summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authornfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org>2025-01-25 01:54:44 -0800
committernfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org>2025-01-25 01:54:44 -0800
commit6d706e2c730305e369fb308fb7eac80efc31a4ec (patch)
tree946a71c5831b4c2633c55ea1081960b15524d8ae
parent60d15af260df44f3a871fa0b64dccac898e51abd (diff)
NormalizeHEADmain
-rw-r--r--.gitattributes4
-rw-r--r--LICENSE.txt11
-rw-r--r--README.md2
-rw-r--r--old/69220-0.txt22807
-rw-r--r--old/69220-0.zipbin468948 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/69220-h.zipbin6223357 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/69220-h/69220-h.htm30061
-rw-r--r--old/69220-h/images/cover.jpgbin527377 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/69220-h/images/i_b_581fp_1-large.jpgbin372694 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/69220-h/images/i_b_581fp_1.jpgbin55861 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/69220-h/images/i_b_581fp_2-large.jpgbin384420 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/69220-h/images/i_b_581fp_2.jpgbin61448 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/69220-h/images/i_b_581fp_3-large.jpgbin527926 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/69220-h/images/i_b_581fp_3.jpgbin81511 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/69220-h/images/i_b_581fp_4-large.jpgbin674417 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/69220-h/images/i_b_581fp_4.jpgbin81383 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/69220-h/images/i_b_581fp_5-large.jpgbin670775 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/69220-h/images/i_b_581fp_5.jpgbin96150 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/69220-h/images/i_b_581fp_6-large.jpgbin683396 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/69220-h/images/i_b_581fp_6.jpgbin84719 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/69220-h/images/i_b_581fp_7-large.jpgbin644525 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/69220-h/images/i_b_581fp_7.jpgbin79418 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/69220-h/images/i_b_581fp_8-large.jpgbin655304 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/69220-h/images/i_b_581fp_8.jpgbin77401 -> 0 bytes
24 files changed, 17 insertions, 52868 deletions
diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..d7b82bc
--- /dev/null
+++ b/.gitattributes
@@ -0,0 +1,4 @@
+*.txt text eol=lf
+*.htm text eol=lf
+*.html text eol=lf
+*.md text eol=lf
diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6312041
--- /dev/null
+++ b/LICENSE.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
+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.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..94108e7
--- /dev/null
+++ b/README.md
@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #69220 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/69220)
diff --git a/old/69220-0.txt b/old/69220-0.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index 6fd7fab..0000000
--- a/old/69220-0.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,22807 +0,0 @@
-The Project Gutenberg eBook of History of the war in the Peninsula
-and in the south of France from the year 1807 to the year 1814, vol. 5
-of 6, by William Francis Patrick Napier
-
-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
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: History of the war in the Peninsula and in the south of France
- from the year 1807 to the year 1814, vol. 5 of 6
-
-Author: William Francis Patrick Napier
-
-Release Date: October 24, 2022 [eBook #69220]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: Brian Coe, John Campbell and the Online Distributed
- Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was
- produced from images generously made available by The
- Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HISTORY OF THE WAR IN THE
-PENINSULA AND IN THE SOUTH OF FRANCE FROM THE YEAR 1807 TO THE YEAR
-1814, VOL. 5 OF 6 ***
-
-
-
-
-
- TRANSCRIBER’S NOTE
-
- Italic text is denoted by _underscores_.
-
- A superscript is denoted by ^x or ^{xx}, for example 3^e or 106^{me}.
-
- There are only two Footnotes in the book. They have been placed at
- the end of the book. The anchors are denoted by [1] and [2].
-
- This is volume 5 of 6. Similar to volume 4, this volume had a date
- (Year. Month) as a margin header on most pages. This information about
- the chronology of the narrative has been preserved as a Sidenote to
- the relevant paragraph on that page whenever the header date changed.
-
- The tables in this book are best viewed using a monospace font.
-
- With a few exceptions noted at the end of the book, variant spellings
- of names have not been changed.
-
- Some minor changes to the text are noted at the end of the book.
-
- Volume 1 of this series can be found at
- https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/67318
- Volume 2 of this series can be found at
- https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/67554
- Volume 3 of this series can be found at
- https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/68187
- Volume 4 of this series can be found at
- https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/68536
-
-
-
-
- HISTORY
-
- OF THE
-
- WAR IN THE PENINSULA
-
- AND IN THE
-
- SOUTH OF FRANCE,
-
- FROM THE YEAR 1807 TO THE YEAR 1814.
-
- BY
-
- W. F. P. NAPIER, C.B.
-
- _COLONEL H. P. FORTY-THIRD REGIMENT,
- MEMBER OF THE ROYAL SWEDISH ACADEMY OF MILITARY SCIENCES._
-
- VOL. V.
-
-
- TO WHICH ARE PREFIXED
- ANSWERS TO SOME ATTACKS
- IN
- ROBINSON’S LIFE OF PICTON, AND IN THE QUARTERLY REVIEW;
-
- WITH
- COUNTER-REMARKS
- TO
- MR. DUDLEY MONTAGU PERCEVAL’S REMARKS
- UPON SOME PASSAGES IN COLONEL NAPIER’S FOURTH VOLUME OF
- THE HISTORY OF THE PENINSULAR WAR.
-
-
- LONDON:
- THOMAS & WILLIAM BOONE, NEW BOND-STREET.
-
- MDCCCXXXVI.
-
-
-
-
- LONDON:
-
- MARCHANT, PRINTER, INGRAM-COURT, FENCHURCH-STREET.
-
-
-
-
-TABLE OF CONTENTS.
-
-
- Notice Page i
-
- Answer to Robinson’s Life of Picton ii
-
- Answer to the Quarterly Review xxiv
-
- Counter-Remarks, &c. xlvii
-
-
- BOOK XVII.
-
- CHAPTER I.
-
- Summary of the political state of affairs—Lord Wellesley
- resigns—Mr. Perceval killed—New administration—Story of the
- war resumed—Wellington’s precautionary measures described—He
- relinquishes the design of invading Andalusia and resolves to
- operate in the north—Reasons why—Surprize of Almaraz by general
- Hill—False alarm given by sir William Erskine prevents Hill from
- taking the fort of Mirabete—Wellington’s discontent—Difficult
- moral position of English generals Page 1
-
-
- CHAP. II.
-
- Progress of the war in different parts of Spain—State of
- Gallicia-French precautions and successes against the Partidas of
- the north—Marmont’s arrangements in Castile—Maritime expedition
- suggested by sir Howard Douglas—He stimulates the activity of the
- northern Partidas—The curate Merino defeats some French near Aranda
- de Duero—His cruelty to the prisoners—Mina’s activity—Harasses
- the enemy in Arragon—Is surprized at Robres by general
- Pannetier—Escapes with difficulty—Re-appears in the Rioja—Gains the
- defiles of Navas Tolosa—Captures two great convoys—Is chased by
- general Abbé and nearly crushed, whereby the Partidas in the north
- are discouraged—Those in other parts become more enterprising—The
- course of the Ebro from Tudela to Tortoza so infested by them that
- the army of the Ebro is formed by drafts from Sachet’s forces
- and placed under general Reille to repress them—Operations of
- Palombini against the Partidas—He moves towards Madrid—Returns
- to the Ebro—Is ordered to join the king’s army—Operations in
- Arragon and Catalonia—The Catalonians are cut off from the
- coast line—Eroles raises a new division in Talarn—Advances into
- Arragon—Defeats general Bourke at Rhoda—Is driven into Catalonia
- by Severoli—Decaen defeats Sarzfield and goes to Lerida—Lacy
- concentrates in the mountains of Olot—Descends upon Mattaro—Flies
- from thence disgracefully—Lamarque defeats Sarzfield—Lacy’s bad
- conduct—Miserable state of Catalonia 23
-
-
- CHAP. III.
-
- Operations in Valencia and Murcia—Sachet’s able government of
- Valencia—O’Donel organizes a new army in Murcia—Origin of the
- Sicilian expedition to Spain—Secret intrigues against Napoleon in
- Italy and other parts—Lord William Bentinck proposes to invade
- Italy—Lord Wellington opposes it—The Russian admiral Tchtchagoff
- projects a descent upon Italy—Vacillating conduct of the English
- ministers productive of great mischief—Lord William Bentinck sweeps
- the money-markets to the injury of lord Wellington’s operations—Sir
- John Moore’s plan for Sicily rejected—His ability and foresight
- proved by the ultimate result—Evil effects of bad government shewn
- by examples 45
-
-
- CHAP. IV.
-
- Operations in Andalusia and Estremadura—Advantage of
- lord Wellington’s position shewn—Soult’s plans vast but
- well-considered—He designs to besiege Tarifa, Alicant,
- and Carthagena, and march upon Lisbon—Restores the French
- interest at the court of Morocco—English embassy to the
- Moorish emperor fails—Soult bombards Cadiz, and menaces a
- serious attack—Ballesteros, his rash conduct—He is defeated at
- Bornos—Effect of his defeat upon the allies in Estremadura—Foy
- succours the fort of Mirabete—Hill is reinforced—Drouet falls back
- to Azagua—Followed by Hill—General Slade defeated by Lallemande in
- a cavalry combat at Macquilla—Exploit of cornet Strenowitz—General
- Barrois marches to reinforce Drouet by the road of St. Ollala—Hill
- falls back to Albuera—His disinterested conduct 56
-
-
- CHAP. V.
-
- Political situation of France—Secret policy of the European
- courts—Causes of the Russian war—Napoleon’s grandeur and
- power—Scene on the Niemen—Design attributed to Napoleon of
- concentrating the French armies behind the Ebro—No traces of
- such an intention to be discovered—His proposals for peace
- considered—Political state of England—Effects of the continental
- system—Extravagance, harshness, and improvident conduct of
- the English ministers—Dispute with America—Political state
- of Spain—Intrigues of Carlotta—New scheme of mediation with
- the colonies—Mr. Sydenham’s opinion of it—New constitution
- adopted—Succession to the crown fixed—Abolition of the Inquisition
- agitated—Discontent of the clergy and absolute-monarchy-men—Neglect
- of the military affairs—Dangerous state of the country—Plot to
- deliver up Ceuta—Foreign policy of Spain—Negociations of Bardaxi at
- Stockholm—Fresh English subsidy—Plan of enlisting Spanish soldiers
- in British regiments fails—The councillor of state Sobral offers
- to carry off Ferdinand from Valençay but Ferdinand rejects his
- offer—Joseph talks of assembling a cortes at Madrid, but secretly
- negociates with that in the Isla 65
-
-
- CHAP. VI.
-
- Political state of Portugal—Internal condition not
- improved—Government weak—Lord Strangford’s conduct condemned—Lord
- Wellesley resolves to recall him and send lord Louvaine to Rio
- Janeiro—Reasons why this did not take place—Lord Strangford’s
- career checked by the fear of being removed—Lord Wellington
- obtains full powers from the Brazils—Lord Castlereagh’s vigorous
- interference—Death of Linhares at Rio Janeiro—Domingo Souza
- succeeds him as chief minister but remains in London—Lord
- Wellington’s moderation towards the Portuguese regency—His
- embarrassing situation described—His opinion of the Spanish and
- Portuguese public men—His great diligence and foresight aided
- by the industry and vigour of Mr. Stuart supports the war—His
- administrative views and plans described—Opposed by the regency—He
- desires the prince regent’s return to Portugal without his
- wife—Carlotta prepares to come without the prince—Is stopped—Mr.
- Stuart proposes a military government but lord Wellington will not
- consent—Great desertion from the Portuguese army in consequence of
- their distressed state from the negligence of the government—Severe
- examples do not check it—The character of the Portuguese troops
- declines—Difficulty of procuring specie—Wellington’s resources
- impaired by the shameful cupidity of English merchants at Lisbon
- and Oporto—Proposal for a Portuguese bank made by Domingo Souza,
- Mr. Vansittart, and Mr. Villiers—Lord Wellington ridicules it—He
- permits a contraband trade to be carried on with Lisbon by Soult
- for the sake of the resources it furnishes 83
-
-
- BOOK XVIII.
-
- CHAP. I.
-
- Numbers of the French in the Peninsula shewn—Joseph
- commander-in-chief—His dissentions with the French generals—His
- plans—Opposed by Soult, who recommends different operations and
- refuses to obey the king—Lord Wellington’s plans described—His
- numbers—Colonel Sturgeon skilfully repairs the bridge of
- Alcantara—The advantage of this measure—The navigation of the
- Tagus and the Douro improved and extended—Rash conduct of a
- commissary on the Douro—Remarkable letter of lord Wellington
- to lord Liverpool—Arrangements for securing the allies’ flanks
- and operating against the enemy’s flanks described—Marmont’s
- plans—His military character—He restores discipline to the army of
- Portugal—His measures for that purpose and the state of the French
- army described and compared with the state of the British army and
- Wellington’s measures 100
-
-
- CHAP. II.
-
- Campaign of 1812—Wellington advances to the Tormes—Marmont
- retires—The allies besiege the forts of Salamanca—General aspect
- of affairs changes and becomes gloomy—The king concentrates
- the army of the centre—Marmont returns to the Tormes and
- cannonades the allies on the position of San Christoval—Various
- skirmishes—Adventure of Mr. Mackay—Marmont retires to Monte
- Rubia—Crosses the Tormes with a part of his army—Fine conduct
- of general Bock’s German cavalry—Graham crosses the Tormes
- and Marmont retires again to Monte Rubia—Observations on this
- movement—Assault on San Vincente fails—Heroic death of general
- Bowes—Siege suspended for want of ammunition—It is renewed—Cajetano
- is stormed—San Vincente being on fire surrenders—Marmont retires
- to the Duero followed by Wellington—The French rear-guard
- suffers some loss between Rueda and Tordesillas—Positions
- of the armies described—State of affairs in other parts
- described—Procrastination of the Gallician army—General Bonet
- abandons the Asturias—Coincidence of Wellington’s and Napoleon’s
- views upon that subject—Sir Home Popham arrives with his squadron
- on the coast of Biscay—His operations—Powerful effect of them upon
- the campaign—Wellington and Marmont alike cautious of bringing on a
- battle—Extreme difficulty and distress of Wellington’s situation 122
-
-
- CHAP. III.
-
- Bonet arrives in the French camp—Marmont passes the Duero—Combat
- of Castrejon—Allies retire across the Guarena—Combat on that
- river—Observations on the movements—Marmont turns Wellington’s
- flank—Retreat to San Christoval—Marmont passes the Tormes—Battle of
- Salamanca—Anecdote of Mrs. Dalbiac 147
-
-
- CHAP. IV.
-
- Clauzel passes the Tormes at Alba—Cavalry combat at La
- Serna—Chauvel’s cavalry joins the French army—The king
- reaches Blasco Sancho—Retires to Espinar on hearing of the
- battle—Receives letters from Clauzel which induce him to march
- on Segovia—Wellington drives Clauzel across the Duero—Takes
- Valladolid—Brings Santocildes over the Duero—Marches upon
- Cuellar—The king abandons Segovia and recrosses the Guadarama—State
- of affairs in other parts of Spain—General Long defeats
- Lallemand in Estremadura—Caffarelli is drawn to the coast by
- Popham’s expedition—Wellington leaves Clinton at Cuellar and
- passes the Guadarama—Cavalry combat at Majadahonda—The king
- unites his army at Valdemoro—Miserable state of the French
- convoy—Joseph passes the Tagus; hears of the arrival of the
- Sicilian expedition at Alicant—Retreats upon Valencia instead of
- Andalusia—Maupoint’s brigade succours the garrison of Cuenca, is
- beaten at Utiel by Villa Campa—Wellington enters Madrid—The Retiro
- surrenders—Empecinado takes Guadalaxara—Extraordinary journey of
- colonel Fabvier—Napoleon hears of Marmont’s defeat—His generous
- conduct towards that marshal—Receives the king’s report against
- Soult—His magnanimity—Observations 182
-
-
- BOOK XIX.
-
- CHAP. I.
-
- State of the war—Eastern operations—Lacy’s bad conduct—French
- army of the Ebro dissolved—Lacy’s secret agents blow up the
- magazines in Lerida—He is afraid to storm the place—Calumniates
- Sarzfield—Suchet comes to Reus—The hermitage of St. Dimas
- surrendered to Decaen by colonel Green—The French general burns
- the convent of Montserrat and marches to Lerida—General Maitland
- with the Anglo-Sicilian army appears off Palamos—Sails for
- Alicant—Reflections on this event—Operations in Murcia—O’Donel
- defeated at Castalla—Maitland lands at Alicant—Suchet concentrates
- his forces at Xativa—Entrenches a camp there—Maitland advances
- to Alcoy—His difficulties—Returns to Alicant—The king’s army
- arrives at Almanza—The remnant of Maupoint’s brigade arrives from
- Cuenca—Suchet re-occupies Alcoy—O’Donel comes up to Yecla—Maitland
- is reinforced from Sicily and entrenches a camp under the walls of
- Alicant 213
-
-
- CHAP. II.
-
- Operations in Andalusia—The king orders Soult to abandon that
- province—Soult urges the king to join him with the other
- armies—Joseph reiterates the order to abandon Andalusia—Soult
- sends a letter to the minister of war expressing his suspicions
- that Joseph was about to make a separate peace with the allies—The
- king intercepts this letter, and sends colonel Desprez to
- Moscow, to represent Soult’s conduct to the emperor—Napoleon’s
- magnanimity—Wellington anxiously watches Soult’s movements—Orders
- Hill to fight Drouet, and directs general Cooke to attack the
- French lines in front of the Isla de Leon—Ballesteros, pursued
- by Leval and Villate, skirmishes at Coin—Enters Malaga—Soult’s
- preparations to abandon Andalusia—Lines before the Isla de Leon
- abandoned—Soult marches towards Grenada—Colonel Skerrit and
- Cruz Murgeon land at Huelva—Attack the French rear-guard at
- Seville—Drouet marches upon Huescar—Soult moving by the mountains
- reaches Hellin, and effects his junction with the king and
- Suchet—Maitland desires to return to Sicily—Wellington prevents
- him—Wellington’s general plans considered—State of affairs
- in Castile—Clauzel comes down to Valladolid with the French
- army—Santo Cildes retires to Torrelobaton, and Clinton falls
- back to Arevalo—Foy marches to carry off the French garrisons in
- Leon—Astorga surrenders before his arrival—He marches to Zamora
- and drives Sylveira into Portugal—Menaces Salamanca—Is recalled
- by Clauzel—The Partidas get possession of the French posts on the
- Biscay coast—Take the city of Bilbao—Reille abandons several posts
- in Arragon—The northern provinces become ripe for insurrection 234
-
-
- CHAP. III.
-
- Wellington’s combinations described—Foolish arrangements of
- the English ministers relative to the Spanish clothing—Want of
- money—Political persecution in Madrid—Miserable state of that
- city—Character of the Madrilenos—Wellington marches against
- Clauzel—Device of the Portuguese regency to avoid supplying
- their troops—Wellington enters Valladolid—Waits for Castaños—His
- opinion of the Spaniards—Clauzel retreats to Burgos—His able
- generalship—The allies enter Burgos, which is in danger of
- destruction from the Partidas—Reflections upon the movements of
- the two armies—Siege of the castle of Burgos 254
-
-
- CHAP. IV.
-
- State of the war in various parts of Spain—Joseph’s distress
- for money—Massena declines the command of the army of
- Portugal—Caffarelli joins that army—Reinforcements come from
- France—Mischief occasioned by the English newspapers—Souham
- takes the command—Operations of the Partidas—Hill reaches
- Toledo—Souham advances to relieve the castle of Burgos—Skirmish
- at Monasterio—Wellington takes a position of battle in front of
- Burgos—Second skirmish—Wellington weak in artillery—Negligence
- of the British government on that head—The relative situation
- of the belligerents—Wellington offered the chief command of the
- Spanish armies—His reasons for accepting it—Contumacious conduct
- of Ballesteros—He is arrested and sent to Ceuta—Suchet and
- Jourdan refuse the command of the army of the south—Soult reduces
- Chinchilla—The king communicates with Souham—Hill communicates with
- Wellington—Retreat from Burgos—Combat of Venta de Pozo—Drunkenness
- at Torquemada—Combat on the Carion—Wellington retires behind the
- Pisuerga—Disorders in the rear of the army—Souham skirmishes at the
- bridge of Cabeçon—Wellington orders Hill to retreat from the Tagus
- to the Adaja—Souham fails to force the bridges of Valladolid and
- Simancas—The French captain Guingret swims the Duero and surprizes
- the bridge of Tordesillas—Wellington retires behind the Duero—Makes
- a rapid movement to gain a position in front of the bridge of
- Tordesillas and destroys the bridges of Toro and Zamora, which
- arrests the march of the French 280
-
-
- CHAP. V.
-
- The king and Soult advance from Valencia to the Tagus—General Hill
- takes a position of battle—The French pass the Tagus—Skirmish at
- the Puente Largo—Hill blows up the Retiro and abandons Madrid—Riot
- in that city—Attachment of the Madrilenos towards the British
- troops—The hostile armies pass the Guadarama—Souham restores the
- bridge of Toro—Wellington retreats towards Salamanca and orders
- Hill to retreat upon Alba de Tormes—The allies take a position
- of battle behind the Tormes—The Spaniards at Salamanca display a
- hatred of the British—Instances of their ferocity—Soult cannonades
- the castle of Alba—The king reorganizes the French armies—Soult and
- Jourdan propose different plans—Soult’s plan adopted—French pass
- the Tormes—Wellington by a remarkable movement gains the Valmusa
- river and retreats—Misconduct of the troops—Sir Edward Paget taken
- prisoner—Combat on the Huebra—Anecdote—Retreat from thence to
- Ciudad Rodrigo—The armies on both sides take winter cantonments 308
-
-
- CHAP. VI.
-
- Continuation of the Partizan warfare—General Lameth made governor
- of Santona—Reille takes the command of the army of Portugal—Drouet,
- count D’Erlon, commands that of the centre—Works of Astorga
- destroyed by the Spaniards—Mina’s operations in Arragon—Villa
- Campa’s operations—Empecinado and others enter Madrid—The duke
- Del Parque enters La Mancha—Elio and Bassecour march to Albacete
- and communicate with the Anglo-Sicilian army—The king enters
- Madrid—Soult’s cavalry scour La Mancha—Suchet’s operations—General
- Donkin menaces Denia—General W. Clinton takes the command of
- the Anglo-Sicilian army—Suchet intrenches a camp at Xativa—The
- Anglo-Sicilian army falls into disrepute—General Campbell takes
- the command—Inactivity of the army—The Frayle surprises a convoy
- of French artillery—Operations in Catalonia—Dissensions in that
- province—Eroles and Codrington menace Taragona—Eroles surprises a
- French detachment at Arbeça—Lacy threatens Mataro and Hostalrich
- returns to Vich—Manso defeats a French detachment near Molino
- del Rey—Decaen defeats the united Catalonian army and penetrates
- to Vich—The Spanish divisions separate—Colonel Villamil attempts
- to surprise San Felippe de Balaguer—Attacks it a second time
- in concert with Codrington—The place succoured by the garrison
- of Tortoza—Lacy suffers a French convoy to reach Barcelona, is
- accused of treachery and displaced—The regular warfare in Catalonia
- ceases—The Partizan warfare continues—England the real support of
- the war 341
-
-
- CHAP. VII.
-
- General observations—Wellington reproaches the army—His censures
- indiscriminate—Analysis of his campaign—Criticisms of Jomini
- and others examined—Errors of execution—The French operations
- analyzed—Sir John Moore’s retreat compared with lord
- Wellington’s 357
-
-
- BOOK XX.
-
- CHAP. I.
-
- Political affairs—Their influence on the war—Napoleon’s invasion
- of Russia—Its influence on the contest in the Peninsula—State
- of feeling in England—Lord Wellesley charges the ministers and
- especially Mr. Perceval with imbecility—His proofs thereof—Ability
- and zeal of lord Wellington and Mr. Stuart shewn—Absurd plans of
- the count of Funchal—Mr. Villiers and Mr. Vansittart—The English
- ministers propose to sell the Portuguese crown and church lands—The
- folly and injustice of these, and other schemes, exposed by lord
- Wellington—He goes to Cadiz—His reception there—New organization
- of the Spanish armies—Wellington goes to Lisbon where he is
- enthusiastically received—His departure from Cadiz the signal for
- renewed dissensions—Carlotta’s intrigues—Decree to abolish the
- Inquisition opposed by the clergy—The regency aid the clergy—Are
- displaced by the Cortez—New regency appointed—The American party in
- the Cortez adopt Carlotta’s cause—Fail from fear of the people—Many
- bishops and church dignitaries are arrested and others fly into
- Portugal—The pope’s nuncio Gravina opposes the cortez—His benefices
- sequestered—He flies to Portugal—His intrigues there—Secret
- overtures made to Joseph by some of the Spanish armies 379
-
-
- CHAP. II.
-
- Political state of Portugal—Wellington’s difficulties—Improper
- conduct of some English ships of war—Piratical violence of a
- Scotch merchantman—Disorders in the military system—Irritation of
- the people—Misconduct of the magistrates—Wellington and Stuart
- grapple with the disorders of the administration—The latter calls
- for the interference of the British government—Wellington writes a
- remarkable letter to the prince regent and requests him to return
- to Portugal—Partial amendment—The efficiency of the army restored,
- but the country remains in an unsettled state—The prince unable
- to quit the Brazils—Carlotta prepares to come alone—Is stopped by
- the interference of the British government—An auxiliary Russian
- force is offered to lord Wellington by admiral Greig—The Russian
- ambassador in London disavows the offer—The emperor Alexander
- proposes to mediate between England and America—The emperor of
- Austria offers to mediate for a general peace—Both offers are
- refused 409
-
-
- CHAP. III.
-
- Napoleon’s embarrassed position—His wonderful activity—His designs
- explained—The war in Spain becomes secondary—Many thousand old
- soldiers withdrawn from the armies—The Partidas become more
- disciplined and dangerous—New bands are raised in Biscay and
- Guipuscoa and the insurrection of the northern provinces creeps
- on—Napoleon orders the king to fix his quarters at Valladolid, to
- menace Portugal, and to reinforce the army of the north—Joseph
- complains of his generals, and especially of Soult—Napoleon’s
- magnanimity—Joseph’s complaints not altogether without foundation 430
-
-
- CHAP. IV.
-
- Operations south of the Tagus—Eroles and Codrington seek to entrap
- the governor of Taragona—They fail—Sarzfield and Villa Campa unite
- but disperse at the approach of Pannetier and Severoli—Suchet’s
- position—Great force of the allies in his front—The younger
- Soult engages the Spanish cavalry in La Mancha—General Daricau
- marches with a column towards Valencia—Receives a large convoy and
- returns to La Mancha—Absurd rumours about the English army rife
- in the French camp—Some of lord Wellington’s spies detected—Soult
- is recalled—Gazan assumes the command of the army of the
- south—Suchet’s position described—Sir John Murray takes the command
- of the Anglo-Sicilian troops at Alicant—Attacks the French post at
- Alcoy—His want of vigour—He projects a maritime attack on the city
- of Valencia, but drops the design because lord William Bentinck
- recals some of his troops—Remarks upon his proceedings—Suchet
- surprises a Spanish division at Yecla, and then advances against
- Murray—Takes a thousand Spanish prisoners in Villena—Murray takes
- a position at Castalla—His advanced guard driven from Biar—Second
- battle of Castalla—Remarks 446
-
-
- CHAP. V.
-
- Operations north of the Tagus—Position of the French
- armies—Palombini marches from Madrid to join the army of the
- north—Various combats take place with the Partidas—Foy fails
- to surprise the British post at Bejar—Caffarelli demands
- reinforcements—Joseph misconceives the emperor’s plans—Wellington’s
- plans vindicated against French writers—Soult advises Joseph to
- hold Madrid and the mountains of Avila—Indecision of the king—He
- goes to Valladolid—Concentrates the French armies in Old Castile—A
- division under Leval remains at Madrid—Reille sends reinforcements
- to the army of the north—Various skirmishes with the Partidas—Leval
- deceived by false rumours at Madrid—Joseph wishes to abandon that
- capital—Northern insurrection—Operations of Caffarelli, Palombini,
- Mendizabel, Longa, and Mina—Napoleon recals Caffarelli—Clauzel
- takes the command of the army of the north—Assaults Castro but
- fails—Palombini skirmishes with Mendizabel—Introduces a convoy into
- Santona—Marches to succour Bilbao—His operations in Guipuscoa—The
- insurrection gains strength—Clauzel marches into Navarre—Defeats
- Mina in the valley of Roncal and pursues him into Arragon—Foy acts
- on the coast—Takes Castro—Returns to Bilbao—Defeats the Biscayen
- volunteers under Mugartegui at Villaro, and those of Guipuscoa
- under Artola at Lequitio—The insurrectional junta flies—Bermeo and
- Isaro are taken—Operations of the Partidas on the great line of
- communication 470
-
-
- CHAP. VI.
-
- Wellington restores the discipline of the allied army—Relative
- strength of the belligerent forces—Wellington’s plans
- described—Lord W. Bentinck again proposes to invade
- Italy—Wellington opposes it—The opening of the campaign delayed by
- the weather—State of the French army—Its movements previous to the
- opening of the campaign 503
-
-
- CHAP. VII.
-
- Dangerous discontent of the Portuguese army—Allayed by
- Wellington—Noble conduct of the soldiers—The left wing of the
- allies under general Graham marches through the Tras os Montes
- to the Esla—The right wing under Wellington advances against
- Salamanca—Combat there—The allies pass the Tormes—Wellington
- goes in person to the Esla—Passage of that river—Cavalry combat
- at Morales—The two wings of the allied army unite at Toro on the
- Duero—Remarks on that event—Wellington marches in advance—Previous
- movements of the French described—They pass the Carion and Pisuerga
- in retreat—The allies pass the Carion in pursuit—Joseph takes
- post in front of Burgos—Wellington turns the Pisuerga with his
- left wing and attacks the enemy with his right wing—Combat on
- the Hormaza—The French retreat behind Pancorbo and blow up the
- castle of Burgos—Wellington crosses the Upper Ebro and turns the
- French line of defence—Santander is adopted as a dépôt station
- and the military establishments in Portugal are broken up—Joseph
- changes his dispositions of defence—The allies advance—Combat of
- Osma—Combat of St. Millan—Combat of Subijana Morillas—The French
- armies concentrate in the basin of Vittoria behind the Zadora 520
-
-
- CHAP. VIII.
-
- Confused state of the French in the basin of Vittoria—Two convoys
- are sent to the rear—The king takes up a new order of battle—The
- Gallicians march to seize Orduña but are recalled—Graham marches
- across the hills to Murguia—Relative strength and position
- of the hostile armies—Battle of Vittoria—Joseph retreats by
- Salvatierra—Wellington pursues him up the Borundia and Araquil
- valleys—Sends Longa and Giron into Guipuscoa—Joseph halts at
- Yrursun—Detaches the army of Portugal to the Bidassoa—Retreats
- with the army of the centre and the army of the south to
- Pampeluna—Wellington detaches Graham through the mountains by
- the pass of St. Adrian into Guipuscoa and marches himself to
- Pampeluna—Combat with the French rear-guard—Joseph retreats up
- the valley of Roncevalles—General Foy rallies the French troops
- in Guipuscoa and fights the Spaniards at Montdragon—Retreats to
- Bergara and Villa Franca—Graham enters Guipuscoa—Combat on the
- Orio river—Foy retires to Tolosa—Combat there—The French posts
- on the sea-coast abandoned with exception of Santona and St.
- Sebastian—Foy retires behind the Bidassoa—Clauzel advances towards
- Vittoria—Retires to Logroño—Wellington endeavours to surround
- him—He makes a forced march to Tudela—Is in great danger—Escapes
- to Zaragoza—Halts there—Is deceived by Mina and finally marches
- to Jacca—Gazan re-enters Spain and occupies the valley of
- Bastan—O’Donel reduces the forts of Pancorbo—Hill drives Gazan
- from the valley of Bastan—Observations 548
-
-
-LIST OF APPENDIX.
-
- No. I.
-
- Extracts of letters relating to the battle of Salamanca 585
-
-
- No. II.
-
- Copies of two despatches from the emperor Napoleon to the minister
- at war relative to the duke of Ragusa 587
-
-
- No. III.
-
- Letter from the duke of Dalmatia to king Joseph, August 12, 1812 588
-
-
- No. IV.
-
- Letter from the duke of Dalmatia to the minister at war 590
-
-
- No. V.
-
- Letter from colonel Desprez to king Joseph, Paris, Sept. 22,
- 1812 593
-
-
- No. VI. A.
-
- Confidential letter from the duc de Feltre to king Joseph, Paris,
- Nov. 10, 1812 595
-
-
- No. VI. B.
-
- Letter from colonel Desprez to king Joseph, Paris, Jan, 3, 1813 596
-
-
- No. VII.
-
- Letter from Napoleon to the duc de Feltre, Ghiart, Sept. 2, 1812 600
-
-
- No. VIII. A.
-
- Extract. General Souham’s despatch to the minister at war 602
-
-
- No. VIII. B.
-
- Extracts. Two letters from the duc de Feltre to king Joseph 602
-
-
- No. IX.
-
- Extract. Letter from marshal Jourdan to colonel Napier 603
-
-
- No. X.
-
- Letter from the duc de Feltre to king Joseph, Jan. 29, 1813 605
-
-
- No. XI.
-
- Ditto ditto 606
-
-
- No. XII.
-
- Ditto ditto, Feb. 12, 1813 608
-
-
- No. XIII.
-
- Ditto ditto, Feb. 12, 1813 609
-
-
- No. XIV.
-
- Two ditto ditto, March 12 and 18, 1813 611
-
-
- No. XV.
-
- Letter from Joseph O’Donnel to general Donkin 614
-
-
- No. XVI.
-
- Letter from the marquis of Wellington to major-general Campbell 616
-
-
- No. XVII.
-
- Extract. Letter from the marquis of Wellington to lieutenant-general
- sir John Murray, April 6, 1813 617
-
-
- No. XVIII.
-
- General states of the French army, April 15, May 15, 1812, and
- March 15, 1813 618
-
-
- No. XIX.
-
- Especial state of the army of Portugal, June 15, 1812;
- loss of ditto 619
-
-
- No. XX.
-
- Strength of the Anglo-Portuguese army, July, 1812 620
-
-
- No. XXI.
-
- Losses of the allies, July 18, 1812 621
-
-
- No. XXII.
-
- Strength of the allies at Vittoria 622
-
-
-
-
-LIST OF THE PLATES,
-
-_To be placed together at Page 582_
-
-
- No. 1. Explanatory Sketch of the Surprise of Almaraz, 1812.
-
- 2. Explanatory Sketch of the Sieges of the Forts and Operations
- round Salamanca, 1812.
-
- 3. Battle of Salamanca, with a Sketch of Operations before and
- after the Action.
-
- 4. Explanatory Sketch of the Siege of Burgos, 1812.
-
- 5. Sketch of the Retreat from Madrid and Burgos, 1812.
-
- 6. Explanatory Sketch of the Position of the Partidas and of
- lord Wellington’s March from the Agueda to the Pyrenees,
- 1813.
-
- 7. Battle of Castalla and Operations before the Action.
-
- 8. Battle of Vittoria, with Operations before and after the
- Action.
-
-
-
-
-NOTICE
-
-1º. In the present volume will be found a plan of the Peninsula on
-a very small scale, yet sufficient to indicate the general range
-of operations. A large map would be enormously expensive without
-any correspondent advantages to the reader; and it would only be a
-repetition of errors, because there are no materials for an accurate
-plan. The small one now furnished, together with the sketches which
-I have drawn and published with each volume, and which are more
-accurate than might be supposed, will give a clear general notion of
-the operations. Those who desire to have more detailed information
-will find it in Lieutenant Godwyn’s fine atlas of the battles in the
-Peninsula—a work undertaken by that officer with the sole view of
-forming a record of the glorious actions of the British army.
-
-2º. Most of the manuscript authorities consulted for former volumes
-have been also consulted for this volume, and in addition the
-official correspondence of Lord William Bentinck; some notes by
-Lord Hill; the journal and correspondence of sir Rufane Donkin; a
-journal of Colonel Oglander, twenty-sixth regiment; a memoir by
-sir George Gipps, royal engineers; and a variety of communications
-by other officers. Lastly, authenticated copies of the official
-journals and correspondence of most of the marshals and generals
-who commanded armies in Spain. These were at my request supplied by
-the French War-office with a prompt liberality indicative of that
-military frankness and just pride which ought and does characterize
-the officers of Napoleon’s army. The publication of this volume also
-enables me with convenience to produce additional authorities for
-former statements, while answering, as I now do, the attacks upon my
-work which have appeared in the “Life of Sir Thomas Picton,” and in
-the “Quarterly Review.”
-
- “Many there are that trouble me and persecute me; yet do I not
- swerve from the testimonies,”—PSALM CXIX.
-
-
-[Sidenote: Life of Picton, page 31.]
-
-[Sidenote: Page 325.]
-
-_Robinson’s Life of Picton._—This writer of an English general’s
-life, is so entirely unacquainted with English military customs, that
-he quotes a common order of the day, accrediting a new staff officer
-to the army, as a remarkable testimony to that staff officer’s
-talents. And he is so unacquainted with French military customs,
-that, treating of the battle of Busaco, he places a French marshal,
-Marmont, who by the way was not then even in Spain, at the head of
-a _division_ of Ney’s corps. He dogmatises upon military movements
-freely, and is yet so incapable of forming a right judgment upon the
-materials within his reach, as to say, that sir John Moore should
-not have retreated, because as he was able to beat the French at
-Coruña, he could also have beaten them in the heart of Spain. Thus
-setting aside the facts that at Coruña Moore had fifteen thousand
-men to fight twenty thousand, and in the heart of Spain he had only
-twenty-three thousand to fight more than three hundred thousand!
-
-And lest this display of incompetency should not be sufficient, he
-affirms, that the same sir John Moore had, comparatively, greater
-means at Sahagun to beat the enemy than Lord Wellington had in the
-lines of Torres Vedras. Now those lines, which Wellington had been
-fortifying for more than a year, offered three nearly impregnable
-positions, defended by a hundred thousand men. There was a fortress,
-that of St. Julian’s, and a fleet, close at hand as a final resource,
-and only sixty thousand French commanded by Massena were in front.
-But sir John Moore having only twenty-three thousand men at Sahagun,
-had no lines, no fortifications for defence, and no time to form
-them, he was nearly three hundred miles from his fleet, and Napoleon
-in person had turned one hundred thousand men against him, while two
-hundred thousand more remained in reserve!
-
-Any lengthened argument in opposition to a writer so totally
-unqualified to treat of warlike affairs, would be a sinful waste of
-words; but Mr. Robinson has been at pains to question the accuracy of
-certain passages of my work, and with what justice the reader shall
-now learn.[1]
-
-1º. _Combat on the Coa._—The substance of Mr. Robinson’s complaint
-on this subject is, that I have imputed to general Picton, the
-odious crime of refusing, from personal animosity, to support
-general Craufurd;—that such a serious accusation should not be made
-without ample proof;—that I cannot say whether Picton’s instructions
-did not forbid him to aid Craufurd;—that the roads were so bad,
-the distance so great, and the time so short, Picton could not
-have aided him;—that my account of the action differs from general
-Craufurd’s;—that I was only a lieutenant of the forty-third, and
-consequently could know nothing of the matter;—that I have not
-praised Picton—that he was a Roman hero and so forth. Finally it is
-denied that Picton ever quarrelled with Craufurd at all; and that, so
-far from having an altercation with him on the day of the action he
-did not on that day even quit his own quarters at Pinhel. Something
-also there is about general Cole’s refusing to quit Guarda.
-
-To all this I reply that I never did accuse general Picton of acting
-from personal animosity, and neither the letter nor the spirit of my
-statement will bear out such a meaning, which is a pure hallucination
-of this author. That the light division was not supported is
-notorious. The propriety of supporting it I have endeavoured to shew,
-the cause why it was not so supported I have not attempted to divine;
-yet it was neither the distance, nor the badness of the roads, nor
-the want of time; for the action, which took place in July, lasted
-from day-break until late in the evening, the roads, and there were
-several, were good at that season, and the distance not more than
-eight miles.
-
-It is quite true, as Mr. Robinson observes, that I cannot affirm of
-my own knowledge whether the duke of Wellington forbade Picton to
-succour Craufurd, but I can certainly affirm that he ordered him to
-support him because it is so set down in his grace’s despatches,
-volume 5th, pages 535 and 547; and it is not probable that this
-order should have been rescinded and one of a contrary tendency
-substituted, to meet an event, namely the action on the Coa, which
-Craufurd had been forbidden to fight. Picton acted no doubt upon the
-dictates of his judgment, but all men are not bound to approve of
-that judgment; and as to the charge of faintly praising his military
-talents, a point was forced by me in his favour, when I compared him
-to general Craufurd of whose ability there was no question; more
-could not be done in conscience, even under Mr. Robinson’s assurance
-that he was a Roman hero.
-
-The exact object of Mr. Robinson’s reasoning upon the subject of
-general Cole’s refusal to quit Guarda it is difficult to discover;
-but the passage to which it relates, is the simple enunciation of
-a fact, which is now repeated, namely, that general Cole being
-requested by general Craufurd to come down with his whole division
-to the Coa, refused, and that lord Wellington approved of that
-refusal, though he ordered Cole to support Craufurd under certain
-circumstances. Such however is Mr. Robinson’s desire to monopolize
-all correctness, that he will not permit me to know any thing about
-the action, though I was present, because, as he says, being only a
-lieutenant, I could not know any thing about it. He is yet abundantly
-satisfied with the accuracy of his own knowledge, although he was not
-present, and was neither a captain nor lieutenant. I happened to be a
-captain of seven years standing, but surely, though we should admit
-all subalterns to be blind, like young puppies, and that rank in the
-one case, as age in the other, is absolutely necessary to open their
-eyes, it might still be asked, why I should not have been able, after
-having obtained a rank which gave me the right of seeing, to gather
-information from others as well as Mr. Robinson? Let us to the proof.
-
-In support of his views, he has produced, the rather vague testimony
-of an anonymous officer, on general Picton’s staff, which he deems
-conclusive as to the fact, that Picton never quarrelled with
-Craufurd, that he did not even quit Pinhel on the day of the action,
-and consequently could not have had any altercation with him on the
-Coa. But the following letters from officers on Craufurd’s staff, not
-anonymous, shew that Picton did all these things. In fine that Mr.
-Robinson has undertaken a task for which he is not qualified.
-
-
- _Testimony of lieutenant-colonel Shaw Kennedy, who was on general
- Craufurd’s staff at the action of the Coa, July 24, 1810._
-
- “_Manchester, 7th November, 1835._
-
-“I have received your letter in which you mention ‘_Robinson’s Life
-of Picton_;’ that work I have not seen. It surprises me that any
-one should doubt that Picton and Craufurd met on the day the French
-army invested Almeida in 1810. I was wounded previously, and did not
-therefore witness their interview; but I consider it certain that
-Picton and Craufurd did meet on the 24th July, 1810, on the high
-ground on the left bank of the Coa during the progress of the action,
-and that a brisk altercation took place between them. They were
-primed and ready for such an altercation, as angry communications had
-passed between them previously regarding the disposal of some sick
-of the light division. I have heard Craufurd mention in joke his and
-Picton’s testiness with each other, and I considered that he alluded
-both to the quarrel as to the sick; and to that which occurred when
-they met during the action at Almeida.
-
- “J. S. KENNEDY.”
-
-“_Colonel Napier, &c. &c. &c._”
-
-
- _Testimony of colonel William Campbell, who was on general
- Craufurd’s staff at the action on the Coa, July 24, 1810._
-
- “_Esplanade, Dover, 13th Nov. 1835._
-
-“Your letter from Freshford has not been many minutes in my hands; I
-hasten to reply. General Picton _did_ come out of Pinhel on the day
-of the Coa combat as you term it. It was in the afternoon of that day
-when all the regiments were in retreat, and general Craufurd was with
-his staff and others on the heights above, that, I think, on notice
-being given of general Picton’s approach, general Craufurd turned
-and moved to meet him. Slight was the converse, short the interview,
-for upon Craufurd’s asking enquiringly, whether general Picton did
-not consider it advisable to move out something from Pinhel in
-demonstration of support, or to cover the light division, in terms
-not bland, the general made it understood that ‘he should do no such
-thing.’ This as you may suppose put an end to the meeting, further
-than some violent rejoinder on the part of my much-loved friend,
-and fiery looks returned! We went our several ways, general Picton,
-I think, proceeding onwards a hundred yards to take a peep at the
-bridge. This is my testimony.
-
- “Yours truly,
- “WILLIAM CAMPBELL.”
-
-“COLONEL NAPIER, &C. &C. &C.”
-
-
-2º. _Battle of Busaco._—Mr. Robinson upon the authority of one of
-general Picton’s letters, has endeavoured to show that my description
-of this battle is a mass of errors; but it shall be proved that
-his criticism is so, and that general Picton’s letter is very bad
-authority.
-
-In my work it is said that the allies resisted vigorously, yet
-the French gained the summit of the ridge, and while the leading
-battalions established themselves on the crowning rocks, others
-wheeled to their right, intending to sweep the summit of the Sierra,
-but were driven down again in a desperate charge made by the left of
-the third division.
-
-Picton’s letter says, that the head of the enemy’s column got
-possession of a rocky point on the crest of the position, and that
-they were followed by the remainder of a large column which was
-driven down in a desperate charge made by the left of the third
-division.
-
-So far we are agreed. But Picton gives the merit of the charge to the
-light companies of the seventy-fourth and eighty-eighth regiments,
-and a wing of the forty-fifth aided by _the eighth Portuguese
-regiment, under major Birmingham_, whereas, in the History the whole
-merit is given to the eighty-eighth and forty-fifth regiments.
-Lord Wellington’s despatch gives the merit to the forty-fifth, and
-eighty-eighth, aided by the eighth Portuguese regiment, _under
-colonel Douglas_. The “_Reminiscences of a Subaltern_,” written by an
-officer of the eighty-eighth regiment, and published in the United
-Service Journal, in like manner, gives the merit to the eighty-eighth
-and forty-fifth British regiments, and the _eighth Portuguese_.
-
-It will presently be seen why I took no notice of the share the
-eighth Portuguese are said to have had in this brilliant achievement.
-Meanwhile the reader will observe that Picton’s letter indicates
-the _centre_ of his division as being forced by the French, and he
-affirms that he drove them down again with his _left_ wing without
-aid from the fifth division. But my statement makes both the _right_
-and _centre_ of his division to be forced, and gives the fifth
-division, and especially colonel Cameron and the ninth British
-regiment, a very large share in the glory, moreover I say that the
-_eighth Portuguese was broken to pieces_. Mr. Robinson argues that
-this must be wrong, for, says he, the eighth Portuguese _were not
-broken_, and if the right of the third division had been forced,
-the French would have encountered the fifth division. To this he
-adds, with a confidence singularly rash, his scanty knowledge of
-facts considered, that colonel Cameron and the ninth regiment would
-doubtless have made as good a charge as I have described, “_only they
-were not there_.”
-
-In reply, it is now affirmed distinctly and positively, that the
-French did break the eighth Portuguese regiment, did gain the rocks
-on the summit of the position, and on the _right_ of the third
-division; did ensconce themselves in those rocks, and were going to
-sweep the summit of the Sierra when the fifth division under general
-Leith attacked them; and the ninth regiment led by colonel Cameron
-did form under fire, as described, did charge, and did beat the enemy
-out of those rocks; and if they had not done so, the third division,
-then engaged with other troops, would have been in a very critical
-situation. Not only is all this re-affirmed, but it shall be proved
-by the most irrefragable testimony. It will then follow that the
-History is accurate, that general Picton’s letter is inaccurate, and
-the writer of his life incompetent to censure others.
-
-Mr. Robinson may notwithstanding choose to abide by the authority of
-general Picton’s letter, which he “fortunately found amongst that
-general’s manuscripts,” but which others less fortunate had found
-in _print_ many years before; and he is the more likely to do so,
-because he has asserted that if general Picton’s letters are false,
-they are wilfully so, an assertion which it is impossible to assent
-to. It would be hard indeed if a man’s veracity was to be called
-in question because his letters, written in the hurry of service
-gave inaccurate details of a battle. General Picton wrote what he
-believed to be the fact, but to give any historical weight to his
-letter on this occasion, in opposition to the testimony which shall
-now be adduced against its accuracy, would be weakness. And with
-the more reason it is rejected, because Mr. Robinson himself admits
-that another letter, written by general Picton on this occasion to
-the duke of Queensbury, was so inaccurate as to give general offence
-to the army; and because his letters on two other occasions are as
-incorrect as on this of Busaco.
-
-Thus writing of the assault of Ciudad Rodrigo, Picton says, “about
-this time, namely, when the third division carried the main breach,
-the light division which was rather late in their attack, also
-succeeded in getting possession of the breach they were ordered to
-attack.” Now it has been proved to demonstration, that the light
-division carried the small breach, and were actually attacking the
-flank of the French troops defending the great breach, when the third
-division carried that point. This indeed is so certain, that Mr.
-Uniack of the ninety-fifth, and others of the light division, were
-destroyed on the ramparts close to the great breach by that very
-explosion which was said to have killed general M’Kinnon; and some
-have gone so far as to assert that it is doubtful if the great breach
-would have been carried at all but for the flank attack of the light
-division.
-
-Again, general Picton writing of the battle of Fuentes Onoro, says
-“the light division under general Craufurd was rather _roughly
-handled by the enemy’s cavalry_, and had that arm of the French army
-been as daring and active upon this occasion, as they were when
-following us to the lines of Torres Vedras, they would doubtless have
-cut off the light division to a man.”
-
-Nevertheless as an eye-witness, and, being then a field-officer on
-the staff, by Mr. Robinson’s rule entitled to see, I declare most
-solemnly that the French cavalry, though they often menaced to
-charge, never came within sure shot distance of the light division.
-The latter, with the exception of the ninety-fifth rifles, who were
-skirmishing in the wood of Pozo Velho, was formed by regiments in
-three squares, flanking and protecting each other, they retired over
-the plain leisurely without the loss of a man, without a sabre-wound
-being received, without giving or receiving fire; they moved in the
-most majestic manner secure in their discipline and strength, which
-was such as would have defied all the cavalry that ever charged under
-Tamerlane or Genghis.
-
-But it is time to give the proofs relative to Busaco, the reader
-being requested to compare them with the description of that battle
-in my History.
-
-
- _Extracts from major-general sir John Cameron’s letters
- to colonel Napier._
-
- “_Government House, Devonport, Aug. 9th_, 1834.
-
-“—I am sorry to perceive in the recent publication of lord Beresford,
-his ‘_Refutation of your justification of your third volume_,’ some
-remarks on the battle of Busaco which disfigure, not intentionally I
-should hope, the operations of the British brigade in major-general
-Leith’s corps on that occasion, of which I, as commanding officer
-of one of the regiments composing it, may perhaps be permitted to
-know something. I shall however content myself at present with
-giving you a detail of the operations of the British brigade in
-major-general Leith’s _own words_, extracted from a document in
-my possession, every syllable of which can be verified by many
-distinguished officers now living, some of them actors in, all of
-them eye-witnesses to the affair.
-
-“‘The ground where the British brigade was now moving, was behind
-a chain of rocky eminences where it had appeared clearly, the
-enemy was successfully pushing to establish himself and precluded
-major-general Leith from seeing at that moment the progress the enemy
-was making, but by the information of staff officers stationed on
-purpose who communicated his direction and progress. Major-general
-Leith moved the British brigade so as to endeavour to meet and
-check the enemy when he had gained the ascendancy. At this time a
-heavy fire of musketry was kept upon the height, the smoke of which
-prevented a clear view of the state of things. When however the
-rock forming the high part of the Sierra became visible, the enemy
-appeared in full possession of it, and a French officer was in the
-act of cheering with his hat off, while a continual fire was kept up
-from thence and along the whole face of the Sierra, in a diagonal
-direction towards the bottom, by the enemy ascending rapidly from
-the successive columns formed for the attack, on a mass of soldiers
-from the eighth and ninth Portuguese regiments, who having been
-severely pressed had given way and were rapidly retiring in complete
-confusion and disorder. Major-general Leith on that occasion spoke
-to Major Birmingham (who was on foot, having had his horse killed),
-who stated that the fugitives were of the ninth Portuguese as well
-as the eighth regiment, and that he had ineffectually tried to check
-their retreat. Major-general Leith addressed and succeeded in
-stopping them, and they cheered when he ordered them to be collected
-and formed in the rear. They were passing as they retired diagonally
-to the right of the ninth British regiment. The face of affairs in
-this quarter now bore a different aspect, for the enemy who had been
-the assailant having dispersed or driven every thing opposed to him
-was in possession of the rocky eminence of the Sierra at this part
-of major-general Picton’s position without a shot then being fired
-at him. Not a moment was to be lost. Major-general Leith resolved
-instantly to attack the enemy with the bayonet. He therefore ordered
-the ninth British regiment, which had hitherto been moving rapidly
-by its left in column in order to gain the most advantageous ground
-for checking the enemy, to form the line, which they did with the
-greatest promptitude, accuracy, and coolness, under the fire of
-the enemy, who had just appeared formed on that part of the rocky
-eminence which overlooks the back of the ridge, and who had then for
-the first time perceived the British brigade under him. Major-general
-Leith had intended that the thirty-eighth regiment should have moved
-on in rear of, and to the left of, the ninth British regiment, to
-have turned the enemy beyond the rocky eminence which was quite
-inaccessible towards the rear of the Sierra, while the ninth should
-have gained the ridge on the right of the rocky height; the royal
-Scots to have been posted (as they were) in reserve. But the enemy
-having driven every thing before him in that quarter afforded him
-the advantage of gaining the top of the rocky ridge, which is
-accessible in front, before it was possible for the British brigade
-to have reached that position, although not a moment had been lost
-in marching to support the point attacked, and for that purpose it
-had made a rapid movement of more than two miles without halting
-and frequently in double-quick time. The thirty-eighth regiment
-was therefore directed to form also and support when major-general
-Leith led the ninth regiment to attack the enemy on the rocky ridge,
-which they did without filing a shot. That part which looks behind
-the Sierra (as already stated) was inaccessible and afforded the
-enemy the advantage of outflanking the ninth on the left as they
-advanced, but the order, celerity, and coolness with which they
-attacked panic-struck the enemy, who immediately gave way on being
-charged with the bayonet, and the whole was driven down the face of
-the Sierra in confusion and with immense loss, from a destructive
-fire which the ninth regiment opened upon him as he fled with
-precipitation after the charge.’
-
-“I shall merely add two observations on what has been asserted in the
-‘_Refutation_.’
-
-“First with regard to the confusion and retreat of a portion of
-the Portuguese troops, I certainly did not know at the moment what
-Portuguese corps the fugitives were of, but after the action I
-understood they were belonging to the eighth Portuguese; a very
-considerable number of them were crossing the front of the British
-column dispersed in sixes and sevens over the field just before
-I wheeled the ninth regiment into line for the attack. I pushed
-on a few yards to entreat them to keep out of our way, which
-they understood and called out ‘_viva los Ingleses, valerosos
-Portugueses_.’
-
-“As regards any support which the Portuguese afforded the British
-brigade in the pursuit, I beg to say that during the charge, while
-leading the regiment in front of the centre, my horse was killed
-under me, which for a moment retarded my own personal advance, and
-on extricating myself from under him, I turned round and saw the
-thirty-eighth regiment close up with us and the royal Scots appearing
-over the ridge in support; but did not see any Portuguese join in the
-pursuit, indeed it would have been imprudent in them to attempt such
-a thing, for at the time a brisk cannonade was opened upon us from
-the opposite side of the ravine.
-
-“This, my dear colonel, is, on my honour, an account of the
-operations of the British brigade in major-general Leith’s corps at
-Busaco. It will be satisfactory to you to know that the information
-you received has been correct. The anonymous officer of the ninth
-regiment I do not know. There were several very capable of furnishing
-you with good information on the transactions of that day, not only
-as regarded their own immediate corps, but those around them. Colonel
-Waller I should consider excellent authority; that gallant officer
-must have been an eye-witness to all that passed in the divisions
-of Picton and Leith. I remember on our approach to the scene of
-confusion he delivered me a message from general Picton, intended for
-general Leith, at the time reconnoitring, to hasten our advance.”
-
-
- “_Government House, Devonport, Aug. 21, 1834._
-
-“——The fact really is that both the eighth and ninth Portuguese
-regiments gave way that morning, and I am positive that I am not far
-wrong in saying, that there were not of Portuguese troops within
-my view, at the moment I wheeled the ninth regiment into line, one
-hundred men prepared either for attack or defence. Sir James Douglas
-partly admits that his wing was broken when he says that ‘if we were
-at any time _broken_ it was from the too ardent wish of a corps of
-boy recruits to close.’ Now it is perfectly clear that the wing of
-the regiment under Major Birmingham fled, from what that officer said
-to general Leith. Sir James Douglas states also that ‘no candid man
-will deny that he supported the royals and ninth regiment, though
-before that he says, that ‘by an oblique movement he joined in the
-charge.’ I might safely declare on oath that the Portuguese never
-shewed themselves beyond the ridge of the Sierra that morning.
-
- “Very faithfully yours,
- “JOHN CAMERON.”
-
-
-As these letters from general Cameron refer to some of marshal
-Beresford’s errors, as well as Mr. Robinson’s, an extract from
-a letter of colonel Thorne’s upon the same subject will not be
-misplaced here.
-
-
- _Colonel Thorne to colonel Napier._
-
- “_Harborne Lodge, 28th Aug. 1834._
-
-Extract.—“Viscount Beresford in the ‘_Refutation of your
-Justification of your third volume_,’ has doubted the accuracy of the
-strength of the third dragoon guards and fourth dragoons on the 20th
-March 1811, as extracted by you from the journal which I lent to you.
-As I felt confident I had not inserted any thing therein, which I
-did not obtain from _official documents_, that were in my possession
-at the time it was written, I have, since the perusal of the
-‘Refutation,’ looked over some of my Peninsula papers, and I am happy
-to say I have succeeded in finding amongst them, the monthly returns
-of quarters of the division of cavalry commanded by brigadier-general
-Long, dated Los Santos, April 20th, 1811, which was then sent to me
-by the deputy assistant quarter-master general of that division,
-and which I beg to enclose for your perusal, in order that you may
-see the statement I have made of the strength of that force in my
-journal _is to be relied upon, although his lordship insinuates to
-the contrary_, and that it contains _something more than_ ‘_the
-depositary of the rumours of a camp_.’”
-
-
- _Extract from memorandum of the battle of Busaco, by colonel
- Waller, assistant quarter-master-general to the second division._
-
-“—The attack commenced on the right wing, consisting of Picton’s
-division, by the enemy opening a fire of artillery upon the right of
-the British which did but little injury, the range being too great to
-prove effective. At this moment were seen the heads of the several
-attacking columns, THREE, I THINK, in number, and deploying into
-line with the most beautiful precision, celerity, and gallantry.
-
-“As they formed on the plateau they were cannonaded from our
-position, and the regiment of Portuguese, either the eighth or the
-_16th Infantry_, which were formed in advance in _front_ of the _74th
-regiment_, threw in some volleys of musketry into the enemy’s columns
-in a flank direction, but the regiment was quickly driven into the
-position.
-
-“More _undaunted_ courage never was displayed by _French_ troops
-than on _this_ occasion: it could not have been surpassed, for
-their columns advanced in despite of a tremendous fire of grape and
-musketry from our troops in position in the rocks, and overcoming all
-opposition, although repeatedly charged by Lightburne’s brigade, or
-rather by the whole of Picton’s division, they advanced, and fairly
-drove the BRITISH RIGHT wing from the rocky part of the position.
-
-“_Being an eye-witness_ of this critical moment, and seeing that
-unless the ground was quickly recovered _the right flank_ of
-the army would _infallibly_ be turned, and the _great road_ to
-Coimbra _unmasked_, seeing also that heavy columns of the enemy
-were descending into the valley to operate by the _road_, and to
-support the attack of the Sierra, and to cut off lord Wellington’s
-communication with Coimbra, I instantly galloped off to the rear to
-bring up general Hill’s corps to Picton’s support. Having proceeded
-about _two_ miles along the upper edge and reverse side of the
-Sierra, I fell in with the head of general Leith’s column moving
-_left in front_, at the head of which was colonel Cameron’s brigade,
-led by the ninth regiment. I immediately rode up to colonel Cameron,
-and addressed him in an anxious tone as follows.
-
-“‘Pray, sir, who commands this brigade?’ ‘I do,’ replied the colonel,
-‘I am colonel Cameron.’
-
-“‘Then for God’s sake, sir, move off instantly at _double-quick_ with
-your brigade to Picton’s support; not _one moment_ is to be lost, the
-enemy in great force are already in possession of the _right of the
-position_ on the Sierra and have driven Picton’s troops out of it.
-Move on, and when the rear of your brigade has passed the Coimbra
-road wheel into line, and you will embrace the point of attack.’
-Colonel Cameron did not hesitate _or balance_ an INSTANT, but giving
-the word ‘double-quick’ to his brigade nobly led them to battle and
-to victory.
-
-“The brave colonel attacked the enemy with such a gallant and
-irresistible impetuosity, that after some time fighting he recovered
-the ground which Picton had lost, inflicting _heavy slaughter_ on
-the elite of the enemy’s troops. The ninth regiment behaved on
-this occasion with conspicuous gallantry, as _indeed_ did ALL the
-REGIMENTS engaged. Great numbers of the enemy had descended low
-down in the rear of the position towards the Coimbra road, and were
-killed; the whole position was thickly strewed with their killed and
-wounded; amongst which _were many of our own troops_. The French were
-the finest men I ever saw. I spoke to several of the wounded men,
-light infantry and grenadiers, who were bewailing their unhappy fate
-on being defeated, assuring me they were the heroes of Austerlitz who
-had never before met with defeat!
-
- “ROBERT WALLER, _Lieut.-colonel_.”
-
-
- _Extract of a letter from colonel Taylor, ninth regiment, to
- colonel Napier._
-
- “_Fernhill, near Evesham, 26th April, 1832._
-
-“DEAR SIR,
-
-“I have just received a letter from colonel Shaw, in which he
-quotes a passage from one of yours to him, expressive of your
-wish, if necessary, to print a passage from a statement which
-I made respecting the conduct of the ninth regiment at Busaco,
-and in reference to which, I have alluded to the discomfiture of
-the eighth Portuguese upon the same occasion. I do not exactly
-recollect the terms I made use of to colonel Shaw (nor indeed the
-shape which my communication wore) but, my object was to bring to
-light the distinguished conduct of the ninth without any wish to,
-unnecessarily, obscure laurels, which others wore, even at their
-expense!
-
-“To account for the affair in question, I could not however well omit
-to state, that it was in consequence of the overthrow of the eighth
-Portuguese, that sir James Leith’s British brigade was called upon,
-and it is remarkable, that at the time, there was a considerable
-force of Portuguese (I think it was the old Lusitanian Legion which
-had just been modelled into two battalions) _between_ Leith’s
-British and where the eighth were being engaged, Leith pushed on his
-brigade double-quick, column of sections left in front, past these
-Portuguese, nor did he halt until he came in contact with the enemy
-who had _crowned the heights_ and were firing from behind the rocks,
-the ninth wheeled up into line, fired and charged, and all of the
-eighth Portuguese that was to be seen, at least by me, a company
-officer at the time, was some ten or a dozen men at _the outside_,
-with their commanding officer, but he and they were amongst the very
-foremost in the ranks of the ninth British. As an officer in the
-ranks of course I could not see much of what was going on generally,
-neither could I well have been mistaken as to what I did see, coming
-almost within my very contact! Colonel Waller, now, I believe on the
-Liverpool staff, was the officer who came to sir James Leith for
-assistance, I presume from Picton.
-
- “Yours, &c.
- “J. TAYLOR.”
-
-
- _Second communication from major-general sir John
- Cameron to colonel Napier._
-
- _Stoke Devonport, Nov. 21st, 1835._
-
-“MY DEAR COLONEL,
-
-“Some months ago I took the liberty of pointing out to you certain
-mis-statements contained in a publication of lord Beresford
-regarding the operations of the British brigade in major-general
-Leith’s corps at the battle of Busaco, and as those mis-statements
-are again brought before the public in Robinson’s Life of sir Thomas
-Picton I am induced to trouble you with some remarks upon what is
-therein advanced. A paragraph in major-general Picton’s letter to
-lord Wellington, dated 10th November, 1810, which I first discovered
-some years ago in the Appendix No. 12 of Jones’s War in Spain, &c.
-&c. would appear to be the document upon which Mr. Robinson grounds
-his contradiction of your statement of the conduct of the ninth
-regiment at Busaco, but _that_ paragraph, which runs as follows, I
-am bound to say is _not_ the truth. ‘Major-general Leith’s brigade
-in consequence marched on, and arrived in time to _join_ the
-five companies of the forty-fifth regiment under the honourable
-lieutenant-colonel Meade and the eighth Portuguese regiment under
-lieutenant-colonel Douglas in repulsing the enemy.’ This assertion
-of major-general Picton is, I repeat, _not true_, for, in the first
-place I did not see the forty-fifth regiment on that day, nor was
-I at any period during the action near them or any other British
-regiment to my left. In the second, as regards the eighth Portuguese
-regiment, the ninth British did not most assuredly join _that_ corps
-in its retrograde movement. That major-general Picton left his right
-flank exposed, there can be no question, and had not assistance, and
-_British_ assistance too, come up to his aid as it did I am inclined
-to believe that sir Thomas would have cut a very different figure
-in the despatch to what he did!! Having already given you a detail
-of the defeat of the enemy’s column which was permitted to gain the
-ascendency in considerable force on the right of the third division,
-I beg leave to refer you to the gallant officers I mentioned in a
-former letter, who were not only eye-witnesses to the charge made by
-the ninth regiment but actually distinguished themselves in front of
-the regiment at the side of their brave accomplished general during
-that charge. I believe the whole of sir Rowland Hill’s division
-from a bend in the Sierra could see the ninth in their pursuit of
-the enemy, and though last not the least in importance, as a party
-concerned, I may mention the present major-general sir James T.
-Barns, who commanded the British brigade under major-general Leith,
-(I omitted this gallant officer’s name in my former letter) as the
-major-general took the entire command and from him alone I received
-all orders during the action.
-
-“I have now done with Mr. Robinson and his work which was perhaps
-hardly worth my notice.
-
- “I am, my dear Colonel,
- “Very sincerely yours,
- “J. CAMERON.”
-
-
-Having now sufficiently exposed the weakness of Mr. Robinson’s attack
-upon me, it would be well perhaps to say with sir J. Cameron “I have
-done with his work,” but I am tempted to notice two points more.
-
-Treating of the storming of Badajos, Mr. Robinson says,
-
-“Near the appointed time while the men were waiting with increased
-anxiety Picton with his staff came up. The troops fell in, all were
-in a moment silent until the general in his calm and impressive
-manner addressed a few words to each regiment. The signal was not
-yet given, but the enemy by means of lighted carcasses discovered
-the position of Picton’s soldiers; to delay longer would only have
-been to expose his men unnecessarily; he therefore gave the word to
-march.”——“Picton’s soldiers set up a loud shout and rushed forward
-up the steep _to the ditch at the foot of the castle walls_.—General
-Kempt who had thus far been with Picton at the head of the division
-was here badly wounded and carried to the rear. Picton was therefore
-left alone to conduct the assault.”
-
-Now strange to say Picton was not present when the signal was given,
-and consequently could neither address his men in his “usual calm
-impressive manner,” nor give them the word to march. There was no
-ditch at the foot of the castle walls to rush up to, and, as the
-following letter proves, general Kempt alone led the division to the
-attack.
-
-
- _Extract of a letter from lieutenant-general sir James
- Kempt, K. C. B., master-general of the Ordnance, &c. &c._
-
- _Pall Mall, 10th May, 1833._
-
-“According to the first arrangement made by lord Wellington, my
-brigade only of the third division was destined to attack the castle
-by escalade. The two other brigades were to have attacked the bastion
-adjoining the castle, and to open a communication with it. _On the
-day, however, before the assault_ took place, this arrangement was
-changed by lord Wellington, a French deserter from the castle (a
-serjeant of sappers) gave information that no communication could be
-established between the castle and the adjoining bastion, there being
-(he stated) only one communication between the castle and the town,
-and upon learning this, the whole of the third division were ordered
-by lord Wellington to attack the castle. But as my brigade only was
-originally destined for the service, and was to lead the attack, the
-arrangements for the escalade were in a great measure confided to me
-by general Picton.
-
-“The division had to _file_ across a very narrow bridge to the attack
-under a fire from the castle and the troops in the covered way. It
-was ordered to commence at ten o’clock, but by means of fire-balls
-the formation of our troops at the head of the trench was discovered
-by the French, who opened a heavy fire on them, and the attack was
-commenced _from necessity_ nearly half an hour before the time
-ordered. I was severely wounded in the foot on the glacis after
-passing the Rivillas almost at the commencement of the attack _in the
-trenches_, and met Picton coming to the front on my being carried to
-the rear. If the attack had not commenced till the hour ordered, he,
-I have no doubt, would have been on the spot to direct in person the
-commencement of the operations. I have no _personal_ knowledge of
-what took place afterwards, but I was informed that after surmounting
-the most formidable difficulties, the escalade was effected by means
-of _two_ ladders only in the first instance in the middle of the
-night, and there can be no question that Picton was present in the
-assault. In giving an account of this operation, pray bear in mind
-that _he_ commanded the division, and to _him_ and the enthusiastic
-valour and determination of the troops ought its success alone to be
-attributed.
-
- “Yours, &c.
- “JAMES KEMPT.”
-
-“_Colonel Napier, &c._”
-
-
-The other point to which I would allude is the battle of Salamanca.
-Mr. Robinson, with his baton of military criticism, belabours the
-unfortunate Marmont unmercifully, and with an unhappy minuteness of
-detail, first places general Foy’s troops on the _left_ of the French
-army and then destroys them by the bayonets of the third division,
-although the poor man and his unlucky soldiers were all the time
-on the _right_ of the French army, and were never engaged with the
-third division at all. This is however but a slight blemish for Mr.
-Robinson’s book, and his competence to criticise Marmont’s movements
-is no whit impaired thereby. I wish however to assure him that the
-expression put into the mouth of the late sir Edward Pakenham is “_né
-vero né ben trovato_.” Vulgar swaggering was no part of that amiable
-man’s character, which was composed of as much gentleness, as much
-generosity, as much frankness, and as much spirit as ever commingled
-in a noble mind. Alas! that he should have fallen so soon and so
-sadly!! His answer to lord Wellington, when the latter ordered him
-to attack, was not, “I will, my lord, by God!” With the bearing of
-a gallant gentleman who had resolved to win or perish, he replied,
-“Yes, if you will give me one grasp of that conquering right hand.”
-But these finer lines do not suit Mr. Robinson’s carving of a hero;
-his manner is more after the coarse menacing idols of the South-Sea
-Islands, than the delicate gracious forms of Greece.
-
-Advice to authors is generally thrown away, yet Mr. Robinson would do
-well to rewrite his book with fewer inaccuracies, and fewer military
-disquisitions, avoiding to swell its bulk with such long extracts
-from my work, and remembering also that English commissaries are not
-“_feræ naturæ_” to be hanged, or otherwise destroyed at the pleasure
-of divisional generals. This will save him the trouble of attributing
-to sir Thomas Picton all the standard jokes and smart sayings, for
-the scaring of those gentry, which have been current ever since
-the American war, and which have probably come down to us from the
-Greeks. The reduction of bulk, which an attention to these matters
-will produce, may be compensated by giving us more information of
-Picton’s real services, towards which I contribute the following
-information. Picton in his youth served as a marine, troops being
-then used in that capacity, and it is believed he was in one of the
-great naval victories. Mr. Robinson has not mentioned this, and it
-would be well also, if he were to learn and set forth some of the
-general’s generous actions towards the widows of officers who fell
-under his command: they are to be discovered, and would do more
-honour to his memory than a thousand blustering anecdotes. With these
-changes and improvements, the life of sir Thomas Picton may perhaps,
-in future, escape the equivocal compliment of the newspaper puffers,
-namely, that it is “a military romance.”
-
-_Quarterly Review._—This is but a sorry attack to repel. “_Le jeu ne
-vaut pas la chandelle_,” but “rats and mice and such small deer have
-been Tom’s food for many a year.”
-
-The reviewer does not like my work, and he invokes the vinous
-vagaries of Mr. Coleridge in aid of his own spleen. I do not like
-his work, or Mr. Coleridge either, and I console myself with a maxim
-of the late eccentric general Meadows, who being displeased to see
-his officers wear their cocked hats awry, issued an order beginning
-thus:—“All men have fancy, few have taste.” Let that pass. I am ready
-to acknowledge real errors, and to give my authorities for disputed
-facts.
-
-1º. I admit that the road which leads over the Pyrennees to Pampeluna
-does not _unite_ at that town with the royal causeway; yet the error
-was _ty_pographical, not _to_pographical, because the course of the
-royal causeway was shewn, just before, to be through towns very
-distant from Pampeluna. The true reading should be “_united with the
-first by a branch road commencing at Pampeluna_.”
-
-2º. The reviewer says, the mountains round Madrid do not touch the
-Tagus at both ends within the frontier of Spain, that river is not
-the chord of their arc; neither are the heights of Palmela and
-Almada near Lisbon one and the same. This is very true, although not
-very important. I should have written the heights of Palmela _and_
-Almada, instead of the heights of Palmela _or_ Almada. But though the
-mountains round Madrid do not to the westward, actually touch the
-Tagus within the Spanish frontier, their shoots are scarcely three
-miles from that river near Talavera, and my description was general,
-being intended merely to shew that Madrid could not be approached
-from the eastward or northward, except over one of the mountain
-ranges, a fact not to be disputed.
-
-3º. It is hinted by the reviewer that lord Melville’s degrading
-observation, namely, that “the worst men made the best soldiers,”
-was picked by me out of general Foy’s historical fragment. Now, that
-passage in my history was written many months before general Foy’s
-work was published; and my authority was a very clear recollection
-of lord Melville’s speech, as reported in the papers of the day. The
-time was just before his impeachment for malversation.
-
-General Foy’s work seems a favourite authority with the reviewer,
-and he treats general Thiebault’s work with disdain; yet both were
-Frenchmen of eminence, and the ennobling patriotism of vituperation
-might have been impartially exercised, the weakness of discrimination
-avoided. However general Thiebault’s work, with some apparent
-inaccuracies as to numbers, is written with great ability and
-elegance, and is genuine, whereas general Foy’s history is not even
-general Foy’s writing; colonel D’Esmenard in his recent translation
-of the Prince of Peace’s memoirs has the following conclusive passage
-upon that head.
-
-“_The illustrious general Foy undertook a history of the war in
-Spain, his premature death prevented him from revising and purifying
-his first sketch, he did me the honour to speak of it several times,
-and even attached some value to my observations; the imperfect
-manuscripts of this brilliant orator have been re-handled and re-made
-by other hands. In this posthumous history, he has been gratuitously
-provided with inaccurate and malignant assertions._”
-
-[Sidenote: See Memoirs of Manuel Godoy, translated by Colonel
-D’Esmenard.]
-
-[Sidenote: See also London & Westminster Review No 1.]
-
-While upon this subject, it is right to do justice to Manuel Godoy,
-Prince of the Peace. A sensual and corrupt man he was generally said
-to be, and I called him so, without sufficient consideration of the
-extreme exaggerations which the Spaniards always display in their
-hatred. The prince has now defended himself; colonel D’Esmenard and
-other persons well acquainted with the dissolute manners of the
-Spanish capital, and having personal experience of Godoy’s character
-and disposition, have testified that his social demeanour was decent
-and reserved, and his disposition generous; wherefore I express my
-regret at having ignorantly and unintentionally calumniated him.
-
-To return to the reviewer. He is continually observing that he does
-not know my authority for such and such a fact, and therefore he
-insinuates, that no such fact had place, thus making his ignorance
-the measure of my accuracy. This logic seems to be akin to that of
-the wild-beast showman, who declares that “the little negro boys tie
-the ostrich bird’s leg to a tree, which fully accounts for the milk
-in the cocoa-nuts.” I might reply generally as the late alderman
-Coombe did to a certain baronet, who, in a dispute, was constantly
-exclaiming, “I don’t know that, Mr. Alderman! I don’t know that!”
-“Ah, sir George! all that you _don’t know_ would make a large book!”
-However it will be less witty, but more conclusive to furnish at
-least some of my authorities.
-
-1º. In opposition to the supposititious general Foy’s account of
-Solano’s murder, and in support of my own history, I give the
-authority of sir Hew Dalrymple, from whom the information was
-obtained; a much better authority than Foy, because he was in close
-correspondence with the insurgents of Seville at the time, and had an
-active intelligent agent there.
-
-2º. Against the supposititious Foy’s authority as to the numbers of
-the French army in June 1808, the authority of Napoleon’s imperial
-returns is pleaded. From these returns my estimate of the French
-forces in Spain during May 1808 was taken, and it is so stated in
-my Appendix. The inconsistency of the reviewer himself may also be
-noticed, for he marks my number as _exclusive_ of Junot’s army, and
-yet _includes_ that army in what he calls Foy’s estimate! But Junot’s
-army was more than 29,000 and not 24,000 as the supposititious Foy
-has it, and that number taken from 116,000 which, though wrong, is
-Foy’s estimate of the whole leaves less than 87,000. I said 80,000.
-The difference is not great, yet my authority is the best, and the
-reviewer feels that it is so, or he would also have adopted general
-Foy’s numbers of the French at the combat of Roliça. In Foy’s history
-they are set down as less than 2,500, in mine they are called 5,000.
-He may be right, but it would not suit the reviewer to adopt a
-_truth_ from a French writer.
-
-3º. On the negative proofs afforded 1º. by the absence of any quoted
-voucher in my work, 2º. by the absence of any acknowledgement of such
-a fact in general Anstruther’s manuscript journal, which journal
-may or may not be garbled, the reviewer asserts that the English
-ministers never contemplated the appointing of a military governor
-for Cadiz. Against this, let the duke of Wellington’s authority be
-pleaded, for in my note-book of conversations held with his grace
-upon the subject of my history, the following passage occurs:—
-
-“The ministers were always wishing to occupy Cadiz, lord Wellington
-thinks this a folly, Cadiz was rather a burthen to him, but either
-general Spencer or general Anstruther was intended to command there,
-thinks it was Anstruther, he came out with his appointment.”
-
-Now it is possible that as Acland’s arrival was also the subject of
-conversation, his name was mentioned instead of Anstruther’s; and
-it is also possible, as the note shows, that Spencer was the man,
-but the main fact relative to the government could not have been
-mistaken. To balance this, however, there undoubtedly is an error
-as to the situation of general Anstruther’s brigade at the battle
-of Vimiero. It appears by an extract from his journal, that it was
-disposed, not, as the reviewer says, on the right of Fane’s brigade,
-but at various places, part being on the right of Fane, part upon
-his left, part held in reserve. The forty-third were on the left of
-Fane, the fifty-second and ninety-seventh on his right, the ninth
-in reserve, the error is therefore very trivial, being simply the
-describing two regiments as of Fane’s brigade, when they were of
-Anstruther’s without altering their position. What does the public
-care whether it was a general called Fane, or a general called
-Anstruther, who was on the right hand if the important points of the
-action are correctly described? The fighting of the fifty-second and
-ninety-seventh has indeed been but slightly noticed, in my history,
-under the denomination of Fane’s right, whereas those regiments make
-a good figure, and justly so, in Anstruther’s journal, because it
-is the story of the brigade; but general history ought not to enter
-into the details of regimental fighting, save where the effects are
-decisive on the general result, as in the case of the fiftieth and
-forty-third on this occasion. The whole loss of the ninety-seventh
-and fifty-second together did not exceed sixty killed and wounded,
-whereas the fiftieth alone lost ninety, and the forty-third one
-hundred and eighteen.
-
-While on the subject of Anstruther’s brigade, it is right also to
-admit another error, one of place; that is if it be true, as the
-reviewer says, that Anstruther landed at Paymayo bay, and not at
-Maceira bay. The distance between those places may be about five
-miles, and the fact had no influence whatever on the operations;
-nevertheless the error was not drawn from Mr. Southey’s history,
-though I readily acknowledge I could not go to a more copious source
-of error. With respect to the imputed mistake as to time, viz. the
-day of Anstruther’s landing, it is set down in my first edition as
-the 19th, wherefore the 18th in the third edition is simply a mistake
-of the press! Alas! poor reviewer!
-
-But there are graver charges. I have maligned the worthy bishop of
-Oporto; and ill-used the patriotic Gallician junta! Reader, the
-bishop of Oporto and the patriarch of Lisbon are one and the same
-person! Examine then my history and especially its appendix and judge
-for yourself, whether the reviewer may not justly be addressed as
-the pope was by Richard I. when he sent him the bishop of Beauvais’
-bloody suit of mail. “See now if this be thy son’s coat.” But the
-junta! Why it is true that I said they glossed over the battle of Rio
-Seco after the Spanish manner; that their policy was but a desire
-to obtain money, and to avoid personal inconvenience; that they
-gave sir Arthur Wellesley incorrect statements of the number of the
-Portuguese and Spaniards at Oporto, and a more inaccurate estimate of
-the French army under Junot. All this is true. It is true that I have
-said it, true that they did it. The reviewer _says_ my statement is
-a “gratuitous misrepresentation.” I will _prove_ that the reviewer’s
-remark is a gratuitous impertinence.
-
-1º. The junta informed sir Arthur Wellesley, that Bessieres had
-twenty thousand men in the battle, whereas he had but fifteen
-thousand.
-
-2º. That Cuesta lost only two guns, whereas he lost eighteen.
-
-3º. That Bessieres lost seven thousand men and six guns, whereas he
-lost only three hundred and fifty men, and no guns.
-
-4º. That the Spanish army had retired to Benevente as if it still
-preserved its consistence, whereas Blake and Cuesta had quarrelled
-and separated, all the magazines of the latter had been captured and
-the whole country was at the mercy of the French. This was glossing
-it over in the Spanish manner.
-
-Again the junta pretended that they desired the deliverance of
-Portugal to enable them to unite with the southern provinces in
-a general effort; but Mr. Stuart’s letters prove that they would
-never unite at all with any other province, and that their aim was
-to separate from Spain altogether and join Portugal. Their wish to
-avoid personal inconvenience was notorious, it was the cause of
-their refusal to let sir David Baird’s troops disembark, it was
-apparent to all who had to deal with them, and it belongs to the
-national character. Then their eagerness to obtain money, and their
-unpatriotic use of it when obtained, has been so amply set forth in
-various parts of my history that I need not do more than refer to
-that, and to my quoted authorities, especially in the second chapters
-of the 3d and 14th Books. Moreover the reviewer’s quotations belie
-his comments, and like the slow-worm defined by Johnson “a blind
-worm, a large viper, _venomous_, _not mortal_,” he is at once dull
-and malignant.
-
-The junta told sir Arthur Wellesley that ten thousand Portuguese
-troops were at Oporto, and that two thousand Spaniards, who had
-marched the 15th, would be there on the 25th of July; yet when sir
-Arthur arrived at Oporto, on the 25th, he found only fifteen hundred
-Portuguese and three hundred Spaniards; the two thousand men said to
-be in march had never moved and were not expected. Here then instead
-of twelve thousand men, there were only eighteen hundred! At Coimbra
-indeed eighty miles from Oporto, there were five thousand militia and
-regulars, one-third of which were unarmed, and according to colonel
-Browne’s letter, as given in the folio edition of the inquiry upon
-the Cintra convention, there were also twelve hundred armed peasants
-which the reviewer has magnified into twelve thousand. Thus without
-dwelling on the difference of place, the difference between the true
-numbers and the statements of the Gallician junta, was four thousand;
-nor will it mend the matter if we admit the armed peasants to be
-twelve thousand, for that would make a greater difference on the
-other side.
-
-The junta estimated the French at fifteen thousand men, but the
-embarkation returns of the number shipped after the convention gave
-twenty-five thousand seven hundred and sixty, making a difference of
-more than ten thousand men, exclusive of those who had fallen or been
-captured in the battles of Vimiero and Roliça, and of those who had
-died in hospital! Have I not a right to treat these as inaccurate
-statements; and the reviewer’s remark as an impertinence?
-
-The reviewer speaking of the battle of Baylen scoffs at the
-inconsistency of calling it an insignificant event and yet
-attributing to it immense results. But my expression was, an
-insignificant _action in itself_, which at once reconciles the
-seeming contradiction, and this the writer who has no honest healthy
-criticism, suppresses. My allusion to the disciplined battalions of
-Valley Forge, as being the saviours of American independence, also
-excites his morbid spleen, and assuming what is not true, namely,
-that I selected that period as the time of the greatest improvement
-in American discipline, he says, their soldiers there were few, as if
-that bore at all upon the question.
-
-[Sidenote: See Stedman’s History, 4to. p. 285.]
-
-But my expression is _at_ Valley Forge not “_of_ Valley Forge.”
-The allusion was used figuratively to shew that an armed peasantry
-cannot resist regular troops, and Washington’s correspondence is
-one continued enforcement of the principle, yet the expression may
-be also taken literally. It was with the battalions _of_ Valley
-Forge that Washington drew Howe to the Delawarre, and twice crossing
-that river in winter, surprised the Germans at Trenton and beat the
-British at Prince Town. It was with those battalions he made his
-attacks at German’s-town; with those battalions he prevented Howe
-from sending assistance to Burgoyne’s army, which was in consequence
-captured. In fine, to use his own expression, “The British eagle’s
-wings were spread, and with those battalions he clipped them.” The
-American general, however, at one time occupied, close to Valley
-Forge, a camp in the Jerseys, bearing the odd name of _Quibble_-town,
-on which probably the reviewer’s eye was fixed.
-
-But notwithstanding Quibble-town, enthusiasm will not avail in
-the long run against discipline. Is authority wanted? We have had
-Napoleon’s and Washington’s, and now we have Wellington’s, for in
-the fifth volume of his Despatches, p. 215, as compiled by colonel
-Gurwood, will be found the following passage upon the arming of the
-Spanish and Portuguese people.
-
-“Reflection and above all experience have shown me the exact extent
-of this advantage in a military point of view, and I only beg that
-those who have to contend with the French, will not be diverted from
-the business of raising, arming, equipping, and training regular
-bodies by any notion that the people when armed and arrayed, will
-be of, I will not say any, but of much, use to them. The subject is
-too large for discussion in a paper of this description, but I can
-show hundreds of instances to prove the truth of as many reasons
-why exertions of this description ought not to be relied on. At all
-events no officer can calculate upon an operation to be performed
-against the French by persons of this description, and I believe that
-no officer will enter upon an operation against the French without
-calculating his means most anxiously.”
-
-[Sidenote: See his evidence, Court of Inquiry on the Convention of
-Cintra.]
-
-It is said that some officers of rank have furnished the reviewer’s
-military criticisms, I can understand why, if the fact be true,
-but it is difficult to believe that any officer would even for the
-gratification of a contemptible jealousy, have lent himself to the
-assertion that sir Arthur Wellesley could not have made a _forced
-or a secret march_ from Vimiero to Mafra, because he was encumbered
-with four hundred bullock-carts. Sir Arthur did certainly intend to
-make that march, and he would as certainly not have attempted such a
-flank movement _openly and deliberately_ while thus encumbered and
-moving at the rate of two miles an hour, within a short distance of a
-general having a more experienced army and an overwhelming cavalry.
-The sneer is therefore directed more against sir Arthur Wellesley
-than against me.
-
-This supposed officer of rank says that because the enemy had a
-shorter road to move in retreat, his line of march could not even be
-menaced, still less intercepted by his opponent moving on the longer
-route! How then did Cæsar intercept Afranius and Petreius, Pompey’s
-lieutenants, on the Sicoris? How Pompey himself at Dyrrachium? How
-did Napoleon pass Beaulieu on the Po and gain Lodi? How did Massena
-dislodge Wellington from Busaco? How did Marmont turn him on the
-Guarena in 1812? How did Wellington himself turn the French on the
-Douro and on the Ebro in 1813? And above all how did he propose
-to turn Torres Vedras by the very march in question, seeing that
-from Torres Vedras to Mafra is only twelve miles and from Vimiero
-to Mafra is nineteen miles, the roads leading besides over a river
-and through narrow ways and defiles? But who ever commended such
-dangerous movements, if they were not masked or their success insured
-by some peculiar circumstances, or by some stratagem? And what is
-my speculation but a suggestion of this nature? “Under certain
-circumstances,” said sir Arthur Wellesley at the enquiry, “an army
-might have gained three hours’ start in such a march.” The argument
-of the supposititious officer of rank is therefore a foolish sophism;
-nor is that relative to sir John Moore’s moving upon Santarem, nor
-the assertion that my plan was at variance with all sir Arthur
-Wellesley’s objects, more respectable.
-
-My plan, as it is invidiously and falsely called, was simply a
-reasoning upon the advantages of sir Arthur Wellesley’s plan, and
-the calculation of days by the reviewer is mere mysticism. Sir
-Arthur wished sir John Moore to go to Santarem, and if sir Arthur’s
-recommendation had been followed, sir John Moore, who, instead
-of taking five days as this writer would have him do, actually
-disembarked the greatest part of his troops in the Mondego in half
-a day, that is before one o’clock on the 22d, might have been at
-Santarem the 27th even according to the reviewer’s scale of march,
-ten miles a day! Was he to remain idle there, if the enemy did not
-abandon Lisbon and the strong positions covering that city? If he
-could stop Junot’s retreat either at Santarem or in the Alemtejo, a
-cavalry country, he could surely as safely operate towards Saccavem,
-a strong country. What was sir A. Wellesley’s observation on that
-head? “If the march to Mafra had been made as I had ordered it on
-the 21st of August in the morning, the position of Torres Vedras
-would have been turned, and there was no position in the enemy’s
-possession, excepting that in our front at Cabeça de Montechique
-and those in rear of it. And I must observe to the court that if
-sir John Moore’s corps had gone to Santarem as proposed as soon
-as it disembarked in the Mondego, there would have been no great
-safety in those positions, if it was, as it turned out to be, in
-our power to beat the French.” Lo! then, my plan is not at variance
-with sir Arthur Wellesley’s object. But the whole of the reviewer’s
-sophistry is directed, both as to this march and that to Mafra, not
-against me, but through me against the duke of Wellington whom the
-writer dare not attack openly; witness his cunning defence of that
-“_wet-blanket_” counsel which stopped sir Arthur Wellesley’s pursuit
-of Junot from the field of Vimiero. Officer of rank! Aye, it sounds
-grandly! but it was a shrewd thing of Agesilaus when any one was
-strongly recommended to him to ask “who will vouch for the voucher?”
-
-Passing now from the officer of rank, I affirm, notwithstanding Mr.
-Southey’s “magnificent chapters” and sir Charles Vaughan’s “brief
-and elegant work,” that the statement about Palafox and Zaragoza is
-correct. My authority is well known to sir Charles Vaughan, and is
-such as he is not likely to dispute; that gentleman will not, I feel
-well assured, now guarantee the accuracy of the tales he was told at
-Zaragoza. But my real offence is not the disparagement of Palafox, it
-is the having spoiled some magnificent romances, present or to come;
-for I remembered the Roman saying about the “Lying Greek fable,” and
-endeavoured so to record the glorious feats of my countrymen, that
-even our enemies should admit the facts. And they have hitherto done
-so, with a magnanimity becoming brave men who are conscious of merit
-in misfortune, thus putting to shame the grovelling spirit that would
-make calumny and vituperation the test of patriotism.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Since writing the above a second article has appeared in the same
-review, to which the only reply necessary, is the giving of more
-proofs, that the passages of my history, contradicted by the
-reviewer, are strictly accurate. And to begin, it is necessary to
-inform him, that a man may be perfectly disciplined and a superb
-soldier, and yet be a raw soldier as to real service; and further,
-that staff officers may have been a long time in the English service,
-and yet be quite inexperienced. Even a quarter-master-general of
-an army has been known to commit all kinds of errors, and discover
-negligence and ignorance of his duty, in his first campaigns, who
-yet by dint of long practice became a very good officer in his line,
-though perhaps not so great a general as he would pass himself off
-for; for it was no ill saying of a Scotchman, that “some men, if
-bought at the world’s price, might be profitably sold at their own.”
-Now requesting the reader to observe that in the following quotations
-the impugned passages of my history are first given, and are followed
-by the authority, though not all the authority which might be adduced
-in support of each fact, I shall proceed to expose the reviewer’s
-fallacies.
-
-1º. History. “_Napoleon, accompanied by the dukes of Dalmatia and
-Montebello, quitted Bayonne the morning of the 8th, and reached
-Vittoria in the evening._”
-
-The reviewer contradicts this on the authority of Savary’s Memoirs,
-quoting twice the pages and volume, namely vol. iv. pages 12, 40, and
-41. Now Savary is a writer so careless about dates, and small facts,
-as to have made errors of a month as to time in affairs which he
-conducted himself. Thus he says king Joseph abandoned Madrid on the
-3d of July 1808, whereas it was on the 3d of August. He also says the
-landing of sir Arthur Wellesley in Portugal was made known to him,
-before the council of war relative to the evacuation of Madrid was
-held at that capital; but the council was held the 29th of July, and
-sir Arthur did not land until the 1st of August! Savary is therefore
-no authority on such points. But there is no such passage as the
-reviewer quotes, in Savary’s work. The reader will look for it in
-vain in pages 12, 40, and 41. It is neither in the fourth volume nor
-in any other volume. However at page 8 of the second volume, second
-part, he will find the following passage. “L’Empereur prit la route
-d’Espagne avec toute son armée. Il arriva à Bayonne avec la rapidité
-d’un trait, de même que de Bayonne à Vittoria. Il fit ce dernier
-trajet à cheval _en deux courses_, de la première il alla à Tolosa
-et de la seconde à Vittoria.” The words “deux courses” the reviewer
-with his usual candour translates, “_the first day to Tolosa, the
-second day to Vittoria_.” But notwithstanding this I repeat, that the
-emperor made his journey in one day. My authority is the assurance
-of a French officer of the general staff who was present, and if the
-value of the fact were worth the pains, I could show that it was very
-easy for Napoleon to do so, inasmuch as a private gentleman, the
-correspondent of one of the newspapers, has recently performed the
-same journey in fourteen hours. But my only object in noticing it at
-all is to show the flagrant falseness of the reviewer.
-
-2º. History. “_Sir John Moore had to organize an army of raw
-soldiers, and in a poor unsettled country just relieved from the
-pressure of a harsh and griping enemy, he had to procure the
-transport necessary for his stores, ammunition, and even for
-the conveyance of the officers’ baggage. Every branch of the
-administration civil and military was composed of men zealous and
-willing indeed, yet new to a service where no energy can prevent the
-effects of inexperience being severely felt._”
-
-Authorities. Extracts from sir John Moore’s Journal and Letters.
-
-“I am equipping the troops here and moving them towards the frontier,
-but I found the army without the least preparation, without any
-precise information with respect to roads, and no arrangement
-for feeding the troops upon their march.” “The army is without
-equipments of any kind, either for the carriage of the light baggage
-of regiments, artillery stores, commissariat stores, or any other
-appendage to an army, and not a magazine is formed on any of the
-routes.”—“The commissariat has at its head Mr. Erskine, a gentleman
-of great integrity and honour, and of considerable ability, but
-neither he nor any of his officers have any experience of what an
-army of this magnitude requires to put it in motion.”—“Every thing is
-however going on with zeal; there is no want of that in an English
-army, and though the difficulties are considerable, and we have to
-move through a very impracticable country, I expect to be past the
-frontier early in November.”
-
-Extract from a memoir by sir John Colborne, military secretary to sir
-John Moore.
-
-“The heads of departments were all zeal, but they had but little
-experience, and their means for supplying the wants of the army about
-to enter on an active campaign were in many respects limited.”
-
-3º. History. “_One Sataro, the same person who has been already
-mentioned as an agent of Junot’s in the negociations engaged
-to supply the army, but dishonestly failing in his contract so
-embarrassed the operations,” &c. &c._
-
-Authority. Extract from sir John Colborne’s Memoir quoted above.
-
-“Sataro, a contractor at Lisbon, had agreed to supply the divisions
-on the march through Portugal. He failed in his contract, and daily
-complaints were transmitted to head-quarters of want of provisions
-on this account. The divisions of generals Fraser and Beresford were
-halted, and had it not been for the exertions of these generals and
-of the Portuguese magistrates the army would have been long delayed.”
-
-4º. History. “_General Anstruther had unadvisedly halted the leading
-columns in Almeida._”
-
-Authority. Extract from sir John Moore’s Journal.
-
-“Br.-general Anstruther, who took possession of Almeida from the
-French, and who has been there ever since, and to whom I had written
-to make preparations for the passage of the troops on this route
-and Coimbra, has stopt them within the Portuguese frontier instead
-of making them proceed as I had directed to Ciudad Rodrigo and
-Salamanca.”
-
-5º. History. “_Sir John Moore did not hear of the total defeat and
-dispersion of Belvedere’s Estremaduran army until a week after it
-happened, and then only through one official channel._” That channel
-was Mr. Stuart. Sir John had heard indeed that the Estremadurans had
-been forced from Burgos, but nothing of their utter defeat and ruin:
-the difference is cunningly overlooked by the reviewer.
-
-Authority. Extract of a letter from sir John Moore to Mr. Frere, Nov.
-16th, 1808.
-
-“I had last night the honour to receive your letter of the 13th,
-together with letters of the 14th from Mr. Stuart and lord William
-Bentinck.” “I did not know until I received Mr. Stuart’s letter that
-the defeat of the Estremaduran army had been so complete.”
-
-Now that army was destroyed on the morning of the 10th, and here we
-see that the intelligence of it did not reach sir John Moore till
-the night of the 15th, which if not absolutely a whole week is near
-enough to justify the expression.
-
-6º. History. “_Thousands of arms were stored up in the great towns._”
-
-Authority. Extract from sir John Moore’s letter to Mr. Stuart.
-
-1st December, 1808. “At Zamora there are _three or four thousand_
-stand of arms, in other places _there may be more_. If they remain
-collected in towns they will be taken by the enemy.”
-
-7º. History. “_Sir John Hope’s division was ordered to pass the Duero
-at Tordesillas._”
-
-Authority. Extract of a letter from sir John Moore to sir David
-Baird, 12th Dec. 1808.
-
-“Lord Paget is at Toro, to which place I have sent the reserve and
-general Beresford’s brigade, the rest of the troops from thence
-are moving to the Duero, my quarters to-morrow will be at Alaejos,
-_Hope’s at Tordesillas_.”
-
-Now it is true that on the 14th sir John Moore, writing from Alaejos
-to sir David Baird, says that he had _then_ resolved to change his
-direction, and instead of going to Valladolid should be at Toro
-on the 15th with all the troops; but as Hope was to have been at
-Tordesillas the same day that Moore was at Alaejos, namely on the
-13th, he must have marched from thence to Toro; and where was the
-danger? The cavalry of his division under general C. Stewart had
-already surprized the French at Rueda, higher up the Duero, and it
-was well known no infantry were nearer than the Carion.
-
-8º. History. “_Sir John Moore was not put in communication with any
-person with whom he could communicate at all._”
-
-Authority. Extracts from sir John Moore’s letters and Journal, 19th
-and 28th November.
-
-“I am not in communication with any of the Spanish generals, and
-neither know their plans nor those of their government. No channel
-of information has been opened to me, and I have no knowledge of
-the force or situation of the enemy, but what as a stranger I
-picked up.”—“I am in communication with no one Spanish army, nor am
-I acquainted with the intentions of the Spanish government or any
-of its generals. Castaños with whom I was put in correspondence is
-deprived of his command at the moment I might have expected to hear
-from him, and La Romana, with whom I suppose I am now to correspond,
-(for it has not been officially communicated to me,) is absent, God
-knows where.”
-
-9º. History. “_Sir John’s first intention was to move upon
-Valladolid, but at Alaejos an intercepted despatch of the prince
-of Neufchatel was brought to head-quarters, and the contents were
-important enough to change the direction of the march. Valderas was
-given as the point of union with Baird._”
-
-Authority. Extract from sir John Moore’s Journal.
-
-“I marched on the 13th from Salamanca; head-quarters, Alaejos;
-_there_ I saw an intercepted letter from Berthier, prince of
-Neufchatel, to marshal Soult, duke of Dalmatia, which determined me
-to unite the army without loss of time. I therefore moved on the 15th
-to Toro instead of Valladolid. At _Valderas_ I was joined by sir
-David Baird with two brigades.”
-
-10º. History. “_No assistance could be expected from Romana._”—“_He
-did not destroy the bridge of Mansilla._”—“_Contrary to his promise
-he pre-occupied Astorga, and when there proposed offensive plans of
-an absurd nature_.”
-
-Authorities. 1º. Sir John Moore to Mr. Frere, Dec. 12th, 1808.
-
-“I have heard nothing from the marquis de la Romana in answer to
-the letters I wrote to him on the 6th and 8th instants. _I am
-thus disappointed of his co-operation or of knowing what plan he
-proposes._”
-
-2º. Colonel Symes to sir David Baird, 14th Dec.
-
-“In the morning I waited on the marquis and pressed him as far as I
-could with propriety on the subject of joining sir John Moore, to
-which he evaded giving any more than general assurances.”
-
-3º. Extract from sir John Moore’s Journal.
-
-“At two I received a letter from Romana, brought to me by his
-aide-de-camp, stating that he had twenty-two thousand, (he only
-brought up six thousand,) and would be happy to co-operate with me.”
-“At Castro Nuevo sir D. Baird sent me a letter he had addressed
-to him of rather a later date, stating that he was retiring into
-the Gallicias. I sent his aide-de-camp back to him with a letter
-requesting to know if such was his intention, but without expressing
-either approbation or disapprobation. _In truth I placed no
-dependance on him or his army._”
-
-4º. Sir John Moore to lord Castlereagh, Astorga, 31st December.
-
-“I arrived here yesterday, when _contrary to his promise_ and to my
-expectations I find the marquis de la Romana with a great part of his
-troops.”—“He said to me in direct terms that had he known how things
-were, he neither would have accepted the command nor have returned
-to Spain. With all this, however, he talks of attacks and movements
-which are _quite absurd_, and then returns to the helpless state
-of his army.” “_He could not be persuaded to destroy the bridge at
-Mansillas_, he posted some troops at it which were forced and taken
-prisoners by the French on their march from Mayorga.”
-
-The reviewer must now be content to swallow his disgust at finding
-Napoleon’s genius admired, Soult’s authority accepted, and Romana’s
-military talents contemned in my History; these proofs of my accuracy
-are more than enough, and instead of adding to them, an apology
-is necessary for having taken so much notice of two articles only
-remarkable for malevolent imbecility and systematic violation of
-truth. But if the reader wishes to have a good standard of value,
-let him throw away this silly fellow’s carpings, and look at the
-duke of Wellington’s despatches as compiled by colonel Gurwood, 5th
-and 6th volumes. He will there find that my opinions are generally
-corroborated, never invalidated by the duke’s letters, and that while
-no fact of consequence is left out by me, new light has been thrown
-upon many events, the true bearings of which were unknown at the time
-to the English general. Thus at page 337 of the despatches, lord
-Wellington speaks in doubt about some obscure negociations of marshal
-Victor, which I have shewn, book vii. chap. iii. to be a secret
-intrigue for the treacherous surrender of Badajos. The proceedings
-in Joseph’s council of war, related by me, and I am the first writer
-who was ever informed of them, shew the real causes of the various
-attacks made by the French at the battle of Talavera. I have shewn
-also, and I am the first English writer who has shewn it, that the
-French had in Spain one hundred thousand more men than the English
-general knew of, that Soult brought down to the valley of the Tagus
-after the fight of Talavera, a force which was stronger by more than
-twenty thousand men than sir Arthur Wellesley estimated it to be;
-and without this knowledge the imminence of the danger, which the
-English army escaped by crossing the bridge of Arzobispo, cannot be
-understood.
-
-[Sidenote: See Wellington’s Despatches, vol. v. p. 488, et passim.]
-
-Again, the means of correcting the error which Wellington fell into
-in 1810 relative to Soult, who he supposed to have been at the head
-of the second corps in Placentia when he was really at Seville, has
-been furnished by me, insomuch as I have shewn that it was Mermet who
-was at the head of that corps, and that Wellington was deceived by
-the name of the younger Soult who commanded Mermet’s cavalry.
-
-Two facts only have been misstated in my history.
-
-1º. Treating of the conspiracy in Soult’s camp at Oporto, I said
-that D’Argenton, to save his life, readily told all he knew of the
-British, but _with respect to his accomplices, was immoveable_.
-
-2º. Treating of Cuesta’s conduct in the Talavera campaign I have
-enumerated amongst his reasons for not fighting that it was Sunday.
-
-Now the duke of Wellington says D’Argenton did betray his
-accomplices, and yet my information was drawn from authority only
-second to the duke’s, viz. major-general sir James Douglas, who
-conducted the interviews with D’Argenton, and was the suggester
-and attendant of his journey to the British head-quarters. He was
-probably deceived by that conspirator, but the following extract
-from his narrative proves that the fact was not lightly stated in my
-History.
-
-“D’Argenton was willing enough to save his life by revealing every
-thing he knew about the English, and among other things assured
-Soult it would be nineteen days before any serious attack could be
-made upon Oporto; and there can be little doubt that Soult, giving
-credit to this information, lost his formidable barrier of the
-Douro by surprise. _As no threats on the part of the marshal could
-induce D’Argenton to reveal the name of his accomplices_, he was
-twice brought out to be shot and remanded in the expectation that
-between hope and intimidation he might be led to a full confession.
-On the morning of the attack he was hurried out of prison by the
-gens-d’armes, and, no other conveyance for him being at hand, he was
-placed upon a horse of his own, and that one the very best he had.
-The gens-d’armes in their hurry did not perceive what he very soon
-found out himself, that he was the best mounted man of the party, and
-watching his opportunity he sprung his horse over a wall into the
-fields, and made his escape to the English, who were following close.”
-
-For the second error so good a plea cannot be offered, and yet there
-was authority for that also. The story was circulated, and generally
-believed at the time, as being quite consonant with the temper of the
-Spanish general; and it has since been repeated in a narrative of the
-campaign of 1809, published by lord Munster. Nevertheless it appears
-from colonel Gurwood’s compilation, 5th vol. page 343, that it is not
-true.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Having thus disposed of the Quarterly Review I request the reader’s
-attention to the following corrections of errors, as to facts, which
-having lately reached me, are inserted here in preference to waiting
-for a new edition of the volumes to which they refer.
-
-1º. _The storming of Badajos._
-
-“General Viellande, and Phillipon who was wounded, seeing all
-ruined, passed the bridge with a few hundred soldiers, and entered
-San Cristoval, where they all surrendered the next morning to lord
-Fitzroy Somerset.”
-
-_Correction by colonel Warre, assented to by lord Fitzroy Somerset._
-
-“Lieut.-colonel Warre was the senior officer present at the
-surrender, having joined lord Fitzroy Somerset (who was in search
-of the governor and the missing part of the garrison) just as he
-was collecting a few men wherewith to summon in his capacity of
-aide-de-camp to the commander-in-chief, the tête-du-pont of San
-Christoval.”
-
-2º. _Assault of Tarifa._ “The Spaniards and the forty-seventh British
-regiment guarded the breach.”
-
-_Correction by sir Hugh Gough._
-
-“The only part of the forty-seventh engaged during _the assault_ were
-two companies under captain Livelesly, stationed on the east bastion
-one hundred and fifty paces from the breach, and the Spaniards
-were no where to be seen, except behind a pallisade in the street,
-a considerable way from the breach. _The eighty-seventh, and the
-eighty-seventh alone, defended the breach._ The two companies of
-the forty-seventh, I before mentioned, and the two companies of
-the rifles, which latter were stationed on my left but all under
-my orders, did all that disciplined and brave troops could do in
-support, and the two six-pounders, under lieut.-colonel Mitchel of
-the artillery, most effectively did their duty while their fire could
-tell, the immediate front of the breach from the great dip of the
-ground not being under their range.”
-
-This correction renders it proper that I should give my authority for
-saying the Spaniards were at the breach.
-
-Extract from a letter of sir Charles Smith, the engineer who defended
-Tarifa, to colonel Napier.
-
-“The next great measure of opposition was to assign to the Spaniards
-the defence of the breach. This would have been insupportable: the
-able advocacy of lord Proby proved that it would be a positive insult
-to the Spanish nation to deprive its troops of the honour, and all
-my solemn remonstrances could produce, was to split the difference,
-and take upon myself to determine which half of the breach should be
-entrusted to our ally.”
-
-The discrepancy between sir Charles Smith’s and sir Hugh Gough’s
-statement is however easily reconciled, being more apparent than
-real. The Spaniards were _ordered_ to defend half the breach, but in
-_fact_ did not appear there.
-
-To the above it is proper here to add a fact made known to me since
-my fourth volume was published, and very honourable to major Henry
-King, of the eighty-second regiment. Being commandant of the town
-of Tarifa, a command distinct from the island, he was called to
-a council of war on the 29th of December, and when most of those
-present were for abandoning the place he gave in the following note,
-
-“I am decidedly of opinion that the defence of Tarifa will afford the
-British garrison an opportunity of gaining eternal honour, and it
-ought to be defended to the last extremity.
-
- “I. H. S. KING,
- “_Commandant of Tarifa_.”
-
-3º. _Battle of Barosa._ “The Spanish Walloon guards, the regiment
-of Ciudad Real, and some guerilla cavalry, turned indeed without
-orders coming up just as the action ceased, and it was expected that
-colonel Whittingham, an Englishman, commanding a powerful body of
-horse, would have done as much, but no stroke in aid of the British
-was struck by a Spanish sabre that day, although the French cavalry
-did not exceed two hundred and fifty men, and it is evident that the
-eight hundred under Whittingham might, by sweeping round the left of
-Ruffin’s division have rendered the defeat ruinous.”—History, vol.
-iii. p. 448.
-
-Extract of a letter from sir Samford Whittingham.
-
-“I am free to confess that the statement of the historian of the
-Peninsular War, as regards my conduct on the day of the battle of
-Barosa, is just and correct; but I owe it to myself, to declare that
-my conduct was the result of obedience to the repeated orders of
-the general commanding in chief under whose command I acted. In the
-given strength of the Spanish cavalry under my command on that day,
-there is an error. The total number of the Spanish cavalry, at the
-commencement of the expedition, is correctly stated; but so many
-detachments had taken place by orders from head-quarters that I had
-only one squadron of Spanish cavalry under my command on that day.”
-
-
-
-
-COUNTER-REMARKS
-
-TO
-
-MR. DUDLEY MONTAGU PERCEVAL’S
-
-REMARKS
-
-UPON SOME PASSAGES IN COLONEL NAPIER’S FOURTH VOLUME OF HIS HISTORY
-OF THE PENINSULAR WAR.
-
-
- “The evil, that men do, lives after them.”
-
-
-
-
-COUNTER-REMARKS,
-
-_&c. &c._
-
-
-In the fourth volume of my history of the Peninsular War I assailed
-the public character of the late Mr. Perceval, his son has published
-a defence of it, after having vainly endeavoured, in a private
-correspondence, to convince me that my attack was unfounded. The
-younger Mr. Perceval’s motive is to be respected, and had he confined
-himself to argument and authority, it was my intention to have relied
-on our correspondence, and left the subject matter in dispute to
-the judgment of the public. But Mr. Perceval used expressions which
-obliged me to seek a personal explanation, when I learned that he,
-unable to see any difference between invective directed against the
-public acts of a minister, and terms of insult addressed to a private
-person, thinks he is entitled to use such expressions; and while he
-emphatically “disavows all meaning or purpose of offence or insult,”
-does yet offer most grievous insult, denying at the same time my
-right of redress after the customary mode, and explicitly declining,
-he says from principle, an appeal to any other weapon than the pen.
-
-It is not for me to impugn this principle in any case, still less in
-that of a son defending the memory of his father; but it gives me
-the right which I now assert, to disregard any verbal insult which
-Mr. Perceval, intentionally or unintentionally, has offered to me
-or may offer to me in future. When a gentleman relieves himself
-from personal responsibility by the adoption of this principle, his
-language can no longer convey insult to those who do not reject such
-responsibility; and it would be as unmanly to use insulting terms
-towards him in return as it would be to submit to them from a person
-not so shielded. Henceforth therefore I hold Mr. Perceval’s language
-to be innocuous, but for the support of my own accuracy, veracity,
-and justice, as an historian, I offer these my “_Counter-Remarks_.”
-They must of necessity lacerate Mr. Perceval’s feelings, but they
-are, I believe, scrupulously cleared of any personal incivility, and
-if any passage having that tendency has escaped me I thus apologize
-before-hand.
-
-Mr. Perceval’s pamphlet is copious in declamatory expressions of his
-own feelings; and it is also duly besprinkled with animadversions on
-Napoleon’s vileness, the horrors of jacobinism, the wickedness of
-democrats, the propriety of coercing the Irish, and such sour dogmas
-of melancholy ultra-toryism. Of these I reck not. Assuredly I did
-not write with any expectation of pleasing men of Mr. Perceval’s
-political opinions and hence I shall let his general strictures pass,
-without affixing my mark to them, and the more readily as I can
-comprehend the necessity of ekeing out a scanty subject. But where
-he has adduced specific argument and authority for his own peculiar
-cause,—weak argument indeed, for it is his own, but strong authority,
-for it is the duke of Wellington’s,—I will not decline discussion.
-Let the most honoured come first.
-
-The Duke of Wellington, replying to a letter from Mr. Perceval, in
-which the point at issue is most earnestly and movingly begged by the
-latter, writes as follows:—
-
- _London, June 6, 1835._
-
-DEAR SIR,
-
-I received last night your letter of the 5th. Notwithstanding my
-great respect for Colonel Napier and his work, I have never read
-a line of it; because I wished to avoid being led into a literary
-controversy, which I should probably find more troublesome than the
-operations which it is the design of the Colonel’s work to describe
-and record.
-
-I have no knowledge therefore of what he has written of your father,
-Mr. Spencer Perceval. Of this I am certain, that I never, whether
-in public or in private, said one word of the ministers, or of any
-minister who was employed in the conduct of the affairs of the public
-during the war, excepting in praise of them;—that I have repeatedly
-declared in public my obligations to them for the cordial support
-and encouragement which I received from them; and I should have been
-ungrateful and unjust indeed, if I had excepted Mr. Perceval, than
-whom a more honest, zealous, and able minister never served the king.
-
-It is true that the army was in want of money, that is to say,
-_specie_, during the war. Bank-notes could not be used abroad; and we
-were obliged to pay for every thing in the currency of the country
-which was the seat of the operations. It must not be forgotten,
-however, that at that period the Bank was restricted from making its
-payments in _specie_. That commodity became therefore exceedingly
-scarce in England; and very frequently was not to be procured at
-all. I believe, that from the commencement of the war in Spain up to
-the period of the lamented death of Mr. Perceval, the difficulty in
-procuring _specie_ was much greater than it was found to be from the
-year 1812, to the end of the war; because at the former period all
-intercourse with the Continent was suspended: in the latter, as soon
-as the war in Russia commenced, the communication with the continent
-was in some degree restored; and it became less difficult to procure
-specie.
-
-But it is obvious that, from some cause or other, there was a want of
-money in the army, as the pay of the troops was six months in arrear;
-a circumstance which had never been heard of in a British army in
-Europe: and large sums were due in different parts of the country for
-supplies, means of transport, &c. &c.
-
-Upon other points referred to in your letter, I have really no
-recollection of having made complaints. I am convinced that there was
-no real ground for them; as I must repeat, that throughout the war,
-I received from the king’s servants every encouragement and support
-that they had in their power to give.
-
- Believe me, dear Sir,
- Ever yours most faithfully,
- WELLINGTON.
-
-_Dudley Montagu Perceval, Esq._
-
-
-This letter imports, if I rightly understand it, that any
-complaints, by whomsoever preferred, against the ministers, and
-especially against Mr. Perceval, during the war in the Peninsula, had
-no real foundation. Nevertheless his Grace and others did make many,
-and very bitter complaints, as the following extracts will prove.
-
-
-No. 1.
-
-_Lord Wellington to Mr. Stuart, Minister Plenipotentiary at Lisbon._
-
- “_Viseu, February 10th, 1810._
-
-“I apprized Government more than two months ago of our probable want
-of money, and of the necessity that we should be supplied, not only
-with a large sum but with a regular sum monthly, equal in amount
-to the increase of expense occasioned by the increased subsidy to
-the Portuguese, and by the increase of our own army. _They have not
-attended to either of these demands_, and I must write again. But I
-wish you would mention the subject in your letter to lord Wellesley.”
-
-
-No. 2.
-
- “_February 23d, 1810._
-
-“It is obvious that the sums will fall short of those which _His
-Majesty’s Government have engaged to supply_ to the Portuguese
-government, but that _is the fault of His Majesty’s Government in
-England, and they have been repeatedly informed that it was necessary
-that they should send out money_. The funds for the expenses of the
-British army are insufficient in the same proportion, and all that I
-can do is to divide the deficiency in its due proportions between the
-two bodies which are to be supported by the funds at our disposal.”
-
-
-No. 3.
-
- “_March 1st, 1810._
-
-“In respect to the 15,000 men in addition to those which Government
-did propose to maintain in this country, I have only to say, that I
-don’t care how many men they send here, _provided they will supply us
-with proportionate means to feed and pay them_; but I suspect they
-will fall short rather than exceed the thirty thousand men.”
-
-
-No. 4.
-
- “_March 5th, 1810._
-
-Mr. Stuart, speaking of the Portuguese emigrating, says,
-
-“_If the determination of ministers at home or events here bring
-matters to that extremity._”
-
-
-No. 5.
-
-_Lord Wellington to Mr. Stuart, in reference to Cadiz._
-
- “_30th March, 1810._
-
-“I don’t understand the arrangement which Government have made of
-the command of the troops there. I have hitherto considered them
-as a part of the army, and from the arrangement which I made with
-the Spanish government they cost us nothing but their pay, and all
-the money procured by bills was applicable to the service in this
-country. _The instructions to general Graham alter this entirely,
-and they have even gone so far as to desire him to take measures to
-supply the Spaniards with provisions from the Mediterranean, whereas
-I had insisted that the Spaniards should feed our troops. The first
-consequence of this arrangement will be that we shall have no more
-money from Cadiz._ I had considered the troops at Cadiz so much
-a part of my army that I had written to my brother to desire his
-opinion whether, if the French withdrew from Cadiz, when they should
-attack Portugal, he thought I might bring into Portugal, at least the
-troops, which I had sent there. But I consider this now to be at an
-end.”
-
-
-No. 6.
-
-_Lord Wellington to Mr. Stuart._
-
- “_1st April, 1810._
-
-“I agree with you respecting the disposition of the people of Lisbon.
-In fact all they wish for is to be saved from the French, and they
-were riotous last winter _because they imagined, with some reason,
-that we intended to abandon them_.”——“_The arrangement made by
-Government for the command at Cadiz will totally ruin us in the way
-of money._”
-
-
-No. 7.
-
-_Lord Wellington to Mr. Stuart._
-
- “_April 20th, 1810._
-
-“_The state of opinions in England is very unfavourable to the
-Peninsula. The ministers are as much alarmed as the public or as
-the opposition pretend to be, and they appear to be of opinion that
-I am inclined to fight a desperate battle, which is to answer no
-purpose. Their private letters are in some degree at variance with
-their public instructions, and I have called for an explanation of
-the former, which when it arrives will shew me more clearly what they
-intend. The instructions are clear enough, and I am willing to act
-under them, although they throw upon me the whole responsibility for
-bringing away the army in safety, after staying in the Peninsula till
-it will be necessary to evacuate it. But it will not answer in these
-times to receive private hints and opinions from ministers, which, if
-attended to, would lead to an act directly contrary to the spirit,
-and even to the letter of the public instructions; at the same time
-that, if not attended to, the danger of the responsibility imposed by
-the public instructions is increased tenfold._”
-
-
-No. 8.
-
-_Ditto to Ditto._
-
- “_May, 1810._
-
-“It is impossible for Portugal to aid in feeding Cadiz. We have
-neither money, nor provisions in this country, and the measures which
-they are adopting to feed the people there will positively oblige us
-to evacuate this country for want of money to support the army, and
-to perform the king’s engagements, unless the Government in England
-should enable us to remain by sending out large and regular supplies
-of specie. I have written fully to Government upon this subject.”
-
-
-No. 9.
-
-_General Graham to Mr. Stuart._
-
- “_Isla, 22d May, 1810._
-
-In reference to his command at Cadiz, says, “lord Liverpool has
-decided the doubt by declaring this a part of lord Wellington’s
-army, and saying it is the wish of Government that though I am second
-in command to him I should be left here for the present.” “_This is
-odd enough; I mean that it should not have been left to his judgement
-to decide where I was to be employed; one would think he could judge
-fully better according to circumstances than people in England._”
-
-
-No. 10.
-
-_Lord Wellington to Mr. Stuart._
-
- “_June 5, 1810._
-
-“_This letter will shew you the difficulties under which we labour
-for want of provisions and of money to buy them._” “_I am really
-ashamed of writing to the government_ (Portuguese) upon this subject
-(of the militia), feeling as I do that we owe them so much money
-which we are unable to pay. According to my account the military
-chest is now indebted to the chest of the aids nearly £400,000. At
-the same time I have no money to pay the army, which is approaching
-the end of the second month in arrears, and which ought to be paid
-in advance. The bât and forage to the officers for March is still
-due, and we are in debt every where.” “_The miserable and pitiful
-want of money prevents me from doing many things which might and
-ought to be done for the safety of the country._” “The corps ought
-to be assembled and placed in their stations. But want of provisions
-and money obliges me to leave them in winter-quarters till the last
-moment. _Yet if any thing fails, I shall not be forgiven._”
-
-
-No. 11.
-
-_Mr. Stuart to Lord Wellington._
-
- “_June 9, 1810._
-
-“I have received two letters from Government, the one relative to
-licenses, the other containing a letter from Mr. Harrison of the
-Treasury, addressed to colonel Bunbury, in which, after referring
-to the different estimates both for the British and Portuguese,
-and stating the sums at their disposal, _they not only conclude
-that we have more than is absolutely necessary, but state specie to
-be so scarce in England that we must not rely on further supplies
-from home, and must content ourselves with such sums as come from
-Gibraltar and Cadiz_,” &c. &c.
-
-“From hand to mouth we may perhaps make shift, taking care to pay the
-Portuguese in kind and not in money, until the supplies, which the
-Treasury say in three or four months will be ready, are forthcoming.
-Government desire me to report to them any explanation which either
-your lordship or myself may be able to communicate on the subject of
-Mr. Harrison’s letter. As it principally relates to army finance, I
-do not feel myself quite competent to risk an opinion in opposition
-to what that gentleman has laid down. _I have, however, so often
-and so strongly written to them the embarrassment we all labour
-under, both respecting corn and money_, that there must be some
-misconception, or some inaccuracy has taken place in calculations
-which are so far invalidated by the fact, without obliging us to go
-into the detail necessary to find out what part of the statement is
-erroneous.”
-
-
-No. 12.
-
-_Wellington to Stuart._
-
- “_June, 1810._
-
-“I received from the Secretary of State a copy of Mr. Hamilton’s
-letter to colonel Bunbury, and we have completely refuted him. He
-took an estimate made for September, October, and November, as the
-rate of expense for eight months, without adverting to the alteration
-of circumstances occasioned by change of position, increase of price,
-of numbers, &c., _and then concluded upon his own statement, that we
-ought to have money in hand, (having included in it by the bye some
-sums which we had not received,) notwithstanding that our distress
-had been complained of by every post, and I had particularly desired,
-in December, that £200,000 might be sent out, and a sum monthly equal
-in amount to the increased Portuguese subsidy_.”
-
-
-No. 13.
-
-_Ditto to Ditto._
-
- “_June, 1810._
-
-“All our militia in these provinces [_Tras os Montes and Entre Minho
-y Douro_] are disposable, and we might throw them upon the enemy’s
-flank in advance in these quarters [_Leon_] and increase our means
-of defence here and to the north of the Tagus very much indeed. _But
-we cannot collect them as an army, nor move them without money and
-magazines, and I am upon my last legs in regard to both._”
-
-
-No. 14.
-
-_Wellington to Stuart._
-
- “_November, 1810._
-
-“_I have repeatedly written to government respecting the pecuniary
-wants of Portugal, but hitherto without effect._”
-
-
-No. 15.
-
-_Ditto to Ditto._
-
- “_December 22._
-
-“It is useless to expect more money from England, as the desire of
-economy has overcome even the fears of the Ministers, _and they have
-gone so far as to desire me to send home the transports in order to
-save money_!”
-
-
-No. 16.
-
-_Ditto to Ditto._
-
- “_28th January, 1811._
-
-“I think the Portuguese are still looking to assistance from England,
-and I have written to the king’s Government strongly upon the subject
-in their favour. But I _should deceive myself if I believed we shall
-get any thing, and them if I were to tell them we should; they must,
-therefore, look to their own resources_.”
-
-
-No. 17.
-
-_Ditto to Ditto._
-
-_In reference to the Portuguese intrigue against him._
-
- “_18th February, 1811._
-
-“I think also that they will be supported in the Brazils, and _I have
-no reason to believe that I shall be supported in England_.”
-
-
-No. 18.
-
-_Ditto to Ditto._
-
- “_13th April, 1811._
-
-“_If the Government choose to undertake large services and not
-supply us with sufficient pecuniary means, and leave to me the
-distribution of the means with which they do supply us, I must
-exercise my own judgement upon the distribution for which I am to be
-responsible._”
-
-
-No. 19.
-
-_Lord Wellington to Mr. Stuart._
-
- “_4th July, 1811._
-
-“The pay of the British troops is now nearly two months in arrears,
-instead of being paid one month in advance, according to his
-majesty’s regulations. The muleteers, upon whose services the army
-depends almost as much as upon those of the soldiers, are six
-months in arrears; _there are now bills to a large amount drawn by
-the commissioners in the country on the commissary at Lisbon still
-remaining unpaid, by which delay the credit of the British army and
-government is much impaired_, and you are aware of the pressing
-demands of the Portuguese government for specie. There is but little
-money in hand to be applied to the several services; _there is no
-prospect that any will be sent from England, and the supplies derived
-from the negociation of bills upon the treasury at Cadiz and Lisbon
-have been gradually decreasing_.”
-
-
-No. 20.
-
-_Lord Wellington to Lord Wellesley._
-
- “_26th July, 1811._
-
-“Although there are, I understand, provisions in Lisbon, in
-sufficient quantities to last the inhabitants and army for a year,
-about 12 or 14,000 Portuguese troops which I have on the right bank
-of the Tagus are literally starving; even those in the cantonments
-on the Tagus cannot get bread, because the government have not
-money to pay for means of transport. _The soldiers in the hospitals
-die because the government have not money to pay for the hospital
-necessaries for them; and it is really disgusting to reflect upon the
-detail of the distresses occasioned by the lamentable want of funds
-to support the machine which we have put in motion._”
-
-“Either Great Britain is interested in maintaining the war in the
-Peninsula, or she is not. If she is, there can be no doubt of the
-expediency of making an effort to put in motion against the enemy
-the largest force which the Peninsula can produce. The Spaniards
-would not allow, I believe, of that active interference by us in
-their affairs which might affect and ameliorate their circumstances,
-_but that cannot be a reason for doing nothing_. Subsidies given
-without stipulating for the performance of specific services would,
-in my opinion, answer no purpose.”
-
-
-No. 21.
-
-_Mr. Sydenham to Mr. Stuart._
-
- “_27th September, 1811._
-
-“I take great shame to myself for having neglected so long writing
-to you, &c. but in truth I did not wish to write to you until I
-could give you some notion of the result of my mission and the
-measures which our government would have adopted in consequence of
-the information and opinion which I brought with me from Portugal,
-but _God knows how long I am to wait if I do not write to you until
-I could give you the information which you must naturally be so
-anxious to receive_. _From week to week I have anxiously expected
-that something would be concluded, and I as regularly deferred
-writing; however I am now so much in your debt that I am afraid
-you will attribute my silence to inattention rather than to the
-uncertainty and indecision of our further proceedings._ During the
-ten days agreeable voyage in the Armide I arranged all the papers
-of information which I had procured in Portugal, and I made out a
-paper on which I expressed in plain and strong terms all I thought
-regarding the state of affairs both in Portugal and Spain. These
-papers, together with the notes which I procured from lord Wellington
-and yourself, appeared to me to comprehend every thing which the
-ministers could possibly require, both to form a deliberate opinion
-upon every part of the subject and to shape their future measures.
-The letters which I had written to lord Wellesley during my absence
-from England, and which had been regularly submitted to the prince,
-had prepared them for most of the opinions which I had to enforce
-on my arrival. _Lord Wellesley perfectly coincided in all the
-leading points_, and a short paper of proposals was prepared for
-the consideration of the cabinet, supported by the most interesting
-papers which I brought from Portugal.”
-
-
-Then followed an abstract of the proposals, after which Mr. Sydenham
-continues thus:—
-
-“I really conceived that all this would have been concluded in a
-week, _but a month has elapsed, and nothing has yet been done_.”
-“Campbell will be able to tell you that I have done every thing in
-my power _to get people here to attend to their real interests in
-Portugal_, and I have clamoured for money, money, money in every
-office to which I have had access. To all my clamour and all my
-arguments I have invariably received the same answer ‘that the thing
-is impossible.’ The prince himself certainly appears to be _à la
-hauteur des circonstances_, and has expressed his determination to
-make every exertion to promote the good cause in the Peninsula. _Lord
-Wellesley has a perfect comprehension of the subject in its fullest
-extent, and is fully aware of the several measures which Great
-Britain ought and could adopt. But such is the state of parties and
-such the condition of the present government that I really despair
-of witnessing any decided and adequate effort on our part to save
-the Peninsula. The present feeling appears to be that we have done
-mighty things, and all that is in our power; that the rest must be
-left to all-bounteous Providence, and that if we do not succeed we
-must console ourselves by the reflection that Providence has not
-been so propitious as we deserved. This feeling you will allow is
-wonderfully moral and Christian-like, but still nothing will be done
-until we have a more vigorous military system, and a ministry capable
-of directing the resources of the nation to something nobler than a
-war of descents and embarkations._” “Nothing can be more satisfactory
-than the state of affairs in the north; all that I am afraid of is
-that we have not a ministry capable of taking advantage of so fine a
-prospect.”
-
-
-Mr. Sydenham’s statement of the opinions of Lord Wellesley at the
-time of the negociations which ended in that lord’s retirement in
-February, is as follows:—
-
-“1st. That Lord Wellesley was the only man in power who had a just
-view of affairs in the Peninsula, or a military thought amongst them.”
-
-“2nd. That he did not agree with Perceval that they were to shut the
-door against the Catholics, neither did he agree with Grenville that
-they were to be conciliated by emancipation without securities.”
-
-“3rd. That with respect to the Peninsula, he rejected the notion that
-we were to withdraw from the Peninsula to husband our resources at
-home, _but he thought a great deal more both in men and money could
-be done than the Percevals admitted, and he could no longer act under
-Perceval with credit, or comfort, or use to the country_.”
-
-
-No. 22.
-
-_Extract of a letter from Mr. Hamilton, Under-Secretary of State._
-
- “_April 9th, 1810._
-
-“I hope by next mail will be sent something more satisfactory and
-useful than we have yet done by way of instructions, _but I am afraid
-the late_ O. P. _riots have occupied all the thoughts of our great
-men here, so as to make them, or at least some of them, forget more
-distant but not less interesting concerns_. With respect to the evils
-you allude to as arising from the inefficiency of the Portuguese
-government, the people here are by no means so satisfied of their
-existence (to a great degree) as you who are on the spot. _Here we
-judge only of the results, the details we read over, but being unable
-to remedy, forget them the next day._”
-
-
-No. 23.
-
-_Lord Wellington to Mr. Stuart._
-
- “_6th May, 1812._
-
-“In regard to money for the Portuguese government, I begged Mr.
-Bisset to suggest to you, that if you were not satisfied with the
-sum he was enabled to supply, you should make your complaint on
-the subject to the king’s government. I am not the minister of
-finance, nor is the commissary-general. _It is the duty of the
-king’s ministers to provide supplies for the service, and not to
-undertake a service for which they cannot provide adequate supplies
-of money and every other requisite. They have thrown upon me a very
-unpleasant task, in leaving to me to decide what proportion of the
-money which comes into the hands of the commissary-general, shall be
-applied to the service of the British army; and what shall be paid
-to the king’s minister, in order to enable him to make good the
-king’s engagements to the Portuguese government; and at the same time
-that they have laid upon me this task, and have left me to carry on
-the war as I could, they have by their orders cut off some of the
-resources which I had._”
-
-“_The British army have not been paid for nearly three months. We owe
-nearly a year’s hire to the muleteers of the army. We are in debt
-for supplies in all parts of the country; and we are on the point of
-failing in our payments for some supplies essentially necessary to
-both armies, which cannot be procured excepting with ready money._”
-
-
-No. 24.
-
-[Sidenote: Vol. iv. p. 178.]
-
-The following extracts are of a late date, but being retrospective,
-and to the point, are proper to be inserted here. In 1813 lord
-Castlereagh complained of some proceedings described in my history,
-as having been adopted by lord Wellington and Mr. Stuart, to feed
-the army in 1810 and 1811, and his censure elicited the letters from
-which these extracts are given.
-
-
-No. 25.
-
-_Lord Wellington to Mr. Stuart._
-
- “_3d May, 1813._
-
-“I have read your letter, No. 2, 28th April, in which you have
-enclosed some papers transmitted by lord Castlereagh, including a
-letter from the Board of Trade in regard to the purchases of corn
-made by your authority in concert with me, in Brazil, America, and
-Egypt. When I see a letter from the Board of Trade, I am convinced
-that the latter complaint originates with the jobbing British
-merchants at Lisbon; and although _I am delighted to see the
-Government turn their attention to the subject, as it will eventually
-save me a great deal of trouble, I am quite convinced that if we
-had not adopted, nearly three years ago, the system of measures now
-disapproved of, not only would Lisbon and the army and this part of
-the Peninsula have been starved; but if we had, according to the
-suggestions of the commander-in-chief, and the Treasury, and the
-Board of Trade, carried on transactions of a similar nature through
-the sharks at Lisbon, above referred to, calling themselves British
-merchants, the expense of the army crippled in its operations, and
-depending upon those who, I verily believe, are the worst subjects
-that his Majesty has; and enormous as that expense is, it would have
-been very much increased._”
-
-“In regard to the particular subject under consideration, it is
-obvious to me that the authorities in England have taken a very
-confined view of the question.”
-
-“It appears to me to be extraordinary that when lord Castlereagh read
-the statement that the commissary-general had in his stores a supply
-of corn and flour to last 100,000 men for nine months, he should not
-have adverted to the fact, that the greatest part of the Portuguese
-subsidy, indeed all in the last year, but £600,000, was paid in kind,
-and principally in corn, and that he should not have seen that a
-supply for 100,000 men for nine months was not exorbitant under these
-circumstances. Then the Government appears to me to have forgotten
-all that passed on the particular subject of your purchases. _The
-advantage derived from them in saving a starving people during the
-scarcity of 1810-1811; in bringing large sums into the military chest
-which otherwise would not have found their way there; and in positive
-profit of money._”——“If all this be true, which I believe you have it
-in your power to prove, I cannot understand why Government find fault
-with these transactions, unless it is that they are betrayed into
-disapprobation of them by merchants who are interested in their being
-discontinued. _I admit that your time and mine would be much better
-employed than in speculation of corn, &c. But when it is necessary
-to carry on an extensive system of war with one-sixth of the money
-in specie which would be necessary to carry it on, we must consider
-questions and adopt measures of this sort, and we ought to have the
-confidence and support of the Government in adopting them._ It is
-only the other day that I recommended to my brother something of the
-same kind to assist in paying the Spanish subsidy; and I have adopted
-measures in respect to corn and other articles in Gallicia, with a
-view to get a little money for the army in that quarter. _If these
-measures were not adopted, not only would it be impossible to perform
-the king’s engagement, but even to support our own army._”
-
-
-_Mr. Stuart to Mr. Hamilton._
-
- “_8th May._
-
-“Though I thank you for the letter from the Admiralty contained
-in yours of the 21st April, I propose rather to refer Government
-to the communication of lord Wellington and the admiral, by whose
-desire I originally adverted to the subject, than to continue my
-representations of the consequences to be expected from a state of
-things the navy department are not disposed to remedy. My private
-letter to lord Castlereagh, enclosing lord Wellington’s observations
-on the letter from the Treasury, will, I think, satisfy his lordship
-that the arrangements which had been adopted for the supply of the
-army and population of this country are of more importance than is
-generally imagined. _I am indeed convinced that if they had been left
-to private merchants, and that I had not taken the measures which are
-condemned, the army must have embarked, and a famine must have taken
-place._”
-
-
-Now if these complaints thus made in the duke’s letters, written at
-the time, were unfounded, his Grace’s present letter is, for so much,
-a defence of Mr. Perceval; if they were not unfounded his present
-letter is worth nothing, unless as a proof, that with him, the
-memory of good is longer-lived than the memory of ill. But in either
-supposition the complaints are of historical interest, as shewing the
-difficulties, real or supposed, under which the general laboured.
-They are also sound vouchers for my historical assertions, because
-no man but the duke could have contradicted them; no man could have
-doubted their accuracy on less authority than his own declaration;
-and no man could have been so hardy as to put to him the direct
-question of their correctness.
-
-Mr. Perceval objects to my quoting lord Wellesley’s manifesto,
-because that nobleman expressed sorrow at its appearance, and denied
-that he had composed it. But the very passage of lord Wellesley’s
-speech on which Mr. Perceval relies, proves, that the sentiments and
-opinions of the manifesto were really entertained by lord Wellesley,
-who repudiates the style only, and regrets, not that the statement
-appeared, but that it should have appeared at the moment when Mr.
-Perceval had been killed. The expression of this very natural feeling
-he, however, took care to guard from any mistake, by reasserting his
-contempt for Mr. Perceval’s political character. Thus he identified
-his opinions with those contained in the manifesto. And this view of
-the matter is confirmed by those extracts which I have given from the
-correspondence of Mr. Sydenham, no mean authority, for he was a man
-of high honour and great capacity; and he was the confidential agent
-employed by lord Wellesley, to ascertain and report upon the feelings
-and views of lord Wellington, with respect to the war; and also upon
-those obstacles to his success, which were daily arising, either from
-the conduct of the ministers at home, or from the intrigues of their
-diplomatists abroad.
-
-[Sidenote: See Extract. No. 15]
-
-[Sidenote: Do. No. 7.]
-
-[Sidenote: Do. No. 10.]
-
-[Sidenote: Do. No. 17.]
-
-Thus it appears that if lord Wellington’s complaints, as exhibited
-in these extracts, were unfounded, they were at least so plausible
-as to mislead Mr. Sydenham on the spot, and lord Wellesley at a
-distance, and I may well be excused if they also deceived me. But
-was I deceived? Am I to be condemned as an historian, because lord
-Wellington, in the evening of his life, and in the ease and fulness
-of his glory, generously forgets the crosses, and remembers only
-the benefits of by-gone years? It may be said indeed, that his
-difficulties were real, and yet the government not to blame, seeing
-that it could not relieve them. To this I can oppose the ordering
-away of the transports, on which, in case of failure, the safety
-of the army depended! To this I can oppose the discrepancy between
-the public and private instructions of the ministers! To this I can
-oppose those most bitter passages, “_If any thing fails I shall not
-be forgiven_,” and “_I have no reason to believe that I shall be
-supported in England_.”
-
-I say I can oppose these passages from the duke’s letters, but I need
-them not. Lord Wellesley, a man of acknowledged talent, practised
-in governing, well acquainted with the resources of England, and
-actually a member of the administration at the time, was placed in
-a better position, to make a sound judgement than lord Wellington;
-lord Wellesley, an ambitious man, delighting in power, and naturally
-anxious to direct the political measures, while his brother wielded
-the military strength of the state; lord Wellesley, tempted to keep
-office by natural inclination, by actual possession, by every motive
-that could stir ambition and soothe the whisperings of conscience,
-actually quitted the cabinet
-
-_Because he could not prevail on Mr. Perceval to support the war as
-it ought to be supported, and he could therefore no longer act under
-him with credit, or comfort, or use to the country;_
-
-_Because the war could be maintained on a far greater scale than Mr.
-Perceval maintained it, and it was dishonest to the allies and unsafe
-not to do it;_
-
-_Because the cabinet, and he particularized Mr. Perceval as of a mean
-capacity, had neither ability and knowledge to devise a good plan,
-nor temper and discretion to adopt another’s plan._
-
-Do I depend even upon this authority? No! In lord Wellington’s
-letter, stress is laid upon the word _specie_, the want of which, it
-is implied, was the only distress, because bank notes would not pass
-on the continent; but several extracts speak of corn and hospital
-stores, and the transport vessels ordered home were chiefly paid
-in paper. Notes certainly would not pass on the continent, nor in
-England neither, for their nominal value, and why? Because they were
-not money; they were the signs of debt; the signs that the labour,
-and property, and happiness, of unborn millions, were recklessly
-forestalled, by bad ministers, to meet the exigency of the moment.
-Now admitting, which I do not, that this exigency was real and
-unavoidable; admitting, which I do not, that one generation has a
-right to mortgage the labour and prosperity of another and unborn
-generation, it still remains a question, whether a minister, only
-empowered by a corrupt oligarchy, has such a right. And there can be
-no excuse for a man who, while protesting that the country was unable
-to support the war, as it ought to be supported, continued that war,
-and thus proceeded to sink the nation in hopeless debt, and risk the
-loss of her armies, and her honour, at the same time; there is no
-excuse for that man who, while denying the ability of the country, to
-support her troops abroad, did yet uphold all manner of corruption
-and extravagance at home.
-
-There was no specie, because the fictitious ruinous incontrovertible
-paper money system had driven it away, and who more forward than Mr.
-Perceval to maintain and extend that system—the bane of the happiness
-and morals of the country; a system which then gave power and riches
-to evil men, but has since plunged thousands upon thousands into
-ruin and misery; a system which, swinging like a pendulum between
-high taxes and low prices, at every oscillation strikes down the
-laborious part of the community, spreading desolation far and wide
-and threatening to break up the very foundations of society. And why
-did Mr. Perceval thus nourish the accursed thing? Was it that one bad
-king might be placed on the throne of France; another on the throne
-of Spain; a third on the throne of Naples? That Italy might be the
-prey of the barbarian, or, last, not least, that the hateful power of
-the English oligarchy, which he called social order and legitimate
-rights, might be confirmed? But lo! his narrow capacity! what has
-been the result? In the former countries insurrection, civil war, and
-hostile invasion, followed by the free use of the axe and the cord,
-the torture and the secret dungeon; and in England it would have
-been the same, if her people, more powerful and enlightened in their
-generation, had not torn the baleful oppression down, to be in due
-time trampled to dust as it deserves.
-
-_Mr. Perceval was pre-eminently an “honest, zealous, and able servant
-of the king!”_
-
-[Sidenote: See Extract, No. 23.]
-
-To be the servant of the monarch is not then to be the servant of the
-people. For if the country could not afford to support the war, as it
-ought to be supported, without detriment to greater interests, the
-war should have been given up; or the minister, who felt oppressed
-by the difficulty, should have resigned his place to those who
-thought differently. “_It is the duty of the king’s ministers to
-provide supplies for the service, and not to undertake a service for
-which they cannot provide adequate supplies of money and every other
-requisite!_” These are the words of Wellington, and wise words they
-are. Did Mr. Perceval act on this maxim? No! he suffered the war to
-starve on “_one-sixth of the money necessary to keep it up_,” and
-would neither withdraw from the contest, nor resign the conduct of
-it to lord Wellesley, who, with a full knowledge of the subject,
-declared himself able and willing to support it efficiently. Nay,
-Mr. Perceval, while professing his inability to furnish Wellington
-efficiently for one war in the Peninsula, was by his orders in
-council, those complicated specimens of political insolence, folly,
-and fraud, provoking a new and unjust war with America, which was
-sure to render the supply of that in the Peninsula more difficult
-than ever.
-
-[Sidenote: See Extract No. 20]
-
-But how could the real resources of the country for supplying the
-war be known, until all possible economy was used in the expenditure
-upon objects of less importance? Was there any economy used by Mr.
-Perceval? Was not that the blooming period of places, pensions,
-sinecures, and jobbing contracts? Did not the government and all
-belonging thereto, then shout and revel in their extravagance? Did
-not corruption the most extensive and the most sordid overspread the
-land? Was not that the palmy state of the system which the indignant
-nation has since risen in its moral strength to reform? Why did not
-Mr. Perceval reduce the home and the colonial expenses, admit the
-necessity of honest retrenchment, and then manfully call upon the
-people of England to bear the real burthen of the war, because it was
-necessary, and because their money was fairly expended to sustain
-their honour and their true interests? This would have been the
-conduct of an able, zealous, and faithful servant of the country;
-and am I to be silenced by a phrase, when I charge with a narrow,
-factious, and contemptible policy and a desire to keep himself in
-power, the man, who supported and extended this system of corruption
-at home, clinging to it as a child clings to its nurse, while the
-armies of his country were languishing abroad for that assistance
-which his pitiful genius could not perceive the means of providing,
-and which, if he had been capable of seeing it, his more pitiful
-system of administration would not have suffered him to furnish.
-Profuseness and corruption marked Mr. Perceval’s government at home,
-but the army withered for want abroad; the loan-contractors got fat
-in London, but the soldiers in hospital died because there was no
-money to provide for their necessities. The funds of the country
-could not supply both, and so he directed his economy against the
-troops, and reserved his extravagance to nourish the foul abuses at
-home, and this is to be a pre-eminently “_honest, zealous, and able
-servant of the king_!”
-
-[Sidenote: See further on, Second Extracts, No. 4.]
-
-[Sidenote: Ditto, No. 6]
-
-[Sidenote: See further on, Second Extracts, No. 7.]
-
-This was the man who projected to establish fortresses to awe London
-and other great towns. This was the man who could not support the
-war in Spain, but who did support the tithe war in Ireland, and
-who persecuted the press of England with a ferocity that at last
-defeated its own object. This was the man who called down vindictive
-punishment on the head of the poor tinman, Hamlyn of Plymouth,
-because, in his ignorant simplicity, he openly offered money to a
-minister for a place; and this also was the man who sheltered himself
-from investigation, under the vote of an unreformed House of Commons,
-when Mr. Maddocks solemnly offered to prove at the bar, that he,
-Mr. Perceval, had been privy to, and connived at a transaction, more
-corrupt and far more mischievous and illegal in its aim than that
-of the poor tinman. This is the Mr. Perceval who, after asserting,
-with a view to obtain heavier punishment on Hamlyn, the distinguished
-purity of the public men of his day, called for that heavy punishment
-on Hamlyn for the sake of public justice, and yet took shelter
-himself from that public justice under a vote of an unreformed house,
-and suffered Mr. Ponsonby to defend that vote by the plea that such
-foul transactions were as “_glaring as the sun at noon-day_.” And
-this man is not to be called factious!
-
-Mr. Perceval the younger in his first letter to me says, “_the good
-name of my father is the only inheritance he left to his children_.”
-A melancholy inheritance indeed if it be so, and that he refers to
-his public reputation. But I find that during his life the minister
-Perceval had salaries to the amount of about eight thousand a-year,
-and the reversion of a place worth twelve thousand a-year, then
-enjoyed by his brother, lord Arden. And also I find that after his
-death, his family received a grant of fifty thousand pounds, and
-three thousand a-year from the public money. Nay, Mr. Perceval the
-son, forgetting his former observation, partly founds his father’s
-claim to reputation upon this large amount of money so given to his
-family. Money and praise he says were profusely bestowed, money to
-the family, praise to the father, wherefore Mr. Perceval must have
-been an admirable minister! Admirable proof!
-
-[Sidenote: Ditto, No. 5]
-
-But was he praised and regretted by an admiring grateful people?
-No! the people rejoiced at his death. Bonfires and illuminations
-signalized their joy in the country, and in London many would have
-rescued his murderer; a multitude even blessed him on the scaffold.
-No! He was not praised by the English people, for they had felt
-his heavy griping hand; nor by the people of Ireland, for they had
-groaned under his harsh, his unmitigated bigotry. Who then praised
-him? Why his coadjutors in evil, his colleagues in misrule; the
-majority of a corrupt House of Commons, the nominees of the borough
-faction in England, of the Orange faction in Ireland; those factions
-by which he ruled and had his political being, by whose support, and
-for whose corrupt interests he run his public “career of unmixed
-evil,” unmixed, unless the extreme narrowness of his capacity, which
-led him to push his horrid system forward too fast for its stability,
-may be called a good.
-
-[Sidenote: See further on, Second Extracts, No. 7.]
-
-By the nominees of such factions, by men placed in the situation, but
-without the conscience of Mr. Quentin Dick, Mr. Perceval was praised,
-and the grant of money to his family was carried; but there were many
-to oppose the grant even in that house of corruption. The grant was a
-ministerial measure, and carried, as such, by the same means, and by
-the same men, which, and who, had so long baffled the desire of the
-nation for catholic emancipation and parliamentary reform. And yet
-the people! emphatically, the people! have since wrung those measures
-from the factions; aye! and the same people loathe the very memory of
-the minister who would have denied both for ever, if it had been in
-his power.
-
-“_Mr. Perceval’s bigotry taught him to oppress Ireland, but his
-religion did not deter him from passing a law to prevent the
-introduction of medicines into France during a pestilence._”
-
-This passage is, by the younger Mr. Perceval, pronounced to be
-utterly untrue, because bark is only _one medicine_, and not
-_medicines_; because there was no raging deadly general pestilence in
-France at the time; and because the measure was only retaliation for
-Napoleon’s Milan and Berlin decrees, a sort of war which even Quakers
-might wink at. What the extent of a Quaker’s conscience on such
-occasions may be I know not, since I have heard of one, who, while
-professing his hatred of blood-shedding, told the mate of his ship
-that if he did not port his helm, he would not run down his enemy’s
-boat. But this I do know, that Napoleon’s decrees were retaliation
-for our paper blockades; that both sides gave licenses for a traffic
-in objects which were convenient to them, while they denied to
-unoffending neutrals their natural rights of commerce; that to war
-against hospitals is inhuman, unchristianlike, and uncivilized, and
-that the avowal of the principle is more abhorrent than even the
-act. The avowed principle in this case was to distress the enemy. It
-was known that the French were in great want of bark, therefore it
-was resolved they should not have it, unless Napoleon gave up his
-great scheme of policy called the continental system. Now men do
-not want Jesuit’s bark unless to cure disease, and to prevent them
-from getting it, was literally to war against hospitals. It was no
-metaphor of Mr. Whitbread’s, it was a plain truth.
-
-Oh! exclaims Mr. Perceval, there was no deadly raging general
-pestilence! What then? Is not the principle the same? Must millions
-suffer, must the earth be cumbered with carcasses, before the
-christian statesman will deviate from his barbarous policy? Is a
-momentary expediency to set aside the principle in such a case? Oh!
-no! by no means! exclaims the pious minister Perceval. My policy is
-just, and humane; fixed on immutable truths emanating directly from
-true religion, and quite consonant to the christian dispensation;
-the sick people shall have bark, I am far from wishing to prevent
-them from getting bark. God forbid! I am not so inhuman. Yes, they
-shall have bark, but their ruler must first submit to me. “Port
-thy helm,” quoth the Quaker, “or thee wilt miss her, friend!” War
-against hospitals! Oh! No! “I do not war against the hospital, I see
-the black flag waving over it and I respect it; to be sure: I throw
-my shells on to it continually, but that is not to hurt the sick,
-it is only to make the governor capitulate.” And this is the pious
-sophistry by which the christian Mr. Perceval is to be defended!
-
-But Mr. Cobbett was in favour of this measure! Listen to him! By all
-means! Let us hear Mr. Cobbett; let us hear his “vigorous sentences,”
-his opinions, his proofs, his arguments, the overflowings of his
-“true English spirit and feeling” upon the subject of Mr. Perceval’s
-administration. Yes! yes! I will listen to Mr. Cobbett, and what is
-more, I will yield implicit belief to Mr. Cobbett, where I cannot,
-with any feeling of truth, refute his arguments and assertions.
-
-Mr. Cobbett defended the Jesuit’s bark bill upon the avowed ground
-that it was to assert our sovereignty of the seas, not our actual
-power on that element, but our right to rule there as we listed.
-That is to say, that the other people of the world were not to dare
-traffic, not to dare move upon that high road of nations, not to
-presume to push their commercial intercourse with each other, nay,
-not even to communicate save under the controul and with the license
-of England. Now, if we are endowed by Heaven with such a right, in
-the name of all that is patriotic and English, let it be maintained.
-Yet it seems a strange plea in justification of the christian Mr.
-Perceval—it seems strange that he should be applauded for prohibiting
-the use of bark to the sick people of Portugal and Spain, and France,
-Holland, Flanders, Italy, and the Ionian islands, for to all these
-countries the prohibition extended, on the ground of our right to
-domineer on the wide sea; and that he should also be applauded for
-declaiming against the cruelty, the ambition, the domineering spirit
-of Napoleon. I suppose we were appointed by heaven to rule on the
-ocean according to our caprice, and Napoleon had only the devil to
-sanction his power over the continent. We were christians, “truly
-British christians,” as the Tory phrase goes; and he was an infidel,
-a Corsican infidel. Nevertheless we joined together, each under
-our different dispensations, yes, we joined together, we agreed to
-trample upon the rest of the world; and that trade, which we would
-not allow to neutrals, we, by mutual licenses, carried on ourselves,
-until it was discovered that the sick wanted bark, sorely wanted it;
-then we, the truly British christians, prohibited that article. We
-deprived the sick people of the succour of bark; and without any
-imputation on our christianity, no doubt because the tenets of our
-faith permit us to be merciless to our enemies, provided a quaker
-winks at the act! Truly the logic, the justice, and the christianity
-of this position, seem to be on a par.
-
-All sufferings lead to sickness, but we must make our enemies
-suffer, if we wish to get the better of them, let them give up the
-contest and their sufferings will cease: wherefore there is nothing
-in this stopping of medicine. This is Mr. Cobbett’s argument, and
-Mr. Cobbett’s words are adopted by Mr. Perceval’s son. To inflict
-suffering on the enemy was then the object of the measure, and of
-course the wider the suffering spread the more desirable the measure.
-Now suffering of mind as well as of body must be here meant, because
-the dead and dying are not those who can of themselves oblige the
-government of a great nation to give up a war; it must be the dread
-of such sufferings increasing, that disposes the great body of the
-people to stop the career of their rulers. Let us then torture our
-prisoners; let us destroy towns with all their inhabitants; burn
-ships at sea with all their crews; carry off children and women, and
-torment them until their friends offer peace to save them. Why do we
-not? Is it because we dread retaliation? or because it is abhorrent
-to the usages of christian nations? The former undoubtedly, if
-the younger Mr. Perceval’s argument adopted from Cobbett is just;
-the latter if there is such a thing as christian principle. That
-principle once sacrificed to expediency, there is nothing to limit
-the extent of cruelty in war.
-
-So much for Mr. Cobbett upon the Jesuit’s bark bill, but one swallow
-does not make a summer; his “true English spirit and feeling” breaks
-out on other occasions regarding Mr. Perceval’s policy, and there,
-being quite unable to find any weakness in him, I am content to take
-him as a guide. Something more, however, there is, to advance on the
-subject of the Jesuit’s bark bill, ere I yield to the temptation of
-enlivening my pages with Cobbett’s “vigorous sentences.”
-
-[Sidenote: Hansard’s Debates.]
-
-Mr. Wilberforce, no small name amongst religious men and no very
-rigorous opponent of ministers, described this measure in the house,
-as a bill “_which might add to the ferocity and unfeeling character
-of the contest, but could not possibly put an end to the contest_.”
-
-Mr. Grattan said, “_we might refuse our Jesuit’s bark to the French
-soldiers; we might inflict pains and penalties, by the acrimony of
-our statutes, upon those who were saved from the severity of war; but
-the calculation was contemptible_.”
-
-Mr. Whitbread characterized the bill as “_a most abominable measure
-calculated to hold the country up to universal execration_. _It
-united in itself detestable cruelty with absurd policy._”
-
-Lord Holland combatted the principle of the bill, which he said
-“_would distress the women and children of Spain and Portugal more
-than the enemy_.”
-
-Lord Grenville “_cautioned the house to look well at the
-consideration they were to receive as the price of the honour,
-justice, and humanity of the country_.”
-
-Then alluding to the speech of Lord Mulgrave (who, repudiating
-the flimsy veil of the bill being merely a commercial regulation,
-boldly avowed that it was an exercise of our right to resort to
-whatever mode of warfare was adopted against us) Lord Grenville, I
-say, observed, that such a doctrine did not a little surprise him.
-“_If_,” said he, “_we are at war with the Red Indians, are we to
-scalp our enemies because the Indians scalp our men? When Lyons
-was attacked by Robespierre he directed his cannon more especially
-against the hospital of that city than against any other part, the
-destruction of it gave delight to his sanguinary inhuman disposition.
-In adopting the present measure we endeavour to assimilate ourselves
-to that monster of inhumanity, for what else is the bill but a cannon
-directed against the hospitals on the continent._”
-
-[Sidenote: Hansard’s Debates.]
-
-But all this, says Mr. Perceval the younger, is but “declamatory
-invective, the answered and refuted fallacies of a minister’s
-opponents in debate.” And yet Mr. Perceval, who thus assumes that
-all the opposition speeches were fallacies, does very complacently
-quote lord Bathurst’s speech in defence of the measure, and thus,
-in a most compendious manner, decides the question. Bellarmin says
-yes! exclaimed an obscure Scotch preacher to his congregation,
-Bellarmin says yes! but I say no! and Bellarmin being thus confuted,
-we’ll proceed. Even so Mr. Perceval. But I am not to be confuted so
-concisely as Bellarmin. Lord Erskine, after hearing lord Bathurst’s
-explanation, maintained that “_the bill was contrary to the dictates
-of religion and the principles of humanity_,” and this, he said,
-he felt so strongly, that he was “resolved _to embody his opinion
-in the shape of a protest that it might go down in a record to
-posterity_.” It is also a fact not to be disregarded in this
-case, that the bishops, who were constant in voting for all other
-ministerial measures, wisely and religiously abstained from attending
-the discussions of this bill. Lord Erskine was as good as his word,
-eleven other lords joined him, and their protests contained the
-following deliberate and solemn testimony against the bill.
-
-“Because _the Jesuit’s bark, the exportation of which is prohibited
-by this bill_, has been found, by long experience, to be a specific
-for many dangerous diseases which war has a tendency to spread and
-exasperate; _and because to employ as an engine of war the privation
-of the only remedy for some of the greatest sufferings which war is
-capable of inflicting, is manifestly repugnant to the principles of
-the Christian religion, contrary to humanity, and not to be justified
-by any practice of civilised nations_.
-
-“Because _the means to which recourse has been hitherto had in war,
-have no analogy to the barbarous enactments of this bill, inasmuch
-as it is not even contended that the privations to be created by it,
-have any tendency whatever to self-defence, or to compel the enemy
-to a restoration of peace, the only legitimate object by which the
-infliction of the calamities of war can in any manner be justified_.”
-
-Such was the religious, moral, and political character, given to
-this bill of Mr. Perceval’s, by our own statesmen. Let us now hear
-the yet more solemnly recorded opinion of the statesmen of another
-nation upon Mr. Perceval’s orders in council, of which this formed a
-part. In the American president’s message to Congress, the following
-passages occur.
-
-“The government of Great Britain had already introduced into her
-commerce during war, a system _which at once violating the rights of
-other nations, and resting on a mass of perjury and forgery, unknown
-to other times, was making an unfortunate progress, in undermining
-those principles of morality and religion, which are the best
-foundations of national happiness_.”
-
-One more testimony. Napoleon, whose authority, whatever Mr. Perceval
-and men of his stamp may think, will always have a wonderful
-influence; Napoleon, at St. Helena, declared, “that posterity would
-more bitterly reproach Mr. Pitt for the hideous school he left behind
-him, than for any of his own acts; _a school marked by its insolent
-machiavelism, its profound immorality, its cold egotism, its contempt
-for the well-being of men and the justice of things_.” Mr. Perceval
-was an eminent champion of this hideous school, which we thus find
-the leading men of England, France, and America, uniting to condemn.
-And shall a musty Latin proverb protect such a politician from the
-avenging page of history? The human mind is not to be so fettered.
-Already the work of retribution is in progress.
-
-Mr. Perceval the younger, with something of fatuity, hath called up
-Mr. Cobbett to testify to his father’s political merit. Commending
-that rugged monitor of evil statesmen for his “_vigorous sentences_,”
-for his “_real English spirit and feeling_,” he cannot now demur to
-his authority; let him then read and reflect deeply on the following
-passages from that eminent writer’s works, and he may perhaps
-discover, that to defend his father’s political reputation with
-success will prove a difficult and complicate task. If the passages
-are painful to Mr. Perceval, if the lesson is severe, I am not to
-blame. It is not I but himself who has called up the mighty seer, and
-if the stern grim spirit, thus invoked, will not cease to speak until
-all be told, it is not my fault.
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Sidenote: History of George IV.]
-
-EXTRACTS FROM MR. COBBETT’S WRITINGS.
-
-_Extract 1.—Of Mr. Perceval’s harshness._
-
-“But there now came a man amongst them who soon surpassed all the
-rest in power, as well as in impudence and insolence towards the
-people. This was that Spencer Perceval of whose signal death we shall
-have to speak by and bye. This man, a sharp lawyer, inured, from his
-first days at the bar, to the carrying on of state prosecutions; a
-sort of understrapper, in London, to the attorneys-general in London,
-and frequently their deputy in the counties; a short, spare, pale
-faced, hard, keen, sour-looking man, with a voice well suited to the
-rest, with words in abundance at his command, with the industry of a
-laborious attorney, with no knowledge of the great interest of the
-nation, foreign or domestic, but with a thorough knowledge of those
-means by which power is obtained and preserved in England, and with
-no troublesome scruples as to the employment of those means. He had
-been Solicitor General under Pitt up to 1801, and Attorney General
-under Addington and Pitt up to February, 1806. This man became the
-_adviser of the Princess_, during the period of the investigation
-and correspondence of which we have just seen the history; and, as
-we are now about to see, the power he obtained, by the means of that
-office, _made him the Prime Minister of England to the day of his
-death_, though no more fit for that office than any other barrister
-in London, taken by tossing up or by ballot.”
-
-
-_Extract 2.—Of Perceval’s illiberal, factious, and crooked policy._
-
-“We have seen that the King was told that the _publication_” (the
-publication of the Princess of Wales’s justification) “would take
-place on _the Monday_. That Monday was _the 9th of March_. In this
-difficulty what was to be done? The whig ministry, with their eyes
-fixed on the _probable speedy succession of the Prince_, or at
-least, _his accession to power_, the King having recently been in a
-very shakey state; the whig ministry, with their eyes fixed on this
-expected event, and not perceiving, as Perceval did, the power that
-the _unpublished book_ (for ‘The Book’ it is now called) _would give
-them with the Prince_ as well as with the King, the whig ministry
-would not consent to the terms of the Princess, thinking, too, that
-in spite of her anger and her threats, she would not throw away the
-scabbard as towards the King.
-
-“In the meanwhile, however, Perceval, wholly unknown to the Whigs,
-had got the book actually _printed_, and bound up _ready for
-publication_, and it is clear that it was intended to be published
-on the Monday named in the Princess’s letter; namely, on the _9th of
-March_, unless prevented by the King’s _yielding to the wishes of
-Perceval_. He did yield, that is to say, he resolved _to change his
-ministers_! A _ground_ for doing this was however a difficulty to be
-got over. To allege and promulgate the _true_ ground would never do;
-for then the public would have cried aloud for the publication, which
-contained matter so deeply scandalous to the King and all the Royal
-family. Therefore _another ground_ was alleged; and herein we are
-going to behold another and another important consequence, and other
-national calamities proceeding from this dispute between the Prince
-and his wife. This other ground that was chosen was the Catholic
-Bill. The Whigs stood pledged to grant a bill for the further relief
-of the Catholics. They had in September, 1806, _dissolved the
-parliament_, though it was only _four years_ old, for the purpose of
-securing a majority in the House of Commons; and into this new house,
-which had met on the 19th of December, 1806, they had introduced the
-Catholic Bill, by the hands of Mr. Grey (now become Lord Howick,)
-with the _great and general approbation of the House_, and with a
-clear understanding, that, notwithstanding all the cant and hypocrisy
-that the foes of the Catholics had, at different times, played off
-about the _conscientious scruples_ of the King, the King had now
-explicitly and cheerfully _given his consent_ to the bringing in of
-this bill.
-
-“The new ministry had nominally at its head _the late Duke of
-Portland_; but Perceval, who was _Chancellor of the Exchequer_, was,
-in fact, the master of the whole affair, co-operating, however,
-cordially with Eldon, who now again became Chancellor. The moment
-the dismission of the Whigs was resolved on, the other party set up
-the cry of “No Popery.” The walls and houses, not only of London,
-but of the country towns and villages, were covered with these
-words, sometimes in chalk and sometimes in print; the clergy and
-corporations were all in motion, even the cottages on the skirts of
-the commons, and the forests heard fervent _blessings_ poured out
-on the head of the _good old King_ for preserving the nation from a
-rekindling of the “_fires in Smithfield_!” Never was delusion equal
-to this! Never a people so deceived; never public credulity so great;
-never hypocrisy so profound and so detestably malignant as that of
-the deceivers! The mind shrinks back at the thought of an eternity
-of suffering, even as the lot of the deliberate murderer; but if the
-thought were to be endured, it would be as applicable to that awful
-sentence awarded to hypocrisy like this.”
-
-
-_Extract 3._
-
-“The great and interesting question was, not whether the act (Regency
-Act) were agreeable to the laws and constitution of the country
-or not; not whether it was right or wrong thus to defer the full
-exercise of the Royal authority for a year; _but whether limited
-as the powers were, the Prince upon being invested with them,
-would take his old friends and companions, the Whigs, to be his
-ministers_.”—“Men in general unacquainted with the hidden motives
-that were at work no more expected that Perceval and Eldon would
-continue for one moment to be ministers under the Regent than they
-expected the end of the world.”
-
-“But a very solid reason for not turning out PERCEVAL was found in
-the power which he had with regard to the PRINCESS and the BOOK. He
-had, as has been before observed, the power of bringing her forward,
-and making her the triumphant rival of her husband. This power he had
-completely in his hands, backed as he was by the indignant feelings
-of an enterprizing, brave, and injured woman. But, it was necessary
-for him to do something to keep this great and terrific power in his
-own hands. If he lost the princess he lost his only prop; and, even
-without losing her, if he lost the book, or rather, if the secrets
-of the book escaped and became public, he then lost his power. It
-was therefore of the greatest importance to him that nobody should
-possess a copy of this book but _himself_!
-
-“The reader will now please to turn back to paragraph 73, which he
-will find in chap. 11. He will there find that Perceval ousted the
-Whigs by the means of the book, and not by the means of the catholic
-question, as the hoodwinked nation were taught to believe. The book
-had been purchased by Perceval himself; it had been printed, in a
-considerable edition, by Mr. Edwards, printer, in the Strand; the
-whole edition had been put into the hands of a bookseller; the day
-of publication was named, that being the 9th of March, 1807; but on
-the 7th of March, or thereabouts, the king determined upon turning
-out the Whigs and taking in Perceval. Instantly PERCEVAL suppressed
-THE BOOK; took the edition out of the hands of the booksellers,
-thinking that he had every copy in his own possession. The story has
-been in print about his having burned the books in the court yard
-of his country house; but be this as it may, he certainly appears
-to have thought that no one but himself had a copy of THE BOOK.
-In this however he was deceived; for several copies of this book,
-as many as four or five, at least, were in the hands of private
-individuals.”—“To get at these copies advertisements appeared in
-all the public papers, as soon as the Prince had determined to
-keep Perceval as his minister. These advertisements plainly enough
-described the contents of the book, and contained offers of high
-prices for the book to such persons as might have a copy to dispose
-of. In this manner the copies were bought up: one was sold for £300,
-one or two for £500 each, one for £1000, and the last for £1500.”
-
-
-_Extract 4.—Of Mr. Perceval’s harshness and illiberality._
-
-—— ——“Thus Perceval really ruled the country in precisely what manner
-he pleased. Whole troops of victims to the libel law were crammed
-into jails, the corrupt part of the press was more audacious than
-ever, and the other part of it (never very considerable) was reduced
-nearly to silence. But human enjoyments of every description are of
-uncertain duration: political power, when founded on force, is of a
-nature still more mutable than human enjoyments in general; of which
-observations this haughty and insolent Perceval was destined, in the
-spring of 1812, to afford to the world a striking, a memorable, and
-a most awful example. He had got possession of the highest office
-in the state; by _his secret_, relative to the Princess and her
-BOOK, had secured his influence with the Prince Regent for their
-joint lives; he had bent the proud necks of the landlords to fine,
-imprisonment, and transportation, if they attempted to make inroads
-on his system to support the all-corrupting paper-money; the press
-he had extinguished or had rendered the tool of his absolute will;
-the most eminent amongst the writers who opposed him, Cobbett (the
-author of this history,) Leigh and John Hunt, Finnerty, Drakard,
-Lovel, together with many more, were closely shut up in jail, for
-long terms, with heavy fines on their heads, and long bail at the
-termination of their imprisonment. Not content with all this, he
-meditated the complete subjugation of London to the control and
-command of a military force. Not only did he meditate this, but had
-the audacity to propose it to the parliament; and if his life had not
-been taken in the evening of the 11th of May, 1812, he, that very
-evening, was going to propose, in due form, a resolution for the
-establishment of a permanent army to be stationed in Marybonne-park,
-for the openly avowed purpose of _keeping the metropolis in awe_.”
-
-
-_Extract 5.—Of Mr. Perceval’s unpopularity._
-
-“Upon the news of the death of Perceval arriving at Nottingham, at
-Leicester, at Truro, and indeed all over the country, demonstrations
-of joy were shown by the ringing of bells, the making of bonfires,
-and the like; and at Nottingham particularly, soldiers were called
-out to disperse the people upon the occasion.”——“At the place of
-execution, the prisoner (Bellingham) thanked God for having enabled
-him to meet his fate with so much fortitude and resignation. At the
-moment when the hangman was making the usual preparations; at the
-moment that he was going out of the world, at the moment when he
-was expecting every breath to be his last, his ears were saluted
-with—_God bless you, God bless you, God Almighty bless you, God
-Almighty bless you_! issuing from the lips of many thousands of
-persons.”——“With regard to the fact of the offender going out of
-the world amidst the blessings of the people, I, the author of this
-history, can vouch for its truth, having been an eye and ear witness
-of the awful and most memorable scene, standing, as I did, at the
-window of that prison out of which he went to be executed, and into
-which I had been put in consequence of a prosecution ordered by this
-very Perceval, and the result of which prosecution was a sentence
-to be imprisoned _two years_ amongst felons in Newgate, to pay _a
-thousand pounds_ to the Prince Regent at the end of the two years,
-and to be held in bonds for _seven years_ afterwards; all which was
-executed upon me to the very letter, except that I rescued myself
-from the society of the felons by a cost of twenty guineas a week,
-for the _hundred and four weeks_; and all this I had to suffer for
-having published a paragraph, in which I expressed my indignation
-at the flogging of English local militiamen, at the town of Ely,
-in England, _under a guard of Hanoverian bayonets_. From this
-cause, I was placed in a situation to witness the execution of this
-unfortunate man. The crowd was assembled in the open space just under
-the window at which I stood. I saw the anxious looks, I saw the half
-horrified countenances; I saw the mournful tears run down; and I
-heard the unanimous blessings.”
-
-“The nation was grown heartily tired of the war; it despaired
-of seeing an end to it without utter ruin to the country; the
-expenditure was arrived at an amount that frightened even
-loan-mongers and stock-jobbers; and the shock given to people’s
-confidence by Perceval’s recent acts, which had proclaimed to the
-whole world the fact of the depreciation of the paper-money; these
-things made even the pretended exclusively loyal secretly rejoice at
-his death, which they could not help hoping would lead to some very
-material change in the managing of the affairs of the country.”
-
-
-_Extract 6.—Of Mr. Hamlyn, the Tinman._
-
-[Sidenote: Cobbett’s Register.]
-
-“I shall now address you, though it need not be much at length, upon
-the subject of lord Castlereagh’s conduct. The business was brought
-forward by lord Archibald Hamilton, who concluded his speech with
-moving the following resolutions: ‘1º. That it appears to the House,
-from the evidence on the table, that lord viscount Castlereagh,
-in the year 1805, shortly after he had quitted the situation of
-President of the Board of Control, and being a Privy Councillor and
-Secretary of State, did place at the disposal of lord Clancarty, a
-member of the same board, the nomination to a writership, in order
-to facilitate his procuring a seat in Parliament. 2º. That it was
-owing to a disagreement among the subordinate parties, that this
-transaction did not take effect; and 3º., that by this conduct lord
-Castlereagh had been guilty of a gross violation of his duty as a
-servant of the Crown; an abuse of his patronage as President of the
-Board of Control; and an attack upon the purity of that House.’”
-
-“Well, but what did the House agree to? Why, to this: ‘Resolved,
-that it is the duty of this House to maintain a _jealous guard_ over
-the _purity of election_; but considering that the attempt of lord
-viscount Castlereagh to interfere in the election of a member _had
-not been successful_, this House does not consider it necessary to
-enter into any criminal proceedings against him.’”
-
-“Now, then, let us see what was done in the case of Philip Hamlyn,
-the tinman of Plymouth, who offered a bribe to Mr. Addington, when
-the latter was minister. The case was this: in the year 1802, Philip
-Hamlyn, a tinman of Plymouth, wrote a letter to Mr. Henry Addington,
-the first Lord of the Treasury and Chancellor of the Exchequer,
-offering him the sum of £2000 to give him, Hamlyn, the place of Land
-Surveyor of Customs at Plymouth. In consequence of this, a criminal
-information was filed against the said Hamlyn, by _Mr. Spencer
-Perceval_, who was then the King’s Attorney General, and who, in
-pleading against the offender, asserted _the distinguished purity of
-persons in power in the present day_. The tinman was found guilty; he
-was sentenced to pay a fine of £100 to the King, and to be imprisoned
-for three months. His business was ruined, and he himself died, in a
-few months after his release from prison.”
-
-“Hamlyn confessed his guilt; he stated, in his affidavit, that he
-sincerely repented of his crime; that he was forty years of age; that
-his business was the sole means of supporting himself and family;
-that a severe judgment might be the total ruin of himself and that
-family; and that, therefore, he threw himself upon, and implored,
-the mercy of his prosecutors and the Court. In reference to this,
-Mr. Perceval, _the present Chancellor of the Exchequer_, observe,
-said: ‘The circumstances which the defendant discloses, respecting
-his own situation in life and of his family are all of them topics,
-very well adapted to affect the private feelings of individuals, and
-as far as that consideration goes, nothing further need be said;
-but, there would have been no prosecution at all, in this case, upon
-the ground of personal feeling; it was set on foot upon grounds of a
-public nature, and the spirit in which the prosecution originated,
-still remains; it is, therefore, submitted to your lordships, not on
-a point of individual feeling, but of PUBLIC JUSTICE, in which case
-your lordships will consider how far the affidavits ought to operate
-in mitigation of punishment.’—“For lord Archibald Hamilton’s motion,
-the speakers were, lord A. Hamilton, Mr. C. W. Wynn, lord Milton,
-Mr. W. Smith, Mr. Grattan, Mr. Ponsonby, sir Francis Burdett, Mr.
-Whitbread, and Mr. Tierney. _Against it_, lord Castlereagh himself,
-lord Binning, Mr. Croker, Mr. PERCEVAL, (who prosecuted Hamlyn,)
-Mr. Banks, Mr. G. Johnstone, Mr. H. Lascelles, Mr. Windham, and Mr.
-Canning.”
-
-
-_Extract 7.—Of Mr. Quentin Dick._
-
-(On the 11th of May, 1809, Mr. Maddocks made a charge against Mr.
-Perceval and lord Castlereagh, relative to the selling of a seat in
-Parliament to Mr. Quentin Dick, and to the influence exercised with
-Mr. Dick, as to his voting upon the recent important question.) Mr.
-Maddocks in the course of his speech said:—“I affirm, then, that Mr.
-Dick _purchased a seat in the House of Commons_ for the borough of
-Cashel, through the agency of the Hon. Henry Wellesley, who acted
-for, and on behalf of, the Treasury; that upon a _recent question_ of
-the last importance, when Mr. Dick had determined to vote according
-to his conscience, the noble lord, Castlereagh, did intimate to that
-gentleman the necessity of either his _voting with the government,
-or resigning his seat in that house_: and that Mr. Dick, sooner than
-vote against principle, did make choice of the latter alternative,
-and vacate his seat accordingly. To this transaction I charge the
-right honourable gentleman, _Mr. Perceval, as being privy and having
-connived at it_. This I will ENGAGE TO PROVE BY WITNESSES AT YOUR
-BAR, if the House will give me leave to call them.” Mr. Perceval
-argued against receiving the charge at all, putting it to the House,
-“_whether_ AT SUCH A TIME _it would be wise to warrant such species
-of charges as merely introductory to the agitation of the great
-question of reform, he left it to the House to determine_: but as
-far as he might be allowed to judge, he rather thought that it would
-be more consistent with what was due from him to the House and to
-the public, _if he_ FOR THE PRESENT _declined putting in the plea_
-(he could so conscientiously put in) _until that House had come to a
-determination on the propriety of entertaining that charge or not_.”
-
-The House voted _not_ to entertain the charge, and Mr. Ponsonby and
-others declared, in the course of the debate, that such transactions
-ought not to be inquired into, because they “were notorious,” and had
-become “as glaring as the noon-day sun.”
-
-
-Now let the younger Mr. Perceval grapple with this historian and
-public writer, whose opinions he has invoked, whose “_true English
-spirit and feeling_” he has eulogised. Let him grapple with these
-extracts from his works, which, however, are but a tithe of the
-charges Mr. Cobbett has brought against his father. For my part, I
-have given my proofs, and reasons, and authorities, and am entitled
-to assert, that my public character of Mr. Perceval, the minister,
-is, historically, “_fair, just, and true_.”
-
-
-
-
-HISTORY
-
-OF THE
-
-WAR IN THE PENINSULA.
-
-
-
-
-HISTORY
-
-OF THE
-
-PENINSULAR WAR.
-
-
-
-
-BOOK XVII.
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-[Sidenote: 1812.]
-
-Great and surprising as the winter campaign had been, its importance
-was not understood, and therefore not duly appreciated by the English
-ministers. But the French generals saw with anxiety that lord
-Wellington, having snapped the heavy links of the chain which bound
-him to Lisbon, had acquired new bases of operation on the Guadiana,
-the Agueda, and the Douro, that he could now choose his own field of
-battle, and Spain would feel the tread of his conquering soldiers.
-Those soldiers with the confidence inspired by repeated successes,
-only demanded to be led forward, but their general had still to
-encounter political obstacles, raised by the governments he served.
-
-In Spain, the leading men, neglecting the war at hand, were entirely
-occupied with intrigues, with the pernicious project of reducing
-their revolted colonies, or with their new constitution. In
-Portugal, and in the Brazils, a jealous opposition to the general on
-the part of the native authorities had kept pace with the military
-successes. In England the cabinet, swayed by Mr. Perceval’s narrow
-policy, was still vacillating between its desire to conquer and
-its fear of the expense. There also the Whigs greedy of office and
-dexterous in parliamentary politics, deafened the country with their
-clamours, while the people, deceived by both parties as to the nature
-of the war, and wondering how the French should keep the field at
-all, were, in common with the ministers, still doubtful, if their
-commander was truly a great man or an impostor.
-
-The struggle in the British cabinet having ended with the resignation
-of lord Wellesley, the consequent predominance of the Perceval
-faction, left small hopes of a successful termination to the contest
-in the Peninsula. Wellington had, however, carefully abstained from
-political intrigues, and his brother’s retirement, although a subject
-of regret, did not affect his own personal position; he was the
-General of England, untrammelled, undegraded by factious ties, and
-responsible to his country only for his actions. The ministers might,
-he said, relinquish or continue the war, they might supply his wants,
-or defraud the hopes of the nation by their timorous economy, his
-efforts must be proportioned to his means; if the latter were great,
-so would be his actions, under any circumstances he would do his
-best, yet he was well assured the people of England would not endure
-to forego triumph at the call of a niggard parsimony. It was in this
-temper that he had undertaken the siege of Badajos, in this temper
-he had stormed it, and meanwhile political affairs in England were
-brought to a crisis.
-
-Lord Wellesley had made no secret of Mr. Perceval’s mismanagement of
-the war, and the public mind being unsettled, the Whigs were invited
-by the Prince Regent, his year of restrictions having now expired, to
-join a new administration. But the heads of that faction would not
-share with Mr. Perceval, and he, master of the secrets relating to
-the detestable persecution of the Princess of Wales, was too powerful
-to be removed. However, on the 11th of May, Perceval was killed in
-the house of Commons, and this act, which was a horrible crime,
-but politically no misfortune either to England or the Peninsula,
-produced other negociations, upon a more enlarged scheme with regard
-both to parties and to the system of government. Personal feelings
-again prevailed. Lord Liverpool would not unite with lord Wellesley,
-the Grey and Grenville faction would not serve their country without
-having the disposal of all the household offices, and lord Moira,
-judging a discourtesy to the Prince Regent too high a price to pay
-for their adhesion, refused that condition. The materials of a new
-cabinet were therefore drawn from the dregs of the Tory faction, and
-lord Liverpool became prime minister.
-
-It was unfortunate that a man of lord Wellesley’s vigorous talent
-should have been rejected for lord Liverpool, but this remnant of
-a party being too weak to domineer, proved less mischievous with
-respect to the Peninsula than any of the preceding governments.
-There was no direct personal interest opposed to lord Wellington’s
-wishes, and the military policy of the cabinet yielding by degrees
-to the attraction of his ascending genius, was finally absorbed
-in its meridian splendour. Many practical improvements had also
-been growing up in the official departments, especially in that of
-war and colonies, where colonel Bunbury, the under-secretary, a
-man experienced in the wants of an army on service, had reformed
-the incredible disorders which pervaded that department during the
-first years of the contest. The result of the political crisis was
-therefore comparatively favourable to the war in the Peninsula, the
-story of which shall now be resumed.
-
-It has been shewn how the danger of Gallicia, and the negligence of
-the Portuguese and Spanish authorities with reference to Almeida and
-Ciudad Rodrigo, stopped the invasion of Andalusia, and brought the
-allies back to Beira. But if Wellington, pursuing his first plan, had
-overthrown Soult on the banks of the Guadalquivir and destroyed the
-French arsenal at Seville, his campaign would have ranked amongst
-the most hardy and glorious that ever graced a general; and it is
-no slight proof of the uncertainty of war, that combinations, so
-extensive and judicious, should have been marred by the negligence
-of a few secondary authorities, at points distant from the immediate
-scenes of action. The English general had indeed under-estimated the
-force opposed to him, both in the north and south; but the bravery
-of the allied troops, aided by the moral power of their recent
-successes, would have borne that error, and in all other particulars
-his profound military judgment was manifest.
-
-Yet to obtain a true notion of his views, the various operations
-which he had foreseen and provided against must be considered,
-inasmuch as they shew the actual resources of the allies, the
-difficulty of bringing them to bear with due concert, and the
-propriety of looking to the general state of the war, previous to
-each of Wellington’s great movements. For his calculations were
-constantly dependent upon the ill-judged operations of men, over
-whom he had little influence, and his successes, sudden, accidental,
-snatched from the midst of conflicting political circumstances, were
-as gems brought up from the turbulence of a whirlpool.
-
-Castaños was captain-general of Gallicia, as well as of Estremadura,
-and when Ciudad Rodrigo fell, lord Wellington, expecting from his
-friendly feeling some efficient aid, had counselled him upon all the
-probable movements of the enemy during the siege of Badajos.
-
-First. He supposed Marmont might march into Estremadura, either with
-or without the divisions of Souham and Bonnet. In either case, he
-advised that Abadia should enter Leon, and, according to his means,
-attack Astorga, Benavente, Zamora, and the other posts fortified
-by the enemy in that kingdom; and that Carlos d’España, Sanchez,
-Saornil, in fine all the partidas in Castile and the Asturias, and
-even Mendizabel, who was then in the Montaña St. Ander, should come
-to Abadia’s assistance. He promised also that the regular Portuguese
-cavalry, under Silveira and Bacellar, should pass the Spanish
-frontier. Thus a force of not less than twenty-five thousand men
-would have been put in motion on the rear of Marmont, and a most
-powerful diversion effected in aid of the siege of Badajos and the
-invasion of Andalusia.
-
-The next operation considered, was that of an invasion of Gallicia,
-by five divisions of the army of Portugal, the three other divisions,
-and the cavalry, then in the valley of the Tagus and about Bejar,
-being left to contend, in concert with Soult, for Badajos. To help
-Abadia to meet such an attack, Bacellar and Silveira had orders to
-harass the left flank and rear of the French, with both infantry and
-cavalry, as much as the nature of the case would admit, regard being
-had to the safety of their raw militia, and to their connection with
-the right flank of the Gallician army, whose retreat was to be by
-Orense.
-
-Thirdly. The French might invade Portugal north of the Douro. Abadia
-was then to harass their right flank and rear, while the Portuguese
-opposed them in front; and whether they fell on Gallicia or Portugal,
-or Estremadura, Carlos d’España, and the Partidas, and Mendizabel,
-would have an open field in Leon and Castile.
-
-Lastly, the operation which really happened was considered, and
-to meet it lord Wellington’s arrangements were, as we have seen,
-calculated to cover the magazines on the Douro, and the Mondego, and
-to force the enemy to take the barren difficult line of country,
-through Lower Beira, towards Castelo Branco, while Abadia and the
-Guerilla chiefs entered Castile and Leon on his rear. Carlos d’España
-had also been ordered to break down the bridges on the Yeltes, and
-the Huebra, in front of Ciudad Rodrigo, and that of Barba de Puerco
-on the Agueda to the left of that fortress. Marmont would thus have
-been delayed two days, and the magazines both at Castelo Branco and
-Celorico saved by the near approach of the allied army.
-
-España did none of these things, neither did Abadia nor Mendizabel
-operate in a manner to be felt by the enemy, and their remissness,
-added to the other faults noticed in former observations, entirely
-marred Wellington’s defensive plan in the north, and brought
-him back to fight Marmont. And when that general had passed the
-Agueda in retreat, the allied army wanting the provisions which
-had been so foolishly sacrificed at Castelo Branco, was unable to
-follow; the distant magazines on the Douro and the Mondego were
-its only resource; then also it was found that Ciudad and Almeida
-were in want, and before those places could be furnished, and the
-intermediate magazines on the lines of communication restored, it was
-too late to march against Andalusia. For the harvest which ripens
-the beginning of June in that province and a fortnight later in
-Estremadura, would have enabled the army of Portugal to follow the
-allies march by march.
-
-Now Marmont, as Napoleon repeatedly told him, had only to watch lord
-Wellington’s movements, and a temporary absence from Castile would
-have cost him nothing of any consequence, because the army of the
-north would have protected the great communication with France. The
-advantages of greater means, and better arrangements for supply,
-on which Wellington had calculated, would thus have been lost, and
-moreover, the discontented state of the garrison of Ciudad Rodrigo,
-and the approach of a new battering train from France, rendered it
-dangerous to move far from that fortress. The invasion of Andalusia,
-judicious in April, would in the latter end of May have been a
-false movement; and the more so that Castaños having, like his
-predecessors, failed to bring forward the Gallician army, it was
-again made painfully evident, that in critical circumstances no aid
-could be obtained from that quarter.
-
-Such being the impediments to an invasion of Andalusia, it behoved
-the English general to adopt some other scheme of offence more
-suitable to the altered state of affairs. He considered that as the
-harvest in Leon and Castile, that is to say, in the districts north
-of the Gredos and Gata mountains, was much later than in Estremadura
-and Andalusia, he should be enabled to preserve his commissariat
-advantages over the French in the field for a longer period in the
-north than in the south. And if he could strike a decisive blow
-against Marmont, he would relieve Andalusia as securely as by a
-direct attack, because Madrid would then fall, and Soult, being thus
-cut off from his communications with France, would fear to be hemmed
-in on all sides. Wherefore to make the duke of Ragusa fight a great
-battle, to calculate the chances, and prepare the means of success,
-became the immediate objects of lord Wellington’s thoughts.
-
-The French general might be forced to fight by a vigorous advance
-into Castile, but a happy result depended upon the relative skill
-of the generals, the number and goodness of the troops. Marmont’s
-reputation was great, yet hitherto the essays had been in favour
-of the Englishman’s talents. The British infantry was excellent,
-the cavalry well horsed, and more numerous than it had ever been.
-The French cavalry had been greatly reduced by drafts made for the
-Russian contest, by the separation of the army of the north from
-that of Portugal, and by frequent and harassing marches. Marmont
-could indeed be reinforced with horsemen from the army of the centre,
-and from the army of the north, but his own cavalry was weak, and
-his artillery badly horsed, whereas the allies’ guns were well and
-powerfully equipped. Every man in the British army expected victory,
-and this was the time to seek it, because, without pitched battles
-the French could never be dispossessed of Spain, and they were now
-comparatively weaker than they had yet been, or were expected to
-be; for such was the influence of Napoleon’s stupendous genius,
-that his complete success in Russia, and return to the Peninsula
-with overwhelming forces, was not doubted even by the British
-commander. The time, therefore, being propitious, and the chances
-favourable, it remained only to combine the primary and secondary
-operations in such a manner, that the French army of Portugal,
-should find itself isolated for so long as would enable the allies
-to force it singly into a general action. If the combinations failed
-to obtain that great result, the march of the French succouring
-corps, would nevertheless relieve various parts of Spain, giving
-fresh opportunities to the Spaniards to raise new obstacles, and it
-is never to be lost sight of, that this principle was always the
-base of Wellington’s plans. Ever, while he could secure his final
-retreat into the strong holds of Portugal without a defeat, offensive
-operations, beyond the frontiers, could not fail to hurt the French.
-
-To effect the isolating of Marmont’s army, the first condition was
-to be as early in the field as the rainy season would permit, and
-before the coming harvest enabled the other French armies to move
-in large bodies. But Marmont could avail himself, successively,
-of the lines of the Tormes and the Douro to protract the campaign
-until the ripening of the harvest enabled reinforcements to join
-him, and hence the security of the allies’ flanks and rear during
-the operations, and of their retreat, if overpowered, was to be
-previously looked to. Soult, burning to revenge the loss of Badajos,
-might attack Hill with superior numbers, or detach a force across
-the Tagus, which, in conjunction with the army of the centre, now
-directed by Jourdan, could advance upon Portugal by the valley of the
-Tagus, and so turn the right flank of the allied army in Castile.
-Boats and magazines supplied from Toledo and Madrid, were already
-being collected at the fort of Lugar Nueva, near Almaraz, and from
-hence, as from a place of arms, the French could move upon Coria,
-Placencia, and Castelo Branco, menacing Abrantes, Celorico, Ciudad
-Rodrigo, and Almeida, while detachments from the army of the north
-reinforced the army of Portugal. But to obviate this last danger
-Wellington had planned one of those enterprizes, which as they are
-successful, principally because of their exceeding boldness, are
-beheld with astonishment when achieved, and are attributed to madness
-when they fail.
-
-
-SURPRISE OF ALMARAZ.
-
-For a clear understanding of this event, the reader must call to
-mind, 1º. that the left bank of the Tagus, from Toledo to Almaraz, is
-lined with rugged mountains, the ways through which, impracticable
-for an army, are difficult even for small divisions; 2º. that from
-Almaraz to the frontier of Portugal, the banks, although more open,
-were still difficult, and the Tagus was only to be crossed at
-certain points, to which bad roads leading through the mountains
-descended. But from Almaraz to Alcantara, all the bridges had been
-long ruined, and those of Arzobispo and Talavera, situated between
-Almaraz and Toledo, were of little value, because of the ruggedness
-of the mountains above spoken of. Soult’s pontoon equipage had been
-captured in Badajos, and the only means of crossing the Tagus,
-possessed by the French, from Toledo to the frontier of Portugal, was
-a boat-bridge laid down at Almaraz by Marmont, and to secure which he
-had constructed three strong forts and a bridge-head.
-
-The first of these forts, called Ragusa, was a magazine, containing
-many stores and provisions, and it was, although not finished,
-exceedingly strong, having a loopholed stone tower, twenty-five feet
-high within, and being flanked without by a field-work near the
-bridge.
-
-[Sidenote: Jones’s Sieges.]
-
-On the left bank of the Tagus the bridge had a fortified head of
-masonry, which was again flanked by a redoubt, called Fort Napoleon,
-placed on a height a little in advance. This redoubt, though
-imperfectly constructed, inasmuch as a wide berm, in the middle of
-the scarp, offered a landing place to troops escalading the rampart,
-was yet strong because it contained a second interior defence or
-retrenchment, with a loopholed stone tower, a ditch, draw-bridge, and
-palisades.
-
-These two forts, and the bridge-head, were armed with eighteen guns,
-and they were garrisoned by above a thousand men, which seemed
-sufficient to insure the command of the river; but the mountains on
-the left bank still precluded the passage of an army towards Lower
-Estremadura, save by the royal road to Truxillo, which road, at
-the distance of five miles from the river, passed over the rugged
-Mirabete ridge, and to secure the summit of the mountain the
-French had drawn another line of works, across the throat of the
-pass. This line consisted of a large fortified house, connected by
-smaller posts, with the ancient watch-tower of Mirabete, which itself
-contained eight guns, and was surrounded by a rampart twelve feet
-high.
-
-If all these works and a road, which Marmont, following the traces of
-an ancient Roman way, was now opening across the Gredos mountains had
-been finished, the communication of the French, although circuitous,
-would have been very good and secure. Indeed Wellington fearing the
-accomplishment, intended to have surprised the French at Almaraz
-previous to the siege of Badajos, when the redoubts were far from
-complete, but the Portuguese government neglected to furnish the
-means of transporting the artillery from Lisbon, and he was baffled.
-General Hill was now ordered to attempt it with a force of six
-thousand men, including four hundred cavalry, two field brigades of
-artillery, a pontoon equipage, and a battering train of six iron
-twenty-four pound howitzers.
-
-[Sidenote: May.]
-
-[Sidenote: See Plan, No. 1.]
-
-[Sidenote: Joseph’s Correspondence, MSS.]
-
-The enterprize at all times difficult was become one of extreme
-delicacy. When the army was round Badajos, only the resistance of
-the forts themselves was to be looked for; now Foy’s division of the
-army of Portugal had returned to the valley of the Tagus, and was
-in no manner fettered, and d’Armagnac, with troops from the army
-of the centre, occupied Talavera. Drouet also was, with eight or
-nine thousand men of the army of the south, at Hinojosa de Cordoba,
-his cavalry was on the road to Medellin, he was nearer to Merida
-than Hill was to Almaraz, he might intercept the latter’s retreat,
-and the king’s orders were imperative that he should hang upon the
-English army in Estremadura. Soult could also detach a corps from
-Seville by St. Ollala to fall upon sir William Erskine, who was
-posted with the cavalry and the remainder of Hill’s infantry, near
-Almendralejo. However lord Wellington placed general Graham near
-Portalegre, with the first and sixth divisions, and Cotton’s cavalry,
-all of which had crossed the Tagus for the occasion, and thus
-including Erskine’s corps, above twenty thousand men were ready to
-protect Hill’s enterprize.
-
-Drouet by a rapid march might still interpose between Hill and
-Erskine, and beat them in detail before Graham could support them,
-wherefore the English general made many other arrangements to deceive
-the enemy. First, he chose the moment of action when Soult having
-sent detachments in various directions, to restore his communications
-in Andalusia, had marched himself with a division to Cadiz, and was
-consequently unfavourably placed for a sudden movement. Secondly, by
-rumours adroitly spread, and by demonstrations with the Portuguese
-militia of the Alemtejo, he caused the French to believe that ten
-thousand men were moving down the Guadiana, towards the Niebla,
-preparatory to the invasion of Andalusia, a notion upheld by the
-assembling of so many troops under Graham, by the pushing of cavalry
-parties towards the Morena, and by restoring the bridge at Merida,
-with the avowed intention of sending Hill’s battering and pontoon
-train, which had been formed at Elvas, to Almendralejo. Finally,
-many exploring officers, taking the roads leading to the province
-of Cordoba, made ostentatious inquiries about the French posts at
-Belalcazar and other places, and thus every thing seemed to point at
-Andalusia.
-
-The restoration of the bridge at Merida proving unexpectedly
-difficult, cost a fortnight’s labour, for two arches having been
-destroyed the opening was above sixty feet wide, and large timber was
-scarce. Hill’s march was thus dangerously delayed, but on the 12th of
-May, the repairs being effected and all else being ready, he quitted
-Almendralejo, passed the Guadiana, at Merida, with near six thousand
-men and twelve field-pieces, and joined his pontoons and battering
-train. These last had come by the way of Montijo, and formed a
-considerable convoy, nearly fifty country carts, besides the guns and
-limber carriages, being employed to convey the pontoons, the ladders,
-and the ammunition for the howitzers.
-
-[Sidenote: Foy’s Official Correspondence, MSS.]
-
-The 13th the armament reached the Burdalo river on the road to
-Truxillo; the 14th it was at Villa Mesias; the 15th at Truxillo.
-Meanwhile, to mislead the enemy on the right bank of the Tagus the
-guerillas of the Guadalupe mountains made demonstrations at different
-points between Almaraz and Arzobispo, as if they were seeking a place
-to cast a bridge that Hill might join lord Wellington. General Foy
-was deceived by these operations, and though his spies at Truxillo
-had early informed him of the passage of the Guadiana by the allies,
-they led him to believe that Hill had fifteen thousand men, and that
-two brigades of cavalry were following in his rear; one report even
-stated that thirty thousand men had entered Truxillo, whereas there
-were less than six thousand of all arms.
-
-Hill having reached Jaraicejo early on the 16th, formed his troops
-in three columns, and made a night march, intending to attack by
-surprise and at the same moment, the tower of Mirabete, the fortified
-house in the pass, and the forts at the bridge of Almaraz. The left
-column, directed against the tower, was commanded by general Chowne.
-The centre column, with the dragoons and the artillery, moved by the
-royal road, under the command of general Long. The right column,
-composed of the 50th, 71st, and 92d regiments, under the direction of
-Hill in person, was intended to penetrate by the narrow and difficult
-way of La Cueva, and Roman Gordo against the forts at the bridge. But
-the day broke before any of the columns reached their destination,
-and all hopes of a surprise were extinguished. This untoward
-beginning was unavoidable on the part of the right and centre column,
-because of the bad roads; but it would appear that some negligence
-had retarded general Chowne’s column, and that the castle of Mirabete
-might have been carried by assault before day-light.
-
-The difficulty, great before, was now much increased. An attentive
-examination of the French defences convinced Hill that to reduce the
-works in the pass, he must incur more loss than was justifiable, and
-finish in such plight that he could not afterwards carry the forts at
-the bridge, which were the chief objects of his expedition. Yet it
-was only through the pass of Mirabete that the artillery could move
-against the bridge. In this dilemma, after losing the 17th and part
-of the 18th in fruitless attempts to discover some opening through
-which to reach the valley of Almaraz with his guns, he resolved to
-leave them on the Sierra with the centre column, and to make a
-false attack upon the tower with general Chowne’s troops while he
-himself, with the right column, secretly penetrated by the scarcely
-practicable line of La Cueva and Roman Gordo to the bridge, intent,
-with infantry alone, to storm works which were defended by eighteen
-pieces of artillery and powerful garrisons!
-
-This resolution was even more hardy, and bold, than it appears
-without a reference to the general state of affairs. Hill’s march
-had been one of secrecy, amidst various divisions of the enemy; he
-was four days’ journey distant from Merida, which was his first
-point of retreat; he expected that Drouet would be reinforced, and
-advance towards Medellin, and hence, whether defeated or victorious
-at Almaraz, that his own retreat would be very dangerous; exceedingly
-so if defeated, because his fine British troops could not be
-repulsed with a small loss, and he should have to fall back through
-a difficult country, with his best soldiers dispirited by failure,
-and burthened with numbers of wounded men. Then harassed on one side
-by Drouet, pursued by Foy and D’Armagnac on the other, he would have
-been exposed to the greatest misfortunes, every slanderous tongue
-would have been let loose on the rashness of attacking impregnable
-forts, and a military career, hitherto so glorious, might have
-terminated in shame. But general Hill being totally devoid of
-interested ambition, was necessarily unshaken by such fears.
-
-The troops remained concealed in their position until the evening
-of the 18th, and then the general, reinforcing his own column with
-the 6th Portuguese regiment, a company of the 60th rifles, and the
-artillery-men of the centre column, commenced the descent of the
-valley. His design was to storm Fort Napoleon before day-light, and
-the march was less than six miles, but his utmost efforts could
-only bring the head of the troops to the fort, a little before
-day-light, the rear was still distant, and it was doubtful if the
-scaling-ladders, which had been cut in halves to thread the short
-narrow turns in the precipitous descent, would serve for an assault.
-Fortunately some small hills concealed the head of the column from
-the enemy, and at that moment general Chowne commenced the false
-attack on the castle of Mirabete. Pillars of white smoke rose on the
-lofty brow of the Sierra, the heavy sound of artillery came rolling
-over the valley, and the garrison of Fort Napoleon, crowding on the
-ramparts, were anxiously gazing at these portentous signs of war,
-when, quick and loud, a British shout broke on their ears, and the
-gallant 50th regiment, aided by a wing of the 71st, came bounding
-over the nearest hills.
-
-The French were surprised to see an enemy so close while the
-Mirabete was still defended, yet they were not unprepared, for
-a patrole of English cavalry had been seen from the fort on the
-17th in the pass of Roman Gordo; and in the evening of the 18th a
-woman of that village had carried very exact information of Hill’s
-numbers and intentions to Lugar Nueva. This intelligence had caused
-the commandant Aubert to march in the night with reinforcements
-to Fort Napoleon, which was therefore defended by six companies,
-including the 39th French and the voltigeurs of a foreign regiment.
-These troops were ready to fight, and when the first shout was
-heard, turning their heads, they, with a heavy fire of musketry and
-artillery, smote the assailants in front, while the guns of Fort
-Ragusa took them in flank from the opposite side of the river; in
-a few moments, however, a rise of ground, at the distance of only
-twenty yards from the ramparts, covered the British from the front
-fire, and general Howard, in person, leading the foremost troops into
-the ditch, commenced the escalade. The great breadth of the berm
-kept off the ends of the shortened ladders from the parapet, but
-the soldiers who first ascended, jumped on to the berm itself, and
-drawing up the ladders planted them there, and thus, with a second
-escalade, forced their way over the rampart; then, closely fighting,
-friends and enemies went together into the retrenchment round the
-stone tower. Colonel Aubert was wounded and taken, the tower was not
-defended, and the garrison fled towards the bridge-head, but the
-victorious troops would not be shaken off, and entered that work also
-in one confused mass with the fugitives, who continued their flight
-over the bridge itself. Still the British soldiers pushed their
-headlong charge, slaying the hindmost, and they would have passed the
-river if some of the boats had not been destroyed by stray shots from
-the forts, which were now sharply cannonading each other, for the
-artillery-men had turned the guns of Napoleon on Fort Ragusa.
-
-Many of the French leaped into the water and were drowned, but the
-greatest part were made prisoners, and to the amazement of the
-conquerors, the panic spread to the other side of the river; the
-garrison of Fort Ragusa, although perfectly safe, abandoned that
-fort also and fled with the others along the road to Naval Moral.
-Some grenadiers of the 92d immediately swam over and brought back
-several boats, with which the bridge was restored, and Fort Ragusa
-was gained. The towers and other works were then destroyed, the
-stores, ammunition, provisions, and boats were burned in the course
-of the day, and in the night the troops returned to the Sierra above,
-carrying with them the colours of the foreign regiment, and more than
-two hundred and fifty prisoners, including a commandant and sixteen
-other officers. The whole loss on the part of the British was about
-one hundred and eighty men, and one officer of artillery was killed
-by his own mine, placed for the destruction of the tower; but the
-only officer slain in the actual assault was captain Candler, a brave
-man, who fell while leading the grenadiers of the 50th on to the
-rampart of Fort Napoleon.
-
-[Sidenote: Foy’s Official Correspondence, MSS.]
-
-This daring attack was executed with a decision similar to that with
-which it had been planned. The first intention of general Hill was,
-to have directed a part of his column against the bridge-head, and so
-to have assailed both works together, but when the difficulties of
-the road marred this project, he attacked the nearest work with the
-leading troops, leaving the rear to follow as it could. This rapidity
-was an essential cause of the success, for Foy hearing on the 17th
-that the allies were at Truxillo, had ordered D’Armagnac to reinforce
-Lugar Nueva with a battalion, which being at Naval Moral the 18th,
-might have entered Fort Ragusa early in the morning of the 19th; but
-instead of marching before day-break, this battalion did not move
-until eleven o’clock, and meeting the fugitives on the road, caught
-the panic and returned.
-
-The works at Mirabete being now cut off from the right bank of the
-Tagus, general Hill was preparing to reduce them with his heavy
-artillery, when a report, from sir William Erskine, caused him, in
-conformity with his instructions, to commence a retreat on Merida,
-leaving Mirabete blockaded by the guerillas of the neighbourhood.
-It appeared that Soult, being at Chiclana, heard of the allies’
-march the 19th, and then only desired Drouet to make a diversion in
-Estremadura without losing his communication with Andalusia; for he
-did not perceive the true object of the enterprize, and thinking
-he had to check a movement, which the king told him was made for
-the purpose of reinforcing Wellington in the north, resolved to
-enforce Hill’s stay in Estremadura. In this view he recalled his own
-detachments from the Niebla, where they had just dispersed a body
-of Spaniards at Castillejos, and then forming a large division at
-Seville, he purposed to strengthen Drouet and enable him to fight
-a battle. But that general, anticipating his orders, had pushed an
-advanced guard of four thousand men to Dom Benito the 17th, and his
-cavalry patroles passing the Guadiana on the 18th had scoured the
-roads to Miajadas and Merida, while Lallemand’s dragoons drove back
-the British outposts from Ribera, on the side of Zafra.
-
-Confused by these demonstrations, sir William Erskine immediately
-reported to Graham, and to Hill, that Soult himself was in
-Estremadura with his whole army, whereupon Graham came up to Badajos,
-and Hill, fearful of being cut off, retired, as I have said, from
-Mirabete on the 21st, and on the 26th reached Merida unmolested.
-Drouet then withdrew his advanced guards, and Graham returned to
-Castelo de Vide. Notwithstanding this error Wellington’s precautions
-succeeded, for if Drouet had been aware of Hill’s real object,
-instead of making demonstrations with a part of his force, he would
-with the whole of his troops, more than ten thousand, have marched
-rapidly from Medellin to fall on the allies as they issued out of the
-passes of Truxillo, and before Erskine or Graham could come to their
-aid; whereas acting on the supposition that the intention was to
-cross the Tagus, his demonstrations merely hastened the retreat, and
-saved Mirabete. To meet Hill in the right place, would, however, have
-required very nice arrangements and great activity, as he could have
-made his retreat by the road of Caceres as well as by that of Merida.
-
-Lord Wellington was greatly displeased that this false alarm,
-given by Erskine, should have rendered the success incomplete; yet
-he avoided any public expression of discontent, lest the enemy,
-who had no apparent interest in preserving the post of Mirabete,
-should be led to keep it, and so embarrass the allies when their
-operations required a restoration of the bridge of Almaraz. To the
-ministers however he complained, that his generals, stout in action,
-personally, as the poorest soldiers, were commonly so overwhelmed
-with the fear of responsibility when left to themselves, that the
-slightest movement of the enemy deprived them of their judgment, and
-they spread unnecessary alarm far and wide. But instead of expressing
-his surprise, he should rather have reflected on the cause of this
-weakness. Every British officer of rank knew, that without powerful
-interest, his future prospects, and his reputation for past services,
-would have withered together under the first blight of misfortune;
-that a selfish government would instantly offer him up, a victim to a
-misjudging public and a ribald press with whom success is the only
-criterion of merit. English generals are and must be prodigal of
-their blood to gain a reputation, but they are necessarily timid in
-command, when a single failure, even without a fault, consigns them
-to an old age of shame and misery. It is however undeniable that sir
-William Erskine was not an able officer.
-
-On the other side the king was equally discontented with Soult,
-whose refusal to reinforce Drouet, he thought had caused the loss of
-Almaraz, and he affirmed that if Hill had been more enterprising, the
-arsenal of Madrid might have fallen as well as the dépôt of Almaraz,
-for he thought that general had brought up his whole corps instead of
-a division only six thousand strong.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-
-[Sidenote: 1812. April.]
-
-While the Anglo-British army was thus cleansing and strengthening
-its position on the frontier of Portugal, the progress of the war
-in other parts had not been so favourable to the common cause. It
-has already been shewn that Gallicia, in the latter part of 1811,
-suffered from discord, poverty, and ill success in the field; that
-an extraordinary contribution imposed upon the province, had been
-resisted by all classes, and especially at Coruña the seat of
-Government; finally that the army torn by faction was become hateful
-to the people. In this state of affairs Castaños having, at the
-desire of lord Wellington, assumed the command, removed the seat of
-Government to St. Jago, leaving the troops in the Bierzo under the
-marquis of Portazgo.
-
-Prudent conduct and the personal influence of the new captain-general
-soothed the bitterness of faction, and stopped, or at least checked
-for the moment, many of the growing evils in Gallicia, and the
-regency at Cadiz assigned an army of sixty thousand men for that
-province. But the revenues were insufficient even to put the few
-troops already under arms in motion, and Castaños, although desirous
-to menace Astorga while Marmont was on the Agueda, could not,
-out of twenty-two thousand men, bring even one division into the
-field. Nevertheless, so strange a people are the Spaniards, that
-a second expedition against the colonies, having with it all the
-field-artillery just supplied by England, would have sailed from
-Vigo but for the prompt interference of sir Howard Douglas.
-
-When Castaños saw the penury of his army, he as usual looked to
-England for succour, at the same time, however, both he and the Junta
-made unusual exertions to equip their troops, and the condition of
-the soldiers was generally ameliorated. But it was upon the efforts
-of the Partidas that the British agent chiefly relied. His system,
-with respect to those bodies, has been before described, and it is
-certain that under it, greater activity, more perfect combination,
-more useful and better timed exertions, had marked their conduct,
-and their efforts directed to the proper objects, were kept in some
-subordination to the operations of the allies. This was however so
-distasteful to the regular officers, and to the predominant faction,
-always fearful of the priestly influence over the allies, that sir
-Howard was offered the command of six thousand troops to detach him
-from the Guerilla system; and the Partidas of the northern provinces
-would now have been entirely suppressed, from mere jealousy, by the
-general government, if lord Wellington and sir H. Wellesley had not
-strenuously supported the views of Douglas which were based on the
-following state of affairs.
-
-The French line of communication extending from Salamanca to Irun,
-was never safe while the Gallician and Asturian forces, the English
-squadrons, and the Partidas in the Montaña, in Biscay, in the Rioja,
-and in the mountains of Burgos and Leon, menaced it from both sides.
-The occupation of the Asturias, the constant presence of a division
-in the Montaña, the employment of a corps to threaten Gallicia, and
-the great strength of the army of the north, were all necessary
-consequences of this weakness. But though the line of communication
-was thus laboriously maintained, the lines of correspondence, in this
-peculiar war of paramount importance, were, in despite of numerous
-fortified posts, very insecure, and Napoleon was always stimulating
-his generals to take advantage of each period of inactivity, on the
-part of the British army, to put down the partidas. He observed, that
-without English succours they could not remain in arms, that the
-secret of their strength was to be found on the coast, and that all
-the points, which favoured any intercourse with vessels, should be
-fortified. And at this time so anxious was he for the security of his
-correspondence, that he desired, if necessary, the whole army of the
-north should be employed merely to scour the lines of communication.
-
-[Sidenote: See Plan, No. 6.]
-
-In accordance with these views, Santona, the most important point on
-the coast, had been rendered a strong post in the summer of 1811, and
-then Castro, Portagalete at the mouth of the Bilbao river, Bermeo,
-Lesquito, and Guetaria, were by degrees fortified. This completed
-the line eastward from Santander to St. Sebastian, and all churches,
-convents, and strong houses, situated near the mouths of the creeks
-and rivers between those places were entrenched. The partidas being
-thus constantly intercepted, while attempting to reach the coast,
-were nearly effaced in the latter end of 1811, and a considerable
-part of the army of the north was, in consequence, rendered
-disposable for the aid of the army of Portugal. But when Bonet,
-because of the siege of Ciudad Rodrigo, evacuated the Asturias, the
-French troops in the Montaña were again exposed to the enterprizes of
-the seventh army, which had been immediately succoured by Douglas,
-and which, including guerillas, was said to be twenty-three thousand
-strong. Wherefore Napoleon had so early as March directed that the
-Asturias should be re-occupied, and one of Bonet’s brigades, attached
-to the army of the north, rejoined him in consequence; but the pass
-of Pajares being choked with snow, Bonet, who was then on the Orbijo,
-neglected this order until the approach of finer weather.
-
-[Sidenote: May.]
-
-In May, Marmont having returned from Portugal, the emperor’s order
-was reiterated, and the French troops on the Orbijo, being augmented
-to fifteen thousand drew the attention of the Gallicians to that
-quarter, while Bonet, passing the mountains of Leon, with eight
-thousand men, re-occupied Oviedo, Grado, and Gihon, and established
-small posts communicating through the town of Leon, with the army of
-Portugal. Thus a new military line was established which interrupted
-the Gallicians’ communications with the partidas, the chain of
-sea-port defences was continued to Gihon, a constant intercourse with
-France was maintained, and those convoys came safely by water, which
-otherwise would have had to travel by land escorted by many troops
-and in constant danger.
-
-Meanwhile Marmont, having distributed his division in various parts
-of Leon, was harassed by the partidas, especially Porlier’s, yet he
-proceeded diligently with the fortifying of Toro and Zamora, on the
-Douro, and converted three large convents at Salamanca into so many
-forts capable of sustaining a regular siege; the works of Astorga and
-Leon were likewise improved, and strong posts were established at
-Benavente, La Baneza, Castro-Contrigo, and intermediate points. The
-defensive lines of the Tormes and the Douro were thus strengthened
-against the British general, and as four thousand men sufficed to
-keep the Gallician forces of the Bierzo and Puebla Senabria in check,
-the vast and fertile plains of Leon, called the _Tierras de Campos_,
-were secured for the French, and their detachments chased the bands
-from the open country.
-
-Sir Howard Douglas observing the success of the enemy in cutting off
-the Partidas from the coast, and the advantage they derived from
-the water communication; considering also that, if lord Wellington
-should make any progress in the coming campaign, new lines of
-communication with the sea would be desirable, proposed, that a
-powerful squadron with a battalion of marines and a battery of
-artillery, should be secretly prepared for a littoral warfare on the
-Biscay coast. This suggestion was approved of, and sir Home Popham
-was sent from England, in May, with an armament, well provided with
-scaling-ladders, arms, clothing, and ammunition for the Partidas, and
-all means to effect sudden disembarkations. But the ministers were
-never able to see the war in its true point of view, they were always
-desponding, or elated, and sanguine, beyond what reason warranted in
-either case. Popham was ordered not only to infest the coast but, if
-possible, to seize some point, and hold it permanently as an entrance
-into Biscay, by which the French positions might be turned, if, as
-in 1808, they were forced to adopt the line of the Ebro! Now at this
-period three hundred thousand French soldiers were in the Peninsula,
-one hundred and twenty thousand were in the northern provinces, and,
-without reckoning the army of the centre which could also be turned
-in that direction, nearly fifty thousand were expressly appropriated
-to the protection of this very line of communication, on which a
-thousand marines were to be permanently established, in expectation
-of the enemy being driven over the Ebro by a campaign which was not
-yet commenced!
-
-While Marmont was in Beira, the activity of the seventh army, and
-of the Partidas, in the Montaña, was revived by the supplies which
-sir Howard Douglas, taking the opportunity of Bonet’s absence, had
-transmitted to them through the Asturian ports. The ferocity of the
-leaders was remarkable. Mina’s conduct was said to be very revolting;
-and on the 16th of April the curate Merino coming from the mountains
-of Espinosa, to the forests between Aranda de Duero, and Hontorica
-Valdearados, took several hundred prisoners, and hanged sixty of
-them, in retaliation for three members of the local junta, who had
-been put to death by the French; he executed the others also in the
-proportion of ten for each of his own soldiers who had been shot by
-the enemy. The ignorance and the excited passions of the Guerilla
-chiefs, may be pleaded in mitigation of their proceedings, but to
-the disgrace of England, these infamous executions by Merino were
-recorded with complacency, in the newspapers, and met with no public
-disapprobation.
-
-There are occasions, when retaliation, applied to men of rank, may
-stop the progress of barbarity, yet the necessity should be clearly
-shewn, and the exercise restricted to such narrow limits, that no
-reasonable ground should be laid for counter-retaliation. Here, sixty
-innocent persons were deliberately butchered to revenge the death
-of three, and no proof offered that even those three were slain
-contrary to the laws of war; and though it is not to be doubted
-that the French committed many atrocities, some in wantonness, some
-in revenge, such savage deeds as the curate’s are inexcusable.
-What would have been said if Washington had hanged twenty English
-gentlemen, of family, in return for the death of captain Handy;
-or if sir Henry Clinton had caused twenty American officers, to
-die, for the execution of André? Like atrocities are, however, the
-inevitable consequence of a Guerilla system not subordinate to the
-regular government of armies, and ultimately they recoil upon the
-helpless people of the country, who cannot fly from their enemies.
-When the French occupied a district, famine often ensued, because to
-avoid distant forages they collected large stores of provisions from
-a small extent of country, and thus the Guerilla system, while it
-harassed the French, without starving them, both harassed and starved
-the people. And many of the chiefs of bands, besides their robberies,
-when they dared not otherwise revenge affronts or private feuds,
-would slay some prisoners, or stragglers, so as to draw down the
-vengeance of the French on an obnoxious village, or district. This in
-return produced associations of the people, for self-defence in many
-places, by which the enemy profited.
-
-[Sidenote: March.]
-
-Soon after this exploit a large convoy having marched from Burgos
-towards France, Merino endeavoured to intercept it, and Mendizabel,
-who notwithstanding his defeat by Bonet, had again gathered twelve
-hundred cavalry, came from the Liebana, and occupied the heights
-above Burgos. The French immediately placed their baggage and
-followers in the castle, and recalled the convoy, whereupon the
-Spaniards, dispersing in bands, destroyed the fortified posts of
-correspondence, at Sasamon, and Gamonal, and then returned to the
-Liebana. But Bonet had now re-occupied the Asturias, the remnant of
-the Spanish force, in that quarter, fled to Mendizabel, and the whole
-shifted as they could in the hills. Meanwhile Mina displayed great
-energy. In February he repulsed an attack near Lodosa, and having
-conveyed the prisoners taken at Huesca to the coast, returned to
-Aragon and maintained a distant blockade of Zaragoza itself. In March
-he advanced, with a detachment, to Pina, and captured one of Suchet’s
-convoys going to Mequinenza; but having retired, with his booty, to
-Robres, a village on the eastern slopes of the Sierra de Alcubierre,
-he was there betrayed to general Pannetier, who with a brigade of the
-army of the Ebro, came so suddenly upon him that he escaped death
-with great difficulty.
-
-He reappeared in the Rioja, and although hotly chased by troops from
-the army of the north, escaped without much loss, and, having five
-thousand men, secretly gained the defiles of Navas Tolosa, behind
-Vittoria, where on the 7th of April, he defeated with great loss a
-Polish regiment, which was escorting the enormous convoy that had
-escaped the curate and Mendizabel at Burgos. The booty consisted of
-treasure, Spanish prisoners, baggage, followers of the army, and
-officers retiring to France. All the Spanish prisoners, four hundred
-in number, were released and joined Mina, and, it is said, that one
-million of francs fell into his hands, besides the equipages, arms,
-stores, and a quantity of church plate.
-
-[Sidenote: May.]
-
-[Sidenote: See Plan, No. 6.]
-
-On the 28th he captured another convoy going from Valencia to France,
-but general Abbé, who had been recently made governor of Navarre,
-now directed combined movements from Pampeluna, Jacca, and Sangüesa,
-against him. And so vigorously did this general, who I have heard
-Mina declare to be the most formidable of all his opponents, urge on
-the operations, that after a series of actions, on the 25th, 26th,
-and 28th of May, the Spanish chief, in bad plight, and with the
-utmost difficulty, escaped by Los Arcos to Guardia, in the Rioja.
-Marshal Victor seized this opportunity to pass into France, with the
-remains of the convoy shattered on the 7th, and all the bands in the
-north were discouraged. However, Wellington’s successes, and the
-confusion attending upon the departure of so many French troops for
-the Russian war, gave a powerful stimulus to the partizan chiefs in
-other directions. The Empecinado, ranging the mountains of Cuenca and
-Guadalaxara, pushed his parties close to Madrid; Duran entered Soria,
-and raised a contribution in the lower town; Villa Campa, Bassecour,
-and Montijo, coming from the mountains of Albarracin, occupied Molino
-and Orejuella, and invested Daroca; the Catalonian Gayan, taking
-post in the vicinity of Belchite, made excursions to the very gates
-of Zaragoza; the Frayle, haunting the mountains of Alcañiz and the
-Sierra de Gudar, interrupted Suchet’s lines of communication by
-Morella and Teruel, and along the right bank of the Ebro towards
-Tortoza. Finally, Gay and Miralles infested the Garriga on the left
-bank.
-
-It was to repress these bands that the army of the Ebro, containing
-twenty thousand men, of whom more than sixteen thousand were under
-arms, was formed by drafts from Suchet’s army, and given to general
-Reille. That commander immediately repaired to Lerida, occupied Upper
-Aragon with his own division, placed Severoli’s division between
-Lerida and Zaragoza, and general Frere’s between Lerida, Barcelona,
-and Taragona; but his fourth division, under Palombini, marched
-direct from Valencia towards the districts of Soria and Calatayud,
-to form the link of communication between Suchet and Caffarelli.
-The latter now commanded the army of the north, but the imperial
-guards, with the exception of one division, had quitted Spain, and
-hence, including the government’s and the reserve of Monthion, this
-army was reduced to forty-eight thousand under arms. The reserve at
-Bayonne was therefore increased to five thousand men, and Palombini
-was destined finally to reinforce Caffarelli, and even to march, if
-required, to the aid of Marmont in Leon. However the events of the
-war soon caused Reille to repair to Navarre, and broke up the army
-of the Ebro, wherefore it will be clearer to trace the operations of
-these divisions successively and separately, and in the order of the
-provinces towards which they were at first directed.
-
-[Sidenote: February.]
-
-[Sidenote: March.]
-
-Palombini having left a brigade at the entrenched bridge of Teruel,
-relieved Daroca on the 23d of February, and then deceiving Villa
-Campa, Montijo, and Bassecour, who were waiting about the passes of
-Toralva to fall on his rear-guard, turned them by the Xiloca, and
-reached Calatayud. This effected, he fortified the convent of La
-Peña, which, as its name signifies, was a rocky eminence, commanding
-that city and forming a part of it. But on the 4th of March, having
-placed his baggage and artillery in this post, under a guard of
-three hundred men, he dispersed his troops to scour the country and
-to collect provisions, and the partidas, seeing this, recommenced
-operations. Villa Campa cut off two companies at Campillo on the 8th,
-and made a fruitless attempt to destroy the Italian colonel Pisa
-at Ateca. Five hundred men were sent against him, but he drew them
-towards the mountains of Albarracin, and destroyed them at Pozonhonda
-on the 28th; then marching another way, he drove the Italians from
-their posts of communication as far as the town of Albarracin on the
-road to Teruel, nor did he regain the mountains until Palombini came
-up on his rear and killed some of his men. The Italian general then
-changing his plan, concentrated his division on the plains of Hused,
-where he suffered some privations, but remained unmolested until
-the 14th of April, when he again marched to co-operate with Suchet
-in a combined attempt to destroy Villa Campa. The Spanish chief
-evaded both by passing over to the southern slopes of the Albarracin
-mountains, and before the Italians could return to Hused, Gayan, in
-concert with the alcalde of Calatayud, had exploded a plot against
-the convent of La Peña.
-
-[Sidenote: April.]
-
-Some of the Italian officers, including the commandant, having rashly
-accepted an invitation to a feast, were sitting at table, when Gayan
-appeared on a neighbouring height; the guests were immediately
-seized, and many armed citizens ran up to surprise the convent, and
-sixty soldiers were made prisoners, or killed in the tumult below;
-but the historian, Vacani, who had declined to attend the feast,
-made a vigorous defence, and on the 1st of May general St. Pol
-and colonel Schiazzetti, coming from Hused, and Daroca, raised the
-siege. Schiazzetti marched in pursuit, and as his advanced guard was
-surprised at Mochales by a deceit of the alcalde, he slew the latter,
-whereupon the Spaniards killed the officers taken at the feast of
-Calatayud.
-
-[Sidenote: May.]
-
-Gayan soon baffled his pursuers, and then moved by Medina Celi and
-Soria to Navarre, thinking to surprise a money convoy going to
-Burgos for the army of Portugal, but being followed on one side by
-a detachment from Hused, and met on the other by Caffarelli, he
-was driven again to the hills above Daroca. Here he renewed his
-operations in concert with Villa Campa and the Empecinado, who came
-up to Medina Celi, while Duran descended from the Moncayo hills,
-and this menacing union of bands induced Reille, in May, to detach
-general Paris, with a French regiment and a troop of hussars, to the
-aid of Palombini. Paris moved by Calatayud, while Palombini briskly
-interposing between Duran and Villa Campa, drove the one towards
-Albarracin and the other towards Soria; and in June, after various
-marches, the two French generals uniting, dislodged the Empecinado
-from Siguenza, chasing him so sharply that his band dispersed and
-fled to the Somosierra.
-
-[Sidenote: June.]
-
-During these operations, Mina was pressed by Abbé, but Duran entering
-Tudela by surprise, destroyed the artillery parc, and carried off a
-battering train of six guns. Palombini was only a few marches from
-Madrid, and the king, alarmed by lord Wellington’s preparations for
-opening the campaign, ordered him to join the army of the centre, but
-these orders were intercepted, and the Italian general retraced his
-steps, to pursue Duran. He soon recovered the guns taken at Tudela,
-and drove the Spanish chief through the Rioja into the mountains
-beyond the sources of the Duero; then collecting boats, he would have
-passed the Ebro, for Caffarelli was on the Arga, with a division of
-the army of the north, and a brigade had been sent by Reille to the
-Aragon river with the view of destroying Mina. This chief, already
-defeated by Abbé, was in great danger, when a duplicate of the king’s
-orders having reached Palombini, he immediately recommenced his march
-for the capital, which saved Mina. Caffarelli returned to Vittoria,
-and the Italians reaching Madrid the 21st of July, became a part of
-the army of the centre, having marched one hundred and fifty miles
-in seven days without a halt. Returning now to the other divisions
-of the army of the Ebro, it is to be observed, that their movements
-being chiefly directed against the Catalans, belong to the relation
-of that warfare.
-
-
-OPERATIONS IN ARAGON AND CATALONIA.
-
-[Sidenote: See Vol. IV Book XV.]
-
-After the battle of Altafulla, the fall of Peniscola, and the arrival
-of Reille’s first division on the Ebro, Decaen, who had succeeded
-Macdonald in Upper Catalonia, spread his troops along the coast, with
-a view to cut off the communication between the British navy and the
-interior, where the Catalan army still held certain positions.
-
-[Sidenote: February.]
-
-Lamarque, with a division of five thousand men, first seized and
-fortified Mataro, and then driving Milans from Blanes, occupied
-the intermediate space, while detachments from Barcelona fortified
-Moncada, Mongat, and Molino del Rey, thus securing the plain of
-Barcelona on every side.
-
-The line from Blanes to Cadagués, including Canets, St. Filieu,
-Palamos, and other ports, was strengthened, and placed under general
-Bearman.
-
-General Clement was posted in the vicinity of Gerona, to guard the
-interior French line of march from Hostalrich to Figueras.
-
-Tortoza, Mequinenza, and Taragona were garrisoned by detachments from
-Severoli’s division, which was quartered between Zaragoza and Lerida,
-and in communication with Bourke’s and Pannetier’s brigades of the
-first division of the army of reserve.
-
-General Frere’s division was on the communication between Aragon and
-Catalonia, and there was a division under general Quesnel, composed
-partly of national guards, in the Cerdaña. Finally there was a
-moveable reserve, of six or eight thousand men, with which Decaen
-himself marched from place to place as occasion required; but the
-supreme command of Valencia, Aragon, and Catalonia was with Suchet.
-
-The Catalans still possessed the strong holds of Cardona, Busa, Sceu
-d’Urgel, and the Medas islands, and they had ten thousand men in
-the field. Lacy was at Cardona with Sarzfield’s division, and some
-irregular forces; colonel Green was organizing an experimental corps
-at Montserrat, near which place Erolles was also quartered; Rovira
-continued about the mountains of Olot; Juan Claros, who occupied
-Arenis de Mar when the French were not there, was now about the
-mountains of Hostalrich; Milans, Manso, and the Brigand Gros, being
-driven from the coast line, kept the hills near Manreza; Gay and
-Miralles were on the Ebro. But the communication with the coast being
-cut off, all these chiefs were in want of provisions and stores,
-and the French were forming new roads along the sea-line, beyond the
-reach of the English ship guns.
-
-[Sidenote: Capt. Codrington’s papers, MSS.]
-
-Lacy thus debarred of all access to the coast, feeding his troops
-with difficulty, and having a great number of prisoners and deserters
-to maintain in Cardona, and Busa, because Coupigny refused to
-receive them in the Balearic isles, Lacy, I say, disputing with the
-Junta, and the generals, and abhorred by the people, in his spleen
-desired captain Codrington to cannonade all the sea-coast towns in
-the possession of the French, saying he would give the inhabitants
-timely notice; but he did not do so, and when Codrington reluctantly
-opened his broadsides upon Mataro, many of the people were slain. The
-Catalans complained loudly of this cruel, injudicious operation, and
-hating Lacy, affected Erolles more than ever, and the former sent him
-with a few men to his native district of Talarn, ostensibly to raise
-recruits, and make a diversion in Aragon, but really to deprive him
-of his division and reduce his power.
-
-[Sidenote: March.]
-
-The distress in the Catalan army now became so great, that Sarzfield
-was about to force his way to the coast, and embark his division to
-commence a littoral warfare, when Erolles having quickly raised and
-armed a new division entered Aragon, whereupon Sarzfield followed
-him. The baron having entered the valley of Venasque, advanced to
-Graus, menacing all the district between Fraga and Huesca; but those
-places were occupied by detachments from Bourke’s brigade of the
-army of the Ebro, and at this moment Severoli arrived from Valencia,
-whereupon the Spaniards instead of falling back upon Venasque,
-retired up the valley of the Isabena, to some heights above Roda, a
-village on the confines of Aragon.
-
-Erolles had not more than a thousand regular infantry, three guns,
-and two hundred cavalry, for he had left five hundred in the valley
-of Venasque, and Bourke knowing this, and encouraged by the vicinity
-of Severoli, followed hastily from Benavarre, with about two thousand
-men of all arms, thinking Erolles would not stand before him. But
-the latter’s position besides being very steep and rough in front,
-was secured on both flanks by precipices, beyond which, on the
-hills, all the partidas of the vicinity were gathered; he expected
-aid also from Sarzfield, and was obliged to abide a battle or lose
-the detachment left in the valley of Venasque. Bourke keeping two
-battalions in reserve attacked with the third, but he met with a
-stubborn opposition, and after a long skirmish, in which he lost a
-hundred and fifty men, and Erolles a hundred, was beaten, and being
-wounded himself, retreated to Monza, in great confusion. This combat
-was very honorable to Erolles, but it was exposed to doubt and
-ridicule, at the time, by the extravagance of his public despatch;
-for he affirmed, that his soldiers finding their muskets too hot, had
-made use of stones, and in this mixed mode of action had destroyed a
-thousand of the enemy!
-
-[Sidenote: April.]
-
-Severoli now advanced, and Erolles being still unsupported by
-Sarzfield, retired to Talarn, whereupon the Italian general returned
-to Aragon. Meanwhile Lacy who had increased his forces, approached
-Cervera, while Sarzfield, accused by Erolles of having treacherously
-abandoned him, joined with Gay and Miralles, occupying the hills
-about Taragona, and straitening that place for provisions. Milans
-and Manso also uniting, captured a convoy at Arenis de Mar, and the
-English squadron intercepted several vessels going to Barcelona.
-
-[Sidenote: May.]
-
-[Sidenote: Capt. Codrington’s papers, MSS.]
-
-Decaen observing this fresh commotion came down from Gerona with
-his reserve. He relieved Taragona on the 28th of April, and then
-marched with three thousand men upon Lerida, but on the way, hearing
-that Sarzfield was at Fuentes Rubino, near Villa Franca, he took the
-road of Braffin and Santa Coloma instead of Momblanch, and suddenly
-turning to his right defeated the Spanish general, and then continued
-his march by Cervera towards Lerida. Lacy in great alarm immediately
-abandoned Lower Catalonia and concentrated Manso’s, Milans’, Green’s,
-and Sarzfield’s divisions, in the mountains of Olot, and as they
-were reduced in numbers he reinforced them with select Somatenes,
-called the Companies of Preferencia. After a time however seeing
-that Decaen remained near Lerida, he marched rapidly against the
-convent of Mataro, with five thousand men and with good hope, for the
-garrison consisted of only five hundred, the works were not strong,
-and captain Codrington, who had anchored off Mataro at Lacy’s desire,
-lent some ship guns; but his sailors were forced to drag them to
-the point of attack, because Lacy and Green had, in breach of their
-promise, neglected to provide means of transport.
-
-The wall of the convent gave way in a few hours, but on the 5th,
-Lacy, hearing that Decaen was coming to succour the place, broke
-up the siege and buried the English guns without having any
-communication with captain Codrington. The French found these guns
-and carried them into the convent, yet Lacy, to cover his misconduct,
-said in the official gazette, that they were safely re-embarked.
-
-[Sidenote: June.]
-
-After this disreputable transaction, Manso, who alone had behaved
-well, retired with Milans to Vich, Lacy went to Cardona, the French
-sent a large convoy into Barcelona, and the men of Erolles’ ancient
-division were, to his great discontent, turned over to Sarzfield,
-who took post near Molina del Rey, and remained there until the 5th
-of June, when a detachment from Barcelona drove him to the Campo de
-Taragona. On the 14th of the same month, Milans was defeated near
-Vich by a detachment from the Ampurdan, and being chased for several
-days suffered considerably. Lamarque followed Sarzfield into the
-Campo and defeated him again on the 24th, near Villa Nueva de Sitjes,
-and this time the Spanish general was wounded, yet made his way by
-Santa Coloma de Querault and Calaf to Cardona where he rejoined Lacy.
-Lamarque then joined Deacen in the plains of Lerida, where all the
-French moveable forces were now assembled, with a view to gather the
-harvest; a vital object to both parties, but it was attained by the
-French.
-
-[Sidenote: Codrington’s papers, MSS.]
-
-This with Lacy’s flight from Mattaro, the several defeats of Milans,
-and Sarzfield, and the discontent of Erolles, disturbed the whole
-principality; and the general disquietude was augmented by the
-increase of all the frauds and oppressions, which both the civil
-and military authorities under Lacy, practised with impunity. Every
-where there was a disinclination to serve in the regular army. The
-Somatene argued, that while he should be an ill-used soldier, under
-a bad general, his family would either become the victims of French
-revenge or starve, because the pay of the regular troops was too
-scanty, were it even fairly issued, for his own subsistence; whereas,
-remaining at home, and keeping his arms, he could nourish his family
-by his labour, defend it from straggling plunderers, and at the same
-time always be ready to join the troops on great occasions. In some
-districts the people, seeing that the army could not protect them,
-refused to supply the partidas with food, unless upon contract not to
-molest the French in their vicinity. The spirit of resistance would
-have entirely failed, if lord Wellington’s successes at Ciudad and
-Badajos, and the rumour that an English army was coming to Catalonia,
-had not sustained the hopes of the people.
-
-[Sidenote: July.]
-
-Meanwhile the partidas in the north, being aided by Popham’s
-expedition, obliged Reille to remove to Navarre, that Caffarelli
-might turn his whole attention to the side of Biscay, and the
-Montaña. Decaen then received charge of the Lower as well as of
-the Upper Catalonia, which weakened his position; and at the same
-time some confusion was produced, by the arrival of French prefects
-and councillors of state, to organize a civil administration. This
-measure, ostensibly to restrain military licentiousness, had probably
-the ultimate object of preparing Catalonia for an union with France,
-because the Catalans who have peculiar customs and a dialect of
-their own, scarcely call themselves Spaniards. Although these events
-embarrassed the French army, the progress of the invasion was visible
-in the altered feelings, of the people whose enthusiasm was stifled
-by the folly and corruption, with which their leaders aided the
-active hostility of the French.
-
-[Sidenote: Codrington’s papers, MSS.]
-
-The troops were reduced in number, distressed for provisions, and
-the soldiers deserted to the enemy, a thing till then unheard of in
-Catalonia, nay, the junta having come down to the coast were like
-to have been delivered up to the French, as a peace offering. The
-latter passed, even singly, from one part to the other, and the
-people of the sea-coast towns readily trafficked with the garrison
-of Barcelona, when neither money nor threats could prevail on them
-to supply the British squadron. Claros and Milans were charged with
-conniving at this traffic, and of exacting money for the landing of
-corn, when their own people and soldiers were starving. But to such a
-degree was patriotism overlaid by the love of gain, that the colonial
-produce, seized in Barcelona, and other parts, was sold, by the
-enemy, to French merchants, and the latter undertook both to carry
-it off, and pay with provisions on the spot, which they successfully
-executed by means of Spanish vessels, corruptly licensed for the
-occasion by Catalan authorities.
-
-Meanwhile the people generally accused the junta of extreme
-indolence, and Lacy, of treachery; and tyranny because of his
-arbitrary conduct in all things, but especially that after
-proclaiming a general rising, he had disarmed the Somatenes,
-and suppressed the independent bands. He had quarreled with the
-British naval officers, was the avowed enemy of Erolles, the
-secret calumniator of Sarzfield, and withal a man of no courage or
-enterprize in the field. Nor was the story of his previous life,
-calculated to check the bad opinion generally entertained of him. It
-was said that, being originally a Spanish officer, he was banished,
-for an intrigue, to the Canaries, from whence he deserted to the
-French, and again deserted to his own countrymen, when the war of
-independence broke out.
-
-Under this man, the frauds, which characterize the civil departments
-of all armies in the field, became destructive, and the extent of
-the mischief may be gathered from a single fact. Notwithstanding the
-enormous supplies granted by England, the Catalans paid nearly three
-millions sterling, for the expense of the war, besides contributions
-in kind, and yet their soldiers were always distressed for clothing,
-food, arms, and ammunition.
-
-[Sidenote: Codrington’s papers, MSS.]
-
-[Sidenote: Codrington’s papers, MSS.]
-
-This amount of specie might excite doubt, were it not that here, as
-in Portugal, the quantity of coin accumulated from the expenditure
-of the armies and navies was immense. But gold is not always the
-synonyme of power in war, or of happiness in peace. Nothing could be
-more wretched than Catalonia. Individually the people were exposed
-to all the licentiousness of war, collectively to the robberies,
-and revenge, of both friends and enemies. When they attempted to
-supply the British vessels, the French menaced them with death; when
-they yielded to such threats, the English ships menaced them with
-bombardment, and plunder. All the roads were infested with brigands,
-and in the hills large bands of people, whose families and property
-had been destroyed, watched for straggling Frenchmen and small
-escorts, not to make war but to live on the booty; when this resource
-failed they plundered their own countrymen. While the land was thus
-harassed, the sea swarmed with privateers of all nations, differing
-from pirates only in name; and that no link in the chain of infamy,
-might be wanting, the merchants of Gibraltar, forced their smuggling
-trade at the ports, with a shameless disregard for the rights of the
-Spanish government. Catalonia seemed like some huge carcass, on which
-all manner of ravenous beasts, all obscene birds, and all reptiles
-had gathered to feed.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-OPERATIONS IN VALENCIA AND MURCIA.
-
-
-[Sidenote: 1812. April.]
-
-Suchet having recovered his health was again at the head of the
-troops, but the king’s military authority was so irksome to him, that
-he despatched an officer to represent the inconvenience of it to the
-Emperor, previous to that monarch’s departure for Russia. The answer
-in some degree restored his independence; he was desired to hold his
-troops concentrated, and move them in the manner most conducive to
-the interests of his own command. Hence, when Joseph, designing to
-act against lord Wellington in Estremadura, demanded the aid of one
-division, Suchet replied that he must then evacuate Valencia; and as
-the natural line of retreat for the French armies would, during the
-contemplated operations, be by the eastern provinces, it would be
-better to abandon Andalusia first! an answer calculated to convince
-Joseph that his authority in the field was still but a name.
-
-Suchet, from a natural disposition towards order, and because
-his revenue from the fishery of the Albufera depended upon the
-tranquillity of the province, took infinite pains to confirm his
-power; and his mode of proceeding, at once prudent and firm, was
-wonderfully successful. Valencia, although one of the smallest
-provinces in Spain, and not naturally fertile, was, from the
-industry of the inhabitants, one of the richest. Combining
-manufactures with agriculture, it possessed great resources, but
-they had been injured by the war, without having been applied to
-its exigencies; and the people expected that a bloody vengeance
-would be taken for Calvo’s murder of the French residents at
-the commencement of the contest. Their fears were soon allayed:
-discipline was strictly preserved, and Suchet, having suppressed
-the taxes imposed by the Spanish government, substituted others,
-which, being more equal, were less onerous. To protect the people
-from oppression in the collection, he published in every corner
-his demands, authorising resistance to contributions which were
-not named in his list and demanded by the proper officers; and he
-employed the native authorities, as he had done in Aragon. Thus, all
-impolitic restrictions upon the industry and traffic of the country
-being removed, the people found the government of the invaders less
-oppressive than their own.
-
-Napoleon, in expectation of Suchet’s conquest, had however imposed
-a war contribution, as a punishment for the death of the French
-residents, so heavy, that his lieutenant imagined Valencia would be
-quite unable to raise the sum; yet the emperor, who had calculated
-the Valencians’ means by a comparison with those of Aragon, would
-not rescind the order. And so exact was his judgement, that Suchet,
-by accepting part payment, in kind, and giving a discount for
-prompt liquidation, satisfied this impost in one year, without much
-difficulty, and the current expenses of the army were provided for
-besides; yet neither did the people suffer as in other provinces,
-nor was their industry so cramped, nor their property so injured,
-as under their own government. Valencia therefore remained tranquil,
-and, by contrast, the mischief of negligence and disorder was made
-manifest.
-
-[Sidenote: May.]
-
-The advantages derived from the conquest were even extended to the
-province of Aragon, and to the court of Joseph, for the contributions
-were diminished in the former, and large sums were remitted to the
-latter to meet Napoleon’s grant of one-fifth of the war contributions
-in favour of the intrusive government. This prosperous state of
-French affairs in Valencia was established also in the face of
-an enemy daily increasing in strength. For the regent, Abispal,
-had given Blake’s command to his own brother Joseph O’Donel, who
-collecting the remains of the armies of Murcia and Valencia, had
-raised new levies, and during Suchet’s illness formed a fresh army
-of twelve or fourteen thousand men in the neighbourhood of Alicant.
-In the Balearic Isles also Roche and Whittingham’s divisions were
-declared ready to take the field, and fifteen hundred British troops,
-commanded by general Ross, arrived at Carthagena. To avoid the fever
-there, these last remained on shipboard, and were thus more menacing
-to the enemy than on shore, because they seemed to be only awaiting
-the arrival of a new army, which the French knew to be coming from
-Sicily to the eastern coast of Spain. And as the descent of this army
-was the commencement of a remarkable episode in the history of the
-Peninsular War, it is proper to give an exact account of its origin
-and progress.
-
-Sir John Stuart had been succeeded, in Sicily, by lord William
-Bentinck, a man of resolution, capacity, and spirit, just in his
-actions, and abhorring oppression, but of a sanguine, impetuous
-disposition. Being resolved to ameliorate the condition of the
-Sicilian people, after surmounting many difficulties, he removed
-the queen from power, vested the direction of affairs in the
-crown prince, obtained from the barons a renunciation of their
-feudal privileges, and caused a representative constitution to be
-proclaimed. Believing then that the court was submissive because
-it was silent; that the barons would adhere to his system, because
-it gave them the useful power of legislation, in lieu of feudal
-privileges alloyed by ruinous expenses and the degradation of
-courtiers; because it gave them the dignity of independence at the
-cost only of maintaining the rights of the people and restoring
-the honour of their country:—believing thus, he judged that the
-large British force hitherto kept in Sicily, as much to overawe the
-court as to oppose the enemy, might be dispensed with; and that the
-expected improvement of the Sicilian army, and the attachment of the
-people to the new political system, would permit ten thousand men
-to be employed in aid of lord Wellington, or in Italy. In January,
-therefore, he wrote of these projects to the English ministers, and
-sent his brother to lord Wellington to consult upon the best mode of
-acting.
-
-Such an opportune offer to create a diversion on the left flank of
-the French armies was eagerly accepted by Wellington, who immediately
-sent engineers, artificers, and a battering train complete, to
-aid the expected expedition. But lord William Bentinck was soon
-made sensible, that in large communities working constitutions are
-the offspring, and not the generators, of national feelings and
-habits. They cannot be built like cities in the desert, nor cast, as
-breakwaters, into the sea of public corruption, but gradually, and
-as the insect rocks come up from the depths of the ocean, they must
-arise, if they are to bear the storms of human passions.
-
-The Sicilian court opposed lord William with falsehood and intrigue,
-the constitution was secretly thwarted by the barons, the Neapolitan
-army, a body composed of foreigners of all nations, was diligently
-augmented, with a view to overawe both the English and the people;
-the revenues and the subsidy were alike misapplied, and the native
-Sicilian army, despised and neglected, was incapable of service.
-Finally, instead of going to Spain himself, with ten thousand good
-troops, lord William could only send a subordinate general with six
-thousand—British, Germans, Calabrese, Swiss, and Sicilians; the
-British and Germans only, being either morally or militarily well
-organised. To these, however, Roche’s and Whittingham’s levies,
-represented to be twelve or fourteen thousand strong, were added, the
-Spanish government having placed them at the disposition of general
-Maitland, the commander of the expedition. Thus, in May, twenty
-thousand men were supposed ready for a descent on Catalonia, to which
-quarter lord Wellington recommended they should proceed.
-
-But now other objects were presented to lord William Bentinck’s
-sanguine mind. The Austrian government, while treating with Napoleon,
-was secretly encouraging insurrections in Italy, Croatia, Dalmatia,
-the Venetian states, the Tyrol, and Switzerland. English, as well as
-Austrian agents, were active to organise a vast conspiracy against
-the French emperor, and there was a desire, especially on the part of
-England, to create a kingdom for one of the Austrian archdukes. Murat
-was discontented with France, the Montenegrins were in arms on the
-Adriatic coast, and the prospect of a descent upon Italy in unison
-with the wishes of the people, appeared so promising to lord William
-Bentinck, that supposing himself to have a discretionary power, he
-stopped the expedition to Catalonia, reasoning thus.
-
-“In Spain, only six thousand middling troops can be employed on
-a secondary operation, and for a limited period, whereas twelve
-thousand British soldiers, and six thousand men composing the
-Neapolitan army of Sicily, can land in Italy, a grand theatre,
-where success will most efficaciously assist Spain. The obnoxious
-Neapolitan force being thus removed, the native Sicilian army can be
-organised, and the new constitution established with more certainty.”
-The time, also, he thought critical for Italy, not so for Spain,
-which would suffer but a temporary deprivation, seeing that failure
-in Italy would not preclude after aid to Spain.
-
-Impressed with these notions, which, it must be confessed, were both
-plausible and grand, he permitted the expedition, already embarked,
-to sail for Palma in Sardinia, and Mahon in Minorca, yet merely as a
-blind, because, from those places, he could easily direct the troops
-against Italy, and meanwhile they menaced the French in Spain. But
-the conception of vast and daring enterprises, even the execution of
-them up to a certain point, is not very uncommon, they fail only by
-a little! that little is, however, the essence of genius, the phial
-of wit, which, held to Orlando’s nostril, changed him from a frantic
-giant to a perfect commander.
-
-It was in the consideration of such nice points of military policy
-that lord Wellington’s solid judgement was always advantageously
-displayed. Neither the greatness of this project nor the apparent
-facility of execution weighed with him. He thought the recovery of
-Italy by the power of the British arms would be a glorious, and
-might be a feasible exploit, but it was only in prospect, Spain was
-the better field, the war in the Peninsula existed; years had been
-devoted to the establishment of a solid base there, and experience
-had proved that the chance of victory was not imaginary. England
-could not support two armies. The principle of concentration of
-power on an important point was as applicable here as on a field of
-battle, and although Italy might be the more vital point, it would
-be advisable to continue the war already established in Spain: nay
-it would be better to give up Spain, and direct the whole power of
-England against Italy, rather than undertake double operations, on
-such an extensive scale, at a moment when the means necessary to
-sustain one were so scanty.
-
-The ministers, apparently convinced by this reasoning, forbad
-lord William Bentinck to proceed, and they expressed their
-discontent at his conduct. Nevertheless their former instructions
-had unquestionably conferred on him a discretionary power to act
-in Italy, and so completely had he been misled by their previous
-despatches, that besides delaying the expedition to Spain, he had
-placed twelve hundred men under admiral Fremantle, to assist the
-Montenegrins. And he was actually entangled in a negotiation with
-the Russian admiral, Greig, relative to the march of a Russian army;
-a march planned, as it would appear, without the knowledge of the
-Russian court, and which, from the wildness of its conception and the
-mischief it would probably have effected, deserves notice.
-
-While the Russian war was still uncertain, admiral Tchtchagoff, who
-commanded sixty thousand men on the Danube, proposed to march with
-them, through Bosnia and the ancient Epirus, to the mouths of the
-Cattaro, and, there embarking, to commence the impending contest with
-France in Italy. He was, however, without resources, and expecting
-to arrive in a starving and miserable condition on the Adriatic,
-demanded, through admiral Greig, then commanding a squadron in the
-Mediterranean, that lord William Bentinck should be ready to supply
-him with fresh arms, ammunition, and provisions, and to aid him with
-an auxiliary force. That nobleman saw at a glance the absurdity of
-this scheme, but he was falsely informed that Tchtchagoff, trusting
-to his good will, had already commenced the march; and thus he had
-only to choose between aiding an ally, whose force, if it arrived
-at all, and was supplied by England, would help his own project, or
-permit it, to avoid perishing, to ravage Italy, and so change the
-people of that country from secret friends into deadly enemies. It
-would be foreign to this history to consider what effect the absence
-of Tchtchagoff’s army during the Russian campaign would have had upon
-Napoleon’s operations, but this was the very force whose march to the
-Beresina afterwards obliged the emperor to abandon Smolensko, and
-continue the retreat to Warsaw.
-
-It was in the midst of these affairs, that the English minister’s
-imperative orders to look only to the coast of Spain arrived. The
-negociation with the Russians was immediately stopped, the project of
-landing in Italy was relinquished, and the expedition, already sent
-to the Adriatic, was recalled. Meanwhile the descent on Catalonia
-had been delayed, and as a knowledge of its destination, had reached
-Suchet through the French minister of war, and through the rumours
-rife amongst the Spaniards, all his preparations to meet it were
-matured. Nor was this the only mischief produced by the English
-minister’s want of clear views and decided system of policy. Lord
-William Bentinck had been empowered to raise money on bills for his
-own exigences, and being desirous to form a military chest for his
-project in Italy, he had invaded lord Wellington’s money markets.
-With infinite trouble and difficulty that general had just opened
-a source of supply at the rate of five shillings and four-pence,
-to five shillings and eight-pence the dollar, when lord William
-Bentinck’s agents offering six shillings and eight-pence, swept four
-millions from the markets, and thus, as shall be hereafter shewn,
-seriously embarrassed lord Wellington’s operations in the field.
-
-This unhappy commencement of the Sicilian expedition led to other
-errors, and its arrival on the coast of Spain, did not take place,
-until after the campaign in Castile had commenced; but as its
-proceedings connected the warfare of Valencia immediately with that
-of Catalonia, and the whole with lord Wellington’s operations, they
-cannot be properly treated of in this place. It is, however, worthy
-of observation, how an illiberal and factious policy, inevitably
-recoils upon its authors.
-
-In 1807 sir John Moore, with that sagacity and manliness which
-distinguished his career through life, had informed the ministers,
-that no hope of a successful attack on the French in Italy, could be
-entertained while the British army upheld the tyrannical system of
-the dissolute and treacherous Neapolitan court in Sicily. And as no
-change for the better could be expected while the queen was allowed
-to govern, he proposed, that the British cabinet should either
-relinquish Sicily, or, assuming the entire controul of the island,
-seize the queen and send her to her native Austria. This he judged
-to be the first step necessary to render the large British army in
-Sicily available for the field, because the Sicilian people could
-then be justly governed, and thus only could the organization of
-an effective native force attached to England, and fitted to offer
-freedom to Italy be effected.
-
-He spoke not of constitutions but of justice to the people, and hence
-his proposal was rejected as a matter of Jacobinism. Mr. Drummond,
-the English plenipotentiary, even betrayed it to the queen, a woman
-not without magnanimity, yet so capable of bloody deeds, that, in
-1810, she secretly proposed to Napoleon the perpetration of a second
-Sicilian vespers upon the English. The emperor, detesting such guilt,
-only answered by throwing her agent into prison, yet the traces of
-the conspiracy were detected by the British authorities in 1811; and
-in 1812 lord William Bentinck was forced to seize the government, in
-the manner before recommended by Moore, and did finally expel the
-queen by force. But because these measures were not resorted to in
-time, he was now, with an army of from twenty-five to thirty thousand
-men, sixteen thousand of which were British, only able to detach a
-mixed force of six thousand to aid lord Wellington. And at the same
-time the oppression of Ireland required that sixty thousand fine
-soldiers should remain idle at home, while France, with a Russian war
-on hand, was able to over-match the allies in Spain. Bad government
-is a scourge with a double thong!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-OPERATIONS IN ANDALUSIA AND ESTREMADURA.
-
-
-[Sidenote: 1812. April.]
-
-A short time previous to Hill’s enterprize against Almaraz, Soult,
-after driving Ballesteros from the Ronda, and restoring the
-communication with Grenada, sent three thousand men into the Niebla;
-partly to interrupt the march of some Spaniards coming from Cadiz
-to garrison Badajos, partly to menace Penne Villemur and Morillo,
-who still lingered on the Odiel against the wishes of Wellington.
-The French arguments were more effectual. Those generals immediately
-filed along the frontier of Portugal towards Estremadura, they were
-hastily followed by the Spanish troops sent from Cadiz, and the
-militia of the Algarves were called out, to defend the Portuguese
-frontier. Soult then remained on the defensive, for he expected the
-advance of lord Wellington, which the approach of so many troops, the
-seeming reluctance of the Spaniards to quit the Niebla, the landing
-of fresh men from Cadiz at Ayamonte, and the false rumours purposely
-set afloat by the British general seemed to render certain. Nor did
-the surprize of Almaraz, which he thought to be aimed at the army of
-the south and not against the army of Portugal, alter his views.
-
-The great advantage which lord Wellington had gained by the fall of
-Ciudad Rodrigo and Badajos was now very clearly illustrated; for, as
-he could at will advance either against the north or the south or
-the centre, the French generals in each quarter expected him, and
-they were anxious that the others should regulate their movements
-accordingly. None would help the other, and the secret plans of all
-were paralyzed until it was seen on which side the thunderbolt would
-fall. This was of most consequence in the south, for Soult’s plans
-were vast, dangerous, and ripe for execution.
-
-[Sidenote: May.]
-
-After the fall of Badajos he judged it unwise to persevere in pushing
-a head of troops, into Estremadura, while his rear and flanks were
-exposed to attacks from Cadiz, Gibraltar, and Murcia; but it was
-essential, he thought, to crush Ballesteros before his forces should
-be increased, and this was not to be effected, while that general
-could flee to Gibraltar on the one side, and Tarifa on the other.
-Whereupon Soult had resolved first to reduce Tarifa, with a view to
-the ruin of Ballesteros, and then to lay siege to Carthagena and
-Alicant, and he only awaited the development of Wellington’s menacing
-demonstrations against Andalusia to commence his own operations.
-Great and difficult his plan was, yet profoundly calculated to
-effect his main object, which was to establish his base so firmly in
-Andalusia that, maugre the forces in Cadiz and the Isla, he might
-safely enter upon and follow up regular offensive operations in
-Estremadura and against Portugal, instead of the partial uncertain
-expeditions hitherto adopted. In fine, he designed to make lord
-Wellington feel that there was a powerful army within a few marches
-of Lisbon.
-
-Thinking that Carthagena and Tarifa, and even Alicant must fall,
-with the aid of Suchet, which he expected, or that the siege of the
-first would bring down Hill’s corps, and all the disposable Spanish
-troops to save it, he desired that the army of Portugal, and the
-army of the centre, should operate so as to keep lord Wellington
-employed north of the Tagus. He could then by himself carry on the
-sieges he contemplated, and yet leave a force under Drouet on the
-edge of Estremadura, strong enough to oblige Hill to operate in the
-direction of Carthagena instead of Seville. And if this should happen
-as he expected, he proposed suddenly to concentrate all his finely
-organized and experienced troops, force on a general battle, and,
-if victorious, the preparations being made before hand, to follow
-up the blow by a rapid march upon Portugal, and so enter Lisbon; or
-by bringing Wellington in all haste to the defence of that capital,
-confine the war, while Napoleon was in Russia, to a corner of the
-Peninsula.
-
-This great project was strictly in the spirit of the emperor’s
-instructions. For that consummate commander had desired his
-lieutenants to make lord Wellington feel that his enemies were not
-passively defensive. He had urged them to press the allies close
-on each flank, and he had endeavoured to make Marmont understand
-that, although there was no object to be attained by entering the
-north-east of Portugal, and fighting a general battle on ground
-favourable to lord Wellington, it was contrary to all military
-principles, to withdraw several days’ march from the allies’
-outposts, and by such a timid defensive system, to give the English
-general the power of choosing when and where to strike. Now the loss
-of Badajos, and the difficulty of maintaining a defensive war against
-the increasing forces of the allies in the south of Andalusia,
-rendered it extremely onerous for Soult to press Wellington’s flank
-in Estremadura; and it was therefore a profound modification of the
-emperor’s views, to urge the king and Marmont to active operation in
-the north, while he besieged Tarifa and Carthagena, keeping his army
-in mass ready for a sudden stroke in the field, if fortune brought
-the occasion, and if otherwise, sure of fixing a solid base for
-future operations against Portugal.
-
-The duke of Dalmatia wished to have commenced his operations by
-the siege of Tarifa in May, when Wellington’s return to Beira had
-relieved him from the fear of an immediate invasion of Andalusia,
-but the failure of the harvest in 1811 and the continual movements
-during the winter, had so reduced his magazines, both of provisions
-and ammunition, that he could not undertake the operation until the
-new harvest was ripe, and fresh convoys had replenished his exhausted
-stores. His soldiers were already on short allowance, and famine
-raged amongst the people of the country. Meanwhile his agents in
-Morocco had so firmly re-established the French interests there, that
-the emperor refused all supplies to the British, and even fitted out
-a squadron to insure obedience to his orders. To counteract this
-mischief, the Gibraltar merchant, Viali, who had been employed in the
-early part of the war by sir Hew Dalrymple, was sent by sir Henry
-Wellesley with a mission to the court of Fez, which failed, and it
-was said from the intrigues of the notorious Charmilly who was then
-at Tangier, and being connected by marriage with the English consul
-there, unsuspected: indeed from a mean hatred to sir John Moore,
-there were not wanting persons in power who endeavoured still to
-uphold this man.
-
-So far every thing promised well for Soult’s plans, and he earnestly
-demanded that all his detachments, and sufficient reinforcements,
-together with artillery, officers, money, and convoys of ammunition
-should be sent to him for the siege of Carthagena. Pending their
-arrival, to divert the attention of the allies, he repaired to Port
-St. Mary where the French had, from the circumstances of the war in
-Estremadura, been a long time inactive. He brought down with him a
-number of the Villantroy mortars, and having collected about thirty
-gun-boats in the Trocadero canal, commenced a serious bombardment
-of Cadiz on the 16th of May. While thus engaged, a sudden landing
-from English vessels was effected on the Grenada coast, Almeria was
-abandoned by the French, the people rose along the sea-line, and
-general Frere, advancing from Murcia, entrenched himself in the
-position of Venta de Bahul, on the eastern frontier of Grenada. He
-was indeed surprised and beaten with loss, and the insurrection on
-the coast was soon quelled, but these things delayed the march of the
-reinforcements intended for Drouet; meanwhile Hill surprised Almaraz,
-and Ballesteros, whose forces had subsisted during the winter and
-spring, upon the stores of Gibraltar, advanced against Conroux’s
-division then in observation at Bornos on the Guadalete.
-
-This Spanish general caused equal anxiety to Soult and to Wellington,
-because his proceedings involved one of those intricate knots, by
-which the important parts of both their operations were fastened.
-Lord Wellington judged, that, while a large and increasing corps
-which could be aided by a disembarkation of five or six thousand
-men from the Isla de Leon, menaced the blockade of Cadiz and the
-communications between Seville and Grenada, Soult must keep a
-considerable body in observation, and consequently, Hill would
-be a match for the French in Estremadura. But the efficacy of
-this diversion, depended upon avoiding battles, seeing that if
-Ballesteros’ army was crushed, the French, reinforced in Estremadura,
-could drive Hill over the Tagus, which would inevitably bring
-Wellington himself to his succour. Soult was for the same reason as
-earnest to bring the Spanish general to action, as Wellington was
-to prevent a battle, and Ballesteros, a man of infinite arrogance,
-despised both. Having obtained money and supplies from Gibraltar to
-replace the expenditure of his former excursion against Seville, he
-marched with eight thousand men against Conroux, and that Frenchman,
-aware of his intention, induced him, by an appearance of fear, to
-attack an entrenched camp in a disorderly manner. On the 1st of June
-the battle took place, and Conroux issuing forth unexpectedly killed
-or took fifteen hundred Spaniards, and drove the rest to the hills,
-from whence they retreated to San Roque. How this victory was felt in
-Estremadura shall now be shewn.
-
-[Sidenote: June.]
-
-The loss of Almaraz had put all the French corps in movement. A
-division of Marmont’s army crossed the Gredos mountains, to replace
-Foy in the valley of the Tagus, and the latter general, passing that
-river by the bridge of Arzobispo moved through the mountains of
-Guadalupe, and succoured the garrison of Mirabete on the 26th of May.
-When he retired the partidas of the Guadalupe renewed the blockade,
-and Hill, now strongly reinforced by lord Wellington, advanced to
-Zafra, whereupon Drouet, unable to meet him, fell back to Azagua.
-Hill, wishing to protect the gathering of the harvest, then detached
-Penne Villemur’s horsemen, from Llerena on the right flank, and
-general Slade, with the third dragoon guards and the royals, from
-Llera on the left flank; General Lallemande, having a like object,
-came forward with two regiments of French dragoons, on the side of
-Valencia de las Torres, whereupon Hill, hoping to cut him off, placed
-Slade’s dragoons in a wood with directions to await further orders.
-Slade hearing that Lallemand was so near, and no wise superior to
-himself in numbers, forgot his orders, advanced and drove the French
-cavalry with loss beyond the defile of Maquilla, a distance of eight
-miles; and through the pass also the British rashly galloped in
-pursuit, the general riding in the foremost ranks, and the supports
-joining tumultuously in the charge.
-
-But in the plain beyond stood Lallemand with his reserves well in
-hand. He broke the disorderly English mass thus rushing on him,
-killed or wounded forty-eight men, pursued the rest for six miles,
-recovered all his own prisoners, and took more than a hundred,
-including two officers, from his adversary; and the like bitter
-results will generally attend what is called “_dashing_” in war,
-which in other words means courage without prudence. Two days after
-this event the Austrian Strenowitz, whose exploits have been before
-noticed, marched with fifty men of the same regiments, to fetch off
-some of the English prisoners who had been left, by the French, under
-a slender guard in the village of Maquilla. Eighty of the enemy met
-him on the march, yet by fine management he overthrew him, and losing
-only one man himself, killed many French, executed his mission, and
-returned with an officer and twenty other prisoners.
-
-Such was the state of affairs, when the defeat of Ballesteros at
-Bornoz, enabled Soult to reinforce Drouet, with Barois’s division
-of infantry and two divisions of cavalry; they marched across the
-Morena, but for reasons, to be hereafter mentioned, by the royal
-road of St. Ollala, a line of direction which obliged Drouet to make
-a flank march by his left towards Llerena to form his junction with
-them. It was effected on the 18th, and the allies then fell back
-gradually towards Albuera, where being joined by four Portuguese
-regiments from Badajos, and by the fifth Spanish army, Hill formed a
-line of battle furnishing twenty thousand infantry, two thousand five
-hundred cavalry, and twenty-four guns.
-
-Drouet had only twenty-one thousand men, of which three thousand were
-cavalry, with eighteen pieces of artillery; the allies were therefore
-the most numerous, but the French army was better composed, and
-battle seemed inevitable, for both generals had discretionary orders.
-However the French cavalry did not advance further than Almendralejo,
-and Hill who had shewn himself so daring at Aroyo Molino and Almaraz,
-now, with an uncommon mastery of ambition, refrained from an action
-which promised him unbounded fame, simply because he was uncertain
-whether the state of lord Wellington’s operations in Castile, then
-in full progress, would warrant one. His recent exploits had been
-so splendid that a great battle gained at this time would, with
-the assistance of envious malice, have placed his reputation on a
-level with Wellington’s. Yet he was habituated to command, and his
-adversary’s talents were moderate, his forbearance must therefore be
-taken as a proof of the purest patriotism.
-
-[Sidenote: July.]
-
-Early in July the French cavalry entered Almendralejo and Santa
-Marta, cut off two hundred Spanish horsemen, and surprised a small
-British cavalry post; Hill who had then received fresh instructions,
-and was eager to fight, quickly drove them with loss from both
-places. Drouet immediately concentrated his forces and retired to
-La Granja, and was followed by the allies, but the account of the
-transactions in Andalusia and Estremadura must be here closed,
-because those which followed belong to the general combinations. And
-as the causes of these last movements, and their effects upon the
-general campaign, are of an intricate nature, to avoid confusion the
-explanation of them is reserved for another place: meanwhile I will
-endeavour to describe that political chaos, amidst which Wellington’s
-army appeared as the ark amongst the meeting clouds and rising waters
-of the deluge.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-POLITICAL SITUATION OF FRANCE.
-
-
-[Sidenote: 1812.]
-
-The unmatched power of Napoleon’s genius was now being displayed in a
-wonderful manner. His interest, his inclination, and his expectation
-were alike opposed to a war with Russia, but Alexander and himself,
-each hoping that a menacing display of strength would reduce the
-other to negotiation, advanced, step by step, until blows could no
-longer be avoided. Napoleon, a man capable of sincere friendship,
-had relied too much and too long on the existence of a like feeling
-in the Russian emperor; and misled, perhaps, by the sentiment of
-his own energy, did not sufficiently allow for the daring intrigues
-of a court, where secret combinations of the nobles formed the real
-governing power.
-
-That the cabinet of Petersburgh should be, more than ordinarily
-subject to such combinations at this period, was the necessary
-consequence of the greatness of the interests involved in the
-treaties of Tilsit and Erfurth; the continental system had so deeply
-injured the fortunes of the Russian noblemen, that their sovereign’s
-authority in support of it was as nothing. During the Austrian war
-of 1809, when Alexander was yet warm from Napoleon’s society at
-Erfurth, the aid given to France was a mockery, and a desire to join
-a northern confederation against Napoleon was even then scarcely
-concealed at St. Petersburgh, where the French ambassador was coldly
-treated. The royal family of Prussia were, it is true, at the same
-time, mortified by a reception which inclined them to side with
-France, against the wishes of their people and their ministers, but
-in Russia, Romanzow alone was averse to choose that moment to declare
-against Napoleon. And this was so certain that Austria, anticipating
-the explosion, was only undecided whether the king of Prussia should
-be punished or the people rewarded, whether she herself should
-befriend or plunder the Prussian monarchy.
-
-At that time also, the Russian naval commander, in the Adriatic,
-being ordered to sail to Ancona for the purpose of convoying
-Marmont’s troops from Dalmatia to Italy, refused, on the plea
-that his ships were not sea-worthy; yet secretly he informed the
-governor of Trieste that they would be in excellent order to
-assist an Austrian corps against the French! Admiral Tchtchagoff’s
-strange project of marching upon Italy from Bucharest has been
-already noticed, and it is remarkable that this expedition was to
-be conducted upon popular principles, the interests of the Sicilian
-court being to be made subservient to the wishes of the people. At a
-later period, in 1812, admiral Grieg proposed to place an auxiliary
-Russian army under either Wellington or lord William Bentinck, and it
-was accepted; but when the Russian ambassador in London was applied
-to upon the subject, he unequivocally declared that the emperor knew
-nothing of the matter!
-
-With a court so situated, angry negotiations once commenced rendered
-war inevitable, and the more especially that the Russian cabinet,
-which had long determined on hostilities though undecided as to the
-time of drawing the sword, was well aware of the secret designs and
-proceedings of Austria in Italy, and of Murat’s discontent. The
-Hollanders were known to desire independence, and the deep hatred
-which the people of Prussia bore to the French was a matter of
-notoriety. Bernadotte, who very early had resolved to cast down the
-ladder by which he rose, was the secret adviser of these practices
-against Napoleon’s power in Italy, and he was also in communication
-with the Spaniards. Thus Napoleon, having a war in Spain which
-required three hundred thousand men to keep in a balanced state, was
-forced, by resistless circumstances, into another and more formidable
-contest in the distant north, when the whole of Europe was prepared
-to rise upon his lines of communication, and when his extensive
-sea-frontier was exposed to the all-powerful navy of Great Britain.
-
-A conqueror’s march to Moscow, amidst such dangers, was a design
-more vast, more hardy, more astounding than ever before entered the
-imagination of man; yet it was achieved, and solely by the force
-of his genius. For having organised two hundred thousand French
-soldiers, as a pretorian guard, he stepped resolutely into the heart
-of Germany, and monarchs and nations bent submissively before him;
-secret hostility ceased, and, with the exception of Bernadotte,
-the crowned and anointed plotters quitted their work to follow his
-chariot-wheels. Dresden saw the ancient story of the King of Kings
-renewed in his person; and the two hundred thousand French soldiers
-arrived on the Niemen in company with two hundred thousand allies.
-On that river four hundred thousand troops, I have seen the imperial
-returns, were assembled by this wonderful man, all disciplined
-warriors, and, notwithstanding their different, national feelings,
-all proud of the unmatched genius of their leader. Yet, even in that
-hour of dizzy elevation, Napoleon, deeply sensible of the inherent
-weakness of a throne unhallowed by time, described by one emphatic
-phrase the delicacy of his political situation. During the passage
-of the Niemen, twelve thousand cuirassiers, whose burnished armour
-flashed in the sun while their cries of salutation pealed in unison
-with the thunder of the horses’ feet, were passing like a foaming
-torrent towards the river, when Napoleon turned and thus addressed
-Gouvion St. Cyr, whose republican principles were well known,
-
-“No monarch ever had such an army?”
-
-“No, sire.”
-
-“The French are a fine people; they deserve more liberty, and they
-shall have it, but, St. Cyr, no liberty of the press! That army,
-mighty as it is, could not resist the songs of Paris!”
-
-Such, then, was the nature of Napoleon’s power that success alone
-could sustain it; success which depended as much upon others’
-exertions as upon his own stupendous genius, for Russia was far
-distant from Spain. It is said, I know not upon what authority, that
-he at one moment, had resolved to concentrate all the French troops
-in the Peninsula behind the Ebro during this expedition to Russia,
-but the capture of Blake’s force at Valencia changed his views. Of
-this design there are no traces in the movements of his armies, nor
-in the captured papers of the king, and there are some indications
-of a contrary design; for at that period several foreign agents were
-detected examining the lines of Torres Vedras, and on a Frenchman,
-who killed himself when arrested in the Brazils, were found papers
-proving a mission for the same object. Neither is it easy to discern
-the advantage of thus crowding three hundred thousand men on a narrow
-slip of ground, where they must have been fed from France, already
-overburthened with the expenses of the Russian war; and this when
-they were numerous enough, if rightly handled, to have maintained
-themselves on the resources of Spain, and near the Portuguese
-frontier for a year at least.
-
-To have given up all the Peninsula, west of the Ebro, would have
-been productive of no benefit, save what might have accrued from
-the jealousy which the Spaniards already displayed towards their
-allies; but if that jealousy, as was probable, had forced the British
-general away, he could have carried his army to Italy, or have formed
-in Germany the nucleus of a great northern confederation on the
-emperor’s rear. Portugal was therefore, in truth, the point of all
-Europe in which the British strength was least dangerous to Napoleon
-during the invasion of Russia; moreover, an immediate war with that
-empire was not a certain event previous to the capture of Valencia.
-Napoleon was undoubtedly anxious to avoid it while the Spanish
-contest continued; yet, with a far-reaching European policy, in which
-his English adversaries were deficient, he foresaw and desired to
-check the growing strength of that fearful and wicked power which now
-menaces the civilised world.
-
-The proposal for peace which he made to England before his departure
-for the Niemen is another circumstance where his object seems to
-have been misrepresented. It was called a device to reconcile the
-French to the Russian war; but they were as eager for that war as he
-could wish them to be, and it is more probable that it sprung from
-a secret misgiving, a prophetic sentiment of the consequent power
-of Russia, lifted, as she then would be towards universal tyranny,
-by the very arm which he had raised to restrain her. The ostensible
-ground of his quarrel with the emperor Alexander was the continental
-system; yet, in this proposal for peace, he offered to acknowledge
-the house of Braganza in Portugal, the house of Bourbon in Sicily,
-and to withdraw his army from the Peninsula, if England would join
-him in guaranteeing the crown of Spain to Joseph, together with a
-constitution to be arranged by a national Cortes. This was a virtual
-renunciation of the continental system for the sake of peace with
-England; and a proposal which obviated the charge of aiming at
-universal dominion, seeing that Austria, Spain, Portugal, and England
-would have retained their full strength, and the limits of his empire
-would have been fixed. The offer was made also at a time when the
-emperor was certainly more powerful than he had ever yet been, when
-Portugal was, by the avowal of Wellington himself, far from secure,
-and Spain quite exhausted. At peace with England, Napoleon could
-easily have restored the Polish nation, and Russia would have been
-repressed. Now, Poland has fallen, and Russia stalks in the plenitude
-of her barbarous tyranny.
-
-_Political state of England._—The new administration, despised by
-the country, was not the less powerful in parliament; its domestic
-proceedings were therefore characterised by all the corruption and
-tyranny of Mr. Pitt’s system, without his redeeming genius. The press
-was persecuted with malignant ferocity, and the government sought
-to corrupt all that it could not trample upon. Repeated successes
-had rendered the particular contest in the Peninsula popular with
-the ardent spirits of the nation, and war-prices passed for glory
-with the merchants, land-owners, and tradesmen; but as the price of
-food augmented faster than the price of labour, the poorer people
-suffered, they rejoiced, indeed, at their country’s triumphs because
-the sound of victory is always pleasing to warlike ears, but they
-were discontented. Meanwhile all thinking men, who were not biassed
-by factions, or dazzled by military splendour, perceived in the
-enormous expenses incurred to repress the democratic principle,
-and in the consequent transfer of property, the sure foundation
-of future reaction and revolution. The distresses of the working
-classes had already produced partial insurrections, and the nation at
-large was beginning to perceive that the governing powers, whether
-representative or executive, were rapacious usurpers of the people’s
-rights; a perception quickened by malignant prosecutions, by the
-insolent extravagance with which the public money was lavished on
-the family of Mr. Perceval, and by the general profusion at home,
-while lord Wellesley declared that the war languished for want of
-sustenance abroad.
-
-Napoleon’s continental system, although in the nature of a sumptuary
-law, which the desires of men will never suffer to exist long in
-vigour, was yet so efficient, that the British government was forced
-to encourage, and protect, illicit trading, to the great detriment
-of mercantile morality. The island of Heligoland was the chief point
-of deposit for this commerce, and either by trading energy, or by
-the connivance of continental governments, the emperor’s system was
-continually baffled; nevertheless its effects will not quickly pass
-away; it pressed sorely upon the manufacturers at the time, and by
-giving rise to rival establishments on the continent, has awakened
-in Germany a commercial spirit by no means favourable to England’s
-manufacturing superiority.
-
-But ultimate consequences were never considered by the British
-ministers; the immediate object was to procure money, and by
-virtually making bank-notes a legal tender, they secured unlimited
-means at home, through the medium of loans and taxes, which the
-corruption of the parliament, insured to them, and which, by a
-reaction, insured the corruption of the parliament. This resource
-failed abroad. They could, and did, send to all the allies of
-England, enormous supplies in kind, because to do so, was, in the
-way of contracts, an essential part of the system of corruption at
-home; a system aptly described, as bribing one-half of the nation
-with the money of the other half, in order to misgovern both. Specie
-was however only to be had in comparatively small quantities, and
-at a premium so exorbitant, that even the most reckless politician
-trembled for the ultimate consequences.
-
-The foreign policy of the government was very simple, namely, to
-bribe all powers to wear down France. Hence to Russia every thing,
-save specie, was granted; and hence also, amicable relations with
-Sweden were immediately re-established, and the more readily that
-this power had lent herself to the violation of the continental
-system by permitting the entry of British goods at Stralsund; but
-wherever wisdom, or skill, was required, the English minister’s
-resources failed altogether. With respect to Sicily, Spain, and
-Portugal, this truth was notorious; and to preserve the political
-support of the trading interests at home, a degrading and deceitful
-policy, quite opposed to the spirit of lord Wellington’s counsels,
-was followed in regard to the revolted Spanish colonies.
-
-The short-sighted injustice of the system was however most glaring
-with regard to the United States of America. Mutual complaints,
-the dregs of the war of independence, had long characterised the
-intercourse between the British and American governments, and these
-discontents were turned into extreme hatred by the progress of the
-war with France. The British government in 1806 proclaimed, contrary
-to the law of nations, a blockade of the French coast, which could
-not be enforced. Napoleon, in return, issued the celebrated decrees
-of Berlin and Milan, which produced the no less celebrated orders in
-council. The commerce of all neutrals was thus extinguished by the
-arrogance of the belligerents; but the latter very soon finding that
-their mutual convenience required some relaxation of mutual violence,
-granted licenses to each other’s ships, and by this scandalous
-evasion of their own policy, caused the whole of the evil to fall
-upon the neutral, who was yet called the friend of both parties.
-
-[Sidenote: 18th June, 1812.]
-
-The Americans, unwilling to go to war with two such powerful states,
-were yet resolved not to submit to the tyranny of either; but the
-injustice of the English government was the most direct, and extended
-in its operations, and it was rendered infinitely more bitter by the
-violence used towards the seamen of the United States: not less than
-six thousand sailors, it was said, were taken from merchant vessels
-on the high seas, and forced to serve in the British men-of-war.
-Wherefore, after first passing retaliatory, or rather warning acts,
-called the non-intercourse, non-importation, and embargo acts, the
-Americans finally declared war, at the moment when the British
-government, alarmed at the consequences of their own injustice, had
-just rescinded the orders in council.
-
-The immediate effects of these proceedings on the contest in the
-Peninsula, shall be noticed in another place, but the ultimate
-effects on England’s prosperity have not yet been unfolded. The
-struggle prematurely told the secret of American strength, and it has
-drawn the attention of the world to a people, who, notwithstanding
-the curse of black slavery which clings to them, adding the most
-horrible ferocity to the peculiar baseness of their mercantile
-spirit, and rendering their republican vanity ridiculous, do in their
-general government uphold civil institutions, which have startled the
-crazy despotisms of Europe.
-
-[Sidenote: April.]
-
-_Political state of Spain._—Bad government is more hurtful than
-direct war; the ravages of the last are soon repaired, and the public
-mind is often purified, and advanced, by the trial of adversity, but
-the evils, springing from the former, seem interminable. In the Isla
-de Leon the unseemly currents of folly, although less raging than
-before, continued to break open new channels and yet abandoned none
-of the old. The intrigues of the princess Carlotta were unremitted,
-and though the danger of provoking the populace of Cadiz, restrained
-and frightened her advocates in the Cortez, she opposed the English
-diplomacy, with reiterated, and not quite unfounded accusations, that
-the revolt of the colonies was being perfidiously fostered by Great
-Britain:—a charge well calculated to lower the influence of England,
-especially in regard to the scheme of mediation, which being revived
-in April by lord Castlereagh, was received by the Spaniards with
-outward coldness, and a secret resolution to reject it altogether;
-nor were they in any want of reasons to justify their proceedings.
-
-This mediation had been commenced by lord Wellesley, when the quarrel
-between the mother country and the colonies was yet capable of
-adjustment; it was now renewed when it could not succeed. English
-commissioners were appointed to carry it into execution, the duke of
-Infantado was to join them on the part of Spain, and at first Mr.
-Stuart was to have formed part of the commission, Mr. Sydenham being
-to succeed him at Lisbon, but finally he remained in Portugal and Mr.
-Sydenham was attached to the commission, whose composition he thus
-described.
-
-“I do not understand a word of the Spanish language, I am
-unacquainted with the Spanish character, I know very little of Old
-Spain, and I am quite ignorant of the state of the colonies, yet I am
-part of a commission composed of men of different professions, views,
-habits, feelings, and opinions. The mediation proposed is at least a
-year too late, it has been forced upon the government of Old Spain,
-I have no confidence in the ministers who employ me, and I am fully
-persuaded that they have not the slightest confidence in me.”
-
-The first essential object was to have Bardaxi’s secret article,
-which required England to join Old Spain if the mediation failed,
-withdrawn; but as this could not be done without the consent of
-the Cortez, the publicity thus given would have ruined the credit
-of the mediation with the colonists. Nor would the distrust of the
-latter have been unfounded, for though lord Wellesley had offered
-the guarantee of Great Britain to any arrangement made under her
-mediation, his successors would not do so!
-
-“They empower us,” said Mr. Sydenham, “to negociate and sign a
-treaty but will not guarantee the execution of it! My opinion is,
-that the formal signature of a treaty by plenipotentiaries is in
-itself a solemn guarantee, if there is good faith and fair dealing in
-the transaction; and I believe that this opinion will be confirmed
-by the authority of every writer on the law of nations. But this
-is certainly not the doctrine of our present ministers, they make
-a broad distinction between the ratification of a treaty and the
-intention of seeing it duly observed.”
-
-The failure of such a scheme was inevitable. The Spaniards wanted
-the commissioners to go first to the Caraccas, where the revolt
-being full blown, nothing could be effected; the British government
-insisted that they should go to Mexico, where the dispute had not
-yet been pushed to extremities. After much useless diplomacy, which
-continued until the end of the year, the negociation, as Mr.
-Sydenham had predicted, proved abortive.
-
-In March the new constitution of Spain had been solemnly adopted, and
-a decree settling the succession of the crown was promulgated. The
-infant Francisco de Paula, the queen of Etruria, and their respective
-descendants were excluded from the succession, which was to fall
-first to the princess Carlotta if the infant don Carlos failed of
-heirs, then to the hereditary princess of the Two Sicilies, and
-so on, the empress of France and her descendants being especially
-excluded. This exhibition of popular power, under the pretext of
-baffling Napoleon’s schemes, struck at the principle of legitimacy.
-And when the extraordinary Cortez decided that the ordinary Cortez,
-which ought to assemble every year, should not be convoked until
-October 1813, and thus secured to itself a tenure of power for two
-years instead of one, the discontent increased both at Cadiz and
-in the provinces, and a close connection was kept up between the
-malcontents and the Portuguese government, which was then the strong
-hold of arbitrary power in the Peninsula.
-
-The local junta of Estremadura adopted Carlotta’s claims, in their
-whole extent, and communicated on the subject, at first secretly with
-the Portuguese regency, and then more openly with Mr. Stuart. Their
-scheme was to remove all the acting provincial authorities, and to
-replace them with persons acknowledging Carlotta’s sovereignty; they
-even declared that they would abide by the new constitution, only so
-far as it acknowledged what they called legitimate power, in other
-words, the princess was to be sole regent. Nevertheless this party
-was not influenced by Carlotta’s intrigues, for they would not join
-her agents in any outcry against the British; they acted upon the
-simple principle of opposing the encroachments of democracy, and they
-desired to know how England would view their proceedings. The other
-provinces received the new constitution coldly, and the Biscayens
-angrily rejected it as opposed to their ancient privileges. In this
-state of public feeling, the abolition of the Inquisition, a design
-now openly agitated, offered a point around which all the clergy, and
-all that the clergy could influence, gathered against the Cortes,
-which was also weakened by its own factions; yet the republicans
-gained strength, and they were encouraged by the new constitution
-established in Sicily, which also alarmed their opponents, and the
-fear and distrust extended to the government of Portugal.
-
-However amidst all the varying subjects of interest the insane
-project of reducing the colonies by force, remained a favourite
-with all parties; nor was it in relation to the colonies only, that
-these men, who were demanding aid from other nations, in the names
-of freedom, justice, and humanity, proved themselves to be devoid of
-those attributes themselves. “The humane object of the abolition of
-the slave-trade has been frustrated,” said lord Castlereagh, “because
-not only Spanish subjects but Spanish public officers and governors,
-in various parts of the Spanish colonies, are instrumental to, and
-accomplices in the crimes of the contraband slave-traders of Great
-Britain and America, furnishing them with flags, papers, and solemn
-documents to entitle them to the privileges of Spanish cruizers, and
-to represent their property as Spanish.”
-
-With respect to the war in Spain itself, all manner of mischief
-was abroad. The regular cavalry had been entirely destroyed, and
-when, with the secret permission of their own government, some
-distinguished Austrian officers, proffered their services to the
-regency, to restore that arm, they were repelled. Nearly all the
-field-artillery had been lost in action, the arsenals at Cadiz were
-quite exhausted, and most of the heavy guns on the works of the Isla
-were rendered unserviceable by constant and useless firing; the
-stores of shot were diminished in an alarming manner, no sums were
-appropriated to the support of the founderies, and when the British
-artillery officers made formal representations of this dangerous
-state of affairs, it only produced a demand of money from England
-to put the founderies into activity. To crown the whole, Abadia,
-recalled from Gallicia, at the express desire of sir Henry Wellesley
-because of his bad conduct, was now made minister of war.
-
-In Ceuta, notwithstanding the presence of a small British force,
-the Spanish garrison, the galley-slaves, and the prisoners of war
-who were allowed to range at large, joined in a plan for delivering
-that place to the Moors; not from a treacherous disposition in the
-two first, but to save themselves from starving, a catastrophe which
-was only staved off by frequent assistance from the magazines of
-Gibraltar. Ceuta might have been easily acquired by England at this
-period, in exchange for the debt due by Spain, and general Campbell
-urged it to lord Liverpool, but he rejected the proposal, fearing to
-awaken popular jealousy. The notion, however, came originally from
-the people themselves, and that jealousy which lord Liverpool feared,
-was already in full activity, being only another name for the
-democratic spirit rising in opposition to the aristocratic principle
-upon which England afforded her assistance to the Peninsula.
-
-The foreign policy of Spain was not less absurd than their home
-policy, but it was necessarily contracted. Castro, the envoy at
-Lisbon, who was agreeable both to the Portuguese and British
-authorities, was removed, and Bardaxi, who was opposed to both,
-substituted. This Bardaxi had been just before sent on a special
-mission to Stockholm, to arrange a treaty with that court, and he
-was referred to Russia for his answer, so completely subservient was
-Bernadotte to the czar. One point however was characteristically
-discussed by the Swedish prince and the Spanish envoy. Bardaxi
-demanded assistance in troops, and Bernadotte in reply asked for a
-subsidy, which was promised without hesitation, but security for the
-payment being desired, the negociation instantly dropped! A treaty of
-alliance was however concluded between Spain and Russia, in July, and
-while Bardaxi was thus pretending to subsidize Sweden, the unceasing
-solicitations of his own government had extorted from England a grant
-of one million of money, together with arms and clothing for one
-hundred thousand men, in return for which five thousand Spaniards
-were to be enlisted for the British ranks.
-
-To raise Spanish corps had long been a favourite project with many
-English officers, general Graham had deigned to offer his services,
-and great advantages were anticipated by those who still believed
-in Spanish heroism. Joseph was even disquieted, for the Catalans
-had formally demanded such assistance, and a like feeling was now
-expressed in other places, yet when it came to the proof only two or
-three hundred starving Spaniards of the poorest condition enlisted;
-they were recruited principally by the light division, were taught
-with care and placed with English comrades, yet the experiment
-failed, they did not make good soldiers. Meanwhile the regency
-demanded and obtained from England, arms, clothing, and equipments
-for ten thousand cavalry, though they had scarce five hundred regular
-horsemen to arm at the time, and had just rejected the aid of the
-Austrian officers in the organization of new corps. Thus the supplies
-granted by Great Britain continued to be embezzled or wasted; and
-with the exception of a trifling amelioration in the state of Carlos
-d’Españas’ corps effected by the direct interposition of Wellington,
-no public benefit seemed likely at first to accrue from the subsidy,
-for every branch of administration in Spain, whether civil or
-military, foreign or domestic, was cankered to the core. The public
-mischief was become portentous.
-
-Ferdinand living in tranquillity at Valençay was so averse to
-encounter any dangers for the recovery of his throne, that he
-rejected all offers of assistance to escape. Kolli and the brothers
-Sagas had been alike disregarded. The councellor Sobral, who while in
-secret correspondence with the allies, had so long lived at Victor’s
-head-quarters, and had travelled with that marshal to France, now
-proposed to carry the prince off, and he also was baffled as his
-predecessors had been. Ferdinand would listen to no proposal save
-through Escoiquez, who lived at some distance, and Sobral who judged
-this man one not to be trusted, immediately made his way to Lisbon,
-fearful of being betrayed by the prince to whose succour he had come.
-
-Meanwhile Joseph was advancing towards the political conquest of
-the country, and spoke with ostentation, of assembling a cortes
-in his own interests; but this was to cover a secret intercourse
-with the cortes in the Isla de Leon where his partizans called
-“_Afrancesados_” were increasing: for many of the democratic party,
-seeing that the gulf which separated them from the clergy, and
-from England, could never be closed, and that the bad system of
-government, deprived them of the people’s support, were willing to
-treat with the intrusive monarch as one whose principles were more
-in unison with their own. Joseph secretly offered to adopt the new
-constitution, with some modifications, and as many of the cortes were
-inclined to accept his terms, the British policy was on the eve of
-suffering a signal defeat, when Wellington’s iron arm again fixed the
-destiny of the Peninsula.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-POLITICAL STATE OF PORTUGAL.
-
-
-[Sidenote: 1812.]
-
-The internal condition of this country was not improved. The
-government, composed of civilians, was unable, as well as unwilling
-to stimulate the branches of administration connected with military
-affairs, and the complaints of the army, reaching the Brazils,
-drew reprimands from the prince; but instead of meeting the evil
-with suitable laws, he only increased Beresford’s authority, which
-was already sufficiently great. Thus while the foreigner’s power
-augmented, the native authorities were degraded in the eyes of the
-people; and as their influence to do good dwindled, their ill-will
-increased, and their power of mischief was not lessened, because they
-still formed the intermediate link between the military commander and
-the subordinate authorities. Hence what with the passive patriotism
-of the people, the abuses of the government, and the double dealing
-at the Brazils, the extraordinary energy of lord Wellington and Mr.
-Stuart was counterbalanced.
-
-The latter had foreseen that the regent’s concessions at the time
-of Borel’s arrest would produce but a momentary effect in Portugal,
-and all the intrigues at Rio Janeiro revived when lord Wellesley
-disgusted with Perceval’s incapacity, had quitted the British
-cabinet. But previous to that event, Mr. Sydenham, whose mission
-to Portugal has been noticed, had so strongly represented the evil
-effects of lord Strangford’s conduct, that lord Wellesley would have
-immediately dismissed him, if Mr. Sydenham, who was offered the
-situation, had not refused to profit from the effects of his own
-report. It was then judged proper to send lord Louvaine with the
-rank of ambassador, and he was to touch at Lisbon and consult with
-lord Wellington whether to press the prince’s return to Portugal, or
-insist upon a change in the regency; meanwhile a confidential agent,
-despatched direct to Rio Janeiro, was to keep lord Strangford in the
-strict line of his instructions until the ambassador arrived.
-
-But lord Louvaine was on bad terms with his uncle, the duke of
-Northumberland, a zealous friend to lord Strangford; and for a
-government, conducted on the principle of corruption, the discontent
-of a nobleman, possessing powerful parliamentary influence, was
-necessarily of more consequence than the success of the war in the
-Peninsula. Ere a fit successor to lord Strangford could be found,
-the prince regent of Portugal acceded to lord Wellington’s demands,
-and it was then judged expedient to await the effect of this change
-of policy. Meanwhile the dissensions, which led to the change of
-ministry arose, and occupied the attention of the English cabinet to
-the exclusion of all other affairs. Thus lord Strangford’s career
-was for some time uncontrolled, yet after several severe rebukes
-from lord Wellington and Mr. Stuart, it was at last arrested, by a
-conviction that his tenure of place depended upon their will.
-
-However, prior to this salutary check on the Brazilian intrigues,
-lord Wellesley had so far intimidated the prince regent of Portugal,
-that besides assenting to the reforms, he despatched Mr. DeLemos
-from Rio Janeiro, furnished with authority for Beresford to act
-despotically in all things connected with the administration of the
-army. Moreover lord Wellington was empowered to dismiss Principal
-Souza from the regency; and lord Castlereagh, following up his
-predecessor’s policy on this head, insisted that all the obnoxious
-members of the regency should be set aside and others appointed.
-And these blows at the power of the Souza faction, were accompanied
-by the death of Linhares, the head of the family, an event which
-paralyzed the court of Rio Janeiro for a considerable time;
-nevertheless the Souzas were still so strong, that Domingo Souza, now
-Count of Funchal, was appointed prime minister, although he retained
-his situation as ambassador to the English court, and continued to
-reside in London.
-
-Lord Wellington, whose long experience of Indian intrigues rendered
-him the fittest person possible to deal with the exactions, and
-political cunning of a people who so much resemble Asiatics, now
-opposed the removal of the obnoxious members from the regency. He
-would not even dismiss the Principal Souza; for with a refined policy
-he argued, that the opposition to his measures arose, as much from
-the national, as from the individual character of the Portuguese
-authorities, several of whom were under the displeasure of their
-own court, and consequently dependent upon the British power, for
-support against their enemies. There were amongst them also, persons
-of great ability, and hence no beneficial change could be expected,
-because the influence already gained would be lost with new men.
-The latter would have the same faults, with less talent, and less
-dependence on the British power, and the dismissed ministers would
-become active enemies. The patriarch would go to Oporto, where his
-power to do mischief would be greatly increased, and Principal Souza
-would then be made patriarch. It was indeed very desirable to drive
-this man, whose absurdity was so great as to create a suspicion of
-insanity, from the regency, but he could neither be persuaded, nor
-forced, to quit Portugal. His dismissal had been extorted from the
-prince by the power of the British government, he would therefore
-maintain his secret influence over the civil administration, he would
-be considered a martyr to foreign influence, which would increase his
-popularity, and his power would be augmented by the sanctity of his
-character as patriarch. Very little advantage could then be derived
-from a change, and any reform would be attributed to the English
-influence, against which the numerous interests, involved in the
-preservation of abuses, would instantly combine with active enmity.
-
-On the other hand, the government of Portugal had never yet laid
-the real nature of the war fairly before the people. The latter
-had been deceived, flattered, cajoled, their prowess in the field
-extolled beyond reason, and the enemy spoken of contemptuously; but
-the resources of the nation, which essentially consisted neither
-in its armies, nor in its revenue, nor in its boasting, but in the
-sacrificing of all interests to the prosecution of the contest, had
-never been vigorously used to meet the emergencies of the war. The
-regency had neither appealed to the patriotism of the population
-nor yet enforced sacrifices, by measures, which were absolutely
-necessary, because as the English general honestly observed, no
-people would ever voluntarily bear such enormous, though necessary
-burthens; strong laws and heavy penalties could alone insure
-obedience. The Portuguese government relied upon England, and her
-subsidies, and resisted all measures which could render their
-natural resources more available. Their subordinates on the same
-principle executed corruptly and vexatiously, or evaded, the military
-regulations, and the chief supporters of all this mischief were the
-Principal and his faction.
-
-Thus dragged by opposing forces, and environed with difficulties,
-Wellington took a middle course. That is, he strove by reproaches
-and by redoubled activity, to stimulate the patriotism of the
-authorities; he desired the British ministers at Lisbon, and at Rio
-Janeiro, to paint the dangerous state of Portugal in vivid colours,
-and to urge the prince regent in the strongest manner, to enforce the
-reform of those gross abuses, which in the taxes, in the customs,
-in the general expenditure, and in the execution of orders by the
-inferior magistrates, were withering the strength of the nation.
-At the same time, amidst the turmoil of his duties in the field,
-sometimes actually from the field of battle itself, he transmitted
-memoirs upon the nature of these different evils, and the remedies
-for them; memoirs which will attest to the latest posterity the
-greatness and vigour of his capacity.
-
-These efforts, aided by the suspension of the subsidy, produced
-partial reforms, yet the natural weakness of character and obstinacy
-of the prince regent, were insurmountable obstacles to any general or
-permanent cure; the first defect rendered him the tool of the court
-intriguers, and the second was to be warily dealt with, lest some
-dogged conduct should oblige Wellington to put his often repeated
-threat, of abandoning the country, into execution. The success of the
-contest was in fact of more importance to England, than to Portugal,
-and this occult knot could neither be untied nor cut; the difficulty
-could with appliances be lessened, but might not be swept away; hence
-the British general involved in ceaseless disputes, and suffering
-hourly mortifications, the least of which would have broken the
-spirit of an ordinary man, had to struggle as he could to victory.
-
-Viewing the contest as one of life or death to Portugal, he desired
-to make the whole political economy of the state a simple provision
-for the war, and when thwarted, his reproaches were as bitter as
-they were just; nevertheless, the men to whom they were addressed,
-were not devoid of merit. In after times, while complaining that he
-could find no persons of talent in Spain, he admitted that amongst
-the Portuguese, Redondo possessed both probity and ability, that
-Nogueira was a statesman of capacity equal to the discussion of
-great questions, and that no sovereign in Europe had a better public
-servant than Forjas. Even the restless Principal disinterestedly
-prosecuted measures, for forcing the clergy to pay their just share
-of the imposts. But greatness of mind, on great occasions, is a
-rare quality. Most of the Portuguese considered the sacrifices
-demanded, a sharper ill than submission, and it was impossible to
-unite entire obedience to the will of the British authorities, with
-an energetic, original spirit, in the native government. The Souza
-faction was always violent and foolish; the milder opposition of the
-three gentlemen, above mentioned, was excusable. Lord Wellington, a
-foreigner, was serving his own country, pleasing his own government,
-and forwarding his own fortune, final success was sure to send
-him to England, resplendent with glory, and beyond the reach of
-Portuguese ill-will. The native authorities had no such prospects.
-Their exertions brought little of personal fame, they were disliked
-by their own prince, hated by his favourites, and they feared to
-excite the enmity of the people, by a vigour, which, being unpleasing
-to their sovereign, would inevitably draw evil upon themselves; from
-the French if the invasion succeeded, from their own court if the
-independence of the country should be ultimately obtained.
-
-But thus much conceded, for the sake of justice, it is yet to
-be affirmed, with truth, that the conduct of the Portuguese and
-Brazilian governments was always unwise, often base. Notwithstanding
-the prince’s concessions, it was scarcely possible to remedy any
-abuses. The Lisbon government substituting evasive for active
-opposition, baffled Wellington and Stuart, by proposing inadequate
-laws, or by suffering the execution of effectual measures to be
-neglected with impunity; and the treaty of commerce with England
-always supplied them a source of dispute, partly from its natural
-difficulties, partly from their own bad faith. The general’s labours
-were thus multiplied not abated by his new powers, and in measuring
-these labours, it is to be noted, so entirely did Portugal depend
-upon England, that Wellington instead of drawing provisions for
-his army from the country, in a manner fed the whole nation, and
-was often forced to keep the army magazines low, that the people
-might live. This is proved by the importation of rice, flour, beef,
-and pork from America, which increased, each year of the war, in a
-surprising manner, the price keeping pace with the quantity, while
-the importation of dried fish, the ordinary food of the Portuguese,
-decreased.
-
-[Sidenote: Pitkin’s Statistic Tables.]
-
-In 1808 the supply of flour and wheat, from New York, was sixty
-thousand barrels. In 1811 six hundred thousand; in 1813, between
-seven and eight hundred thousand. Ireland, England, Egypt, Barbary,
-Sicily, the Brazils, parts of Spain, and even France, also
-contributed to the consumption, which greatly exceeded the natural
-means of Portugal; English treasure therefore either directly or
-indirectly, furnished the nation as well as the armies.
-
-The peace revenue of Portugal, including the Brazils, the colonies,
-and the islands, even in the most flourishing periods, had never
-exceeded thirty-six millions of cruzada novas; but in 1811, although
-Portugal alone raised twenty-five millions, this sum, added to
-the British subsidy, fell very short of the actual expenditure;
-yet economy was opposed by the local government, the prince was
-continually creating useless offices for his favourites, and
-encouraging law-suits and appeals to Rio Janeiro. The troops and
-fortresses were neglected, although the military branches of expense
-amounted to more than three-fourths of the whole receipts; and
-though Mr. Stuart engaged that England either by treaty or tribute
-would keep the Algerines quiet, he could not obtain the suppression
-of the Portuguese navy, which always fled from the barbarians. It
-was not until the middle of the year 1812, when admiral Berkeley,
-whose proceedings had at times produced considerable inconvenience,
-was recalled, that Mr. Stuart, with the aid of admiral Martin, who
-succeeded Berkeley, without a seat in the regency, effected this
-naval reform.
-
-The government, rather than adopt the measures suggested by
-Wellington, such as keeping up the credit of the paper-money, by
-regular payments of the interest, the fair and general collection of
-the “_Decima_,” and the repression of abuses in the custom-house, in
-the arsenal, and in the militia, always more costly than the line,
-projected the issuing of fresh paper, and endeavoured, by unworthy
-stock-jobbing schemes, to evade instead of meeting the difficulties
-of the times. To check their folly the general withheld the subsidy,
-and refused to receive their depreciated paper into the military
-chest; but neither did this vigorous proceeding produce more than
-a momentary return to honesty, and meanwhile, the working people
-were so cruelly oppressed that they would not labour for the public,
-except under the direction of British officers. Force alone could
-overcome their repugnance and force was employed, not to forward
-the defence of the country, but to meet particular interests and to
-support abuses. Such also was the general baseness of the Fidalgos,
-that even the charitable aid of money, received from England, was
-shamefully and greedily claimed by the rich, who insisted, that it
-was a donation to all and to be equally divided.
-
-Confusion and injustice prevailed every where, and Wellington’s
-energies were squandered on vexatious details; at one time he was
-remonstrating against the oppression of the working people, and
-devising remedies for local abuses; at another superintending the
-application of the English charities, and arranging the measures
-necessary to revive agriculture in the devastated districts; at all
-times endeavouring to reform the general administration, and in no
-case was he supported. Never during the war did he find an appeal to
-the patriotism of the Portuguese government answered frankly; never
-did he propose a measure which was accepted without difficulties.
-This opposition was at times carried to such a ridiculous extent,
-that when some Portuguese nobles in the French service took refuge
-with the curate Merino, and desired from their own government, a
-promise of safety, to which they were really entitled, the regency
-refused to give that assurance; nor would they publish an amnesty,
-which the English general desired for the sake of justice and from
-policy also, because valuable information as to the French army,
-could have been thus obtained. The authorities would neither say yes!
-nor no! and when general Pamplona applied to Wellington personally
-for some assurance, the latter could only answer that in like cases
-Mascarheñas had been hanged and Sabugal rewarded!
-
-To force a change in the whole spirit, and action of the government,
-seemed to some, the only remedy for the distemperature of the
-time; but this might have produced anarchy, and would have given
-countenance to the democratic spirit, contrary to the general policy
-of the British government. Wellington therefore desired rather to
-have the prince regent at Lisbon, or the Azores, whence his authority
-might, under the influence of England, be more directly used to
-enforce salutary regulations; he however considered it essential
-that Carlotta, whose intrigues were incessant, should not be with
-him, and, she on the other hand, laboured to come back without the
-prince, who was prevented from moving, by continued disturbances
-in the Brazils. Mr. Stuart, then despairing of good, proposed the
-establishment of a military government at once, but Wellington would
-not agree, although the mischief afloat clogged every wheel of the
-military machine.
-
-A law of king Sebastian, which obliged all gentlemen holding land to
-take arms was now revived, but desertion, which had commenced with
-the first appointment of British officers, increased; and so many
-persons sailed away in British vessels of war, to evade military
-service in their own country, that an edict was published to prevent
-the practice. Beresford checked the desertion for a moment, by
-condemning deserters to hard labour, and offering rewards to the
-country people to deliver them up; yet griping want renewed the
-evil at the commencement of the campaign, and the terrible severity
-of condemning nineteen at once to death, did not repress it. The
-cavalry, which had been at all times very inefficient, was now nearly
-ruined, the men were become faint-hearted, the breed of horses almost
-extinct, and shameful peculations amongst the officers increased the
-mischief: one guilty colonel was broke and his uniform stripped from
-his shoulders in the public square at Lisbon. However these examples
-produced fear and astonishment rather than correction, the misery of
-the troops continued, and the army, although by the care of Beresford
-it was again augmented to more than thirty thousand men under arms,
-declined in moral character and spirit.
-
-To govern armies in the field, is at all times a great and difficult
-matter; and in this contest the operations were so intimately
-connected with the civil administration of Portugal, Spain, and the
-Brazils, and the contest, being one of principles, so affected the
-policy of every nation of the civilised world, that unprecedented
-difficulties sprung up in the way of the general, and the ordinary
-frauds and embarrassments of war were greatly augmented. Napoleon’s
-continental system joined to his financial measures, which were
-quite opposed to debt and paper money, increased the pernicious
-effects of the English bank restriction; specie was abundant in
-France, but had nearly disappeared from England; it was only to be
-obtained from abroad, and at an incredible expense. The few markets
-left for British manufactures, and colonial produce, did not always
-make returns in the articles necessary for the war, and gold,
-absolutely indispensable in certain quantities, was only supplied,
-and this entirely from the incapacity of the English ministers, in
-the proportion of one-sixth of what was required, by an army which
-professed to pay for every thing. Hence continual efforts, on the
-part of the government, to force markets, hence a depreciation of
-value both in goods and bills; hence also a continual struggle, on
-the part of the general, to sustain a contest, dependant on the
-fluctuation of such a precarious system. Dependant also it was upon
-the prudence of three governments, one of which had just pushed its
-colonies to rebellion, when the French armies were in possession
-of four-fifths of the mother country; another was hourly raising up
-obstacles to its own defence though the enemy had just been driven
-from the capital; and the third was forcing a war with America, its
-greatest and surest market, when by commerce alone it could hope to
-sustain the struggle in the Peninsula.
-
-The failure of the preceding year’s harvest all over Europe had
-rendered the supply of Portugal very difficult. Little grain was
-to be obtained in any country of the north of Europe accessible to
-the British, and the necessity of paying in hard money rendered
-even that slight resource null. Sicily and Malta were thrown for
-subsistence upon Africa, where colonial produce was indeed available
-for commerce, yet the quantity of grain to be had there, was small,
-and the capricious nature of the barbarians rendered the intercourse
-precarious. In December 1811 there was only two months’ consumption
-of corn in Portugal for the population, although the magazines of the
-army contained more than three. To America therefore it was necessary
-to look. Now in 1810 Mr. Stuart had given treasury bills to the
-house of Sampayo for the purchase of American corn; but the disputes
-between England and the United States, the depreciation of English
-bills, from the quantity in the market, together with the expiration
-of the American bank charter, had prevented Sampayo from completing
-his commission, nevertheless, although the increasing bitterness of
-the disputes with America discouraged a renewal of this plan, some
-more bills were now given to the English minister at Washington,
-with directions to purchase corn, and consign it to Sampayo, to
-resell in Portugal as before, for the benefit of the military chest.
-Other bills were also sent to the Brazils, to purchase rice, and
-all the consuls in the Mediterranean were desired to encourage the
-exportation of grain and the importation of colonial produce. In this
-manner, despite of the English ministers’ incapacity, lord Wellington
-found resources to feed the population, to recover some of the specie
-expended by the army, and to maintain the war. But as the year
-advanced, the Non-intercourse-Act of Congress, which had caused a
-serious drain of specie from Portugal, was followed by an embargo for
-ninety days, and then famine, which already afflicted parts of Spain,
-menaced Portugal.
-
-Mr. Stuart knew of this embargo before the speculators did, and sent
-his agents orders to buy up with hard cash, at a certain price, a
-quantity of grain which had lately arrived at Gibraltar. He could
-only forestall the speculators by a few days, the cost soon rose
-beyond his means in specie, yet the new harvest being nearly ripe,
-this prompt effort sufficed for the occasion, and happily so, for
-the American declaration of war followed, and American privateers
-were to take the place of American flour-ships. But as ruin seemed to
-approach, Stuart’s energy redoubled. His agents seeking for grain in
-all parts of the world, discovered that in the Brazils a sufficient
-quantity might be obtained in exchange for English manufactures, to
-secure Portugal from absolute famine; and to protect this traffic,
-and to preserve that with the United States, he persuaded the regency
-to declare the neutrality of Portugal, and to interdict the sale of
-prizes within its waters. He also, at Wellington’s desire, besought
-the English admiralty to reinforce the squadron in the Tagus, and
-to keep cruisers at particular stations. Finally he pressed the
-financial reforms in Portugal with the utmost vigour and with some
-success. His efforts were, however, strangely counteracted from
-quarters least expected. The English consul, in the Western Isles,
-with incredible presumption, publicly excited the Islanders to war
-with America, when Mr. Stuart’s efforts were directed to prevent
-such a calamity; the Admiralty neglecting to station cruisers in the
-proper places, left the American privateers free to range along the
-Portuguese and African coast; and the cupidity of English merchants
-broke down the credit of the English commissariat paper-money, which
-was the chief medium of exchange on the immediate theatre of war.
-
-This paper had arisen from a simple military regulation. Lord
-Wellington, on first assuming the command in 1809, found that all
-persons, gave their own vouchers in payment for provisions, whereupon
-he proclaimed, that none save commissaries should thus act; and that
-all local accounts should be paid within one month, in ready money,
-if it was in the chest, if not, with bills on the commissary-general.
-These bills soon became numerous, because of the scarcity of specie,
-yet their value did not sink, because they enabled those who had
-really furnished supplies, to prove their debts without the trouble
-of following the head-quarters; and they had an advantage over
-receipts, inasmuch as they distinctly pointed out the person who was
-to pay; they were also in accord with the customs of the country, for
-the people were used to receive government bills. The possessors were
-paid in rotation, whenever there was money; the small holders, who
-were the real furnishers of the army first, the speculators last, a
-regulation by which justice and the credit of the paper were alike
-consulted.
-
-In 1812, this paper sunk twenty per cent., from the sordid practices
-of English mercantile houses whose agents secretly depreciated its
-credit and then purchased it; and in this dishonesty they were aided
-by some of the commissariat, notwithstanding the vigilant probity
-of the chief commissary. Sums, as low as ten pence, payable in
-Lisbon, I have myself seen in the hands of poor country people on
-the frontiers. By these infamous proceedings the poorer dealers were
-ruined or forced to raise their prices, which hurt their sales and
-contracted the markets to the detriment of the soldiers; and there
-was much danger, that the people generally, would thus discover the
-mode of getting cash for bills by submitting to high discounts, which
-would soon have rendered the contest too costly to continue. But
-the resources of lord Wellington and Mr. Stuart were not exhausted.
-They contrived to preserve the neutrality of Portugal, and by means
-of licenses continued to have importations of American flour, until
-the end of the war; a very fine stroke of policy, for this flour was
-paid for with English goods, and resold at a considerable profit for
-specie which went to the military chest. They were less successful in
-supporting the credit of the Portuguese government paper; bad faith,
-and the necessities of the native commissariat, which now caused an
-extraordinary issue, combined to lower its credit.
-
-The conde de Funchal, Mr. Villiers, and Mr. Vansittart proposed a
-bank, and other schemes, such as a loan of one million and a half
-from the English treasury, which shall be treated more at length
-in another place. But lord Wellington ridiculing the fallacy of a
-government, with revenues unequal to its expenditure, borrowing
-from a government which was unable to find specie sufficient to
-sustain the war, remarked, that the money could not be realised in
-the Portuguese treasury, or it must be realised at the expense of
-a military chest, whose hollow sound already mocked the soldiers’
-shout of victory. Again therefore he demanded the reform of abuses,
-and offered to take all the responsibility and odium upon himself,
-certain that the exigences of the war could be thus met, and the
-most vexatious imposts upon the poor abolished; neither did he fail
-to point out in detail the grounds of this conviction. His reasoning
-made as little impression upon Funchal, as it had done upon Linhares;
-money was no where to be had, and the general, after being forced to
-become a trader himself, now tolerated, for the sake of the resources
-it furnished, a contraband commerce, which he discovered Soult to
-have established with English merchants at Lisbon, exchanging the
-quicksilver of Almaden for colonial produce; and he was still to find
-in his own personal resources, the means of beating the enemy, in
-despite of the matchless follies of the governments he served. He did
-so, but complained that it was a hard task.
-
-
-
-
-BOOK XVIII.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-
-[Sidenote: 1812. May.]
-
-In the foregoing book, the political state of the belligerents, and
-those great chains, which bound the war in the Peninsula to the
-policy of the American as well as to the European nations, have been
-shewn; the minor events of the war have also been narrated, and the
-point where the decisive struggle was to be made has been indicated;
-thus nought remains to tell, save the particular preparations of each
-adverse general ere the noble armies were dashed together in the
-shock of battle.
-
-Nearly three hundred thousand French still trampled upon Spain,
-above two hundred and forty thousand were with the eagles, and so
-successful had the plan of raising native soldiers proved, that forty
-thousand Spaniards well organized marched under the king’s banners.
-
-In May the distribution of this immense army, which however according
-to the French custom included officers and persons of all kinds
-attached to the forces, was as follows:—
-
-[Sidenote: Appendix, No. 18]
-
-Seventy-six thousand, of which sixty thousand were with the eagles,
-composed the armies of Catalonia and Aragon, under Suchet, and they
-occupied Valencia, and the provinces whose name they bore.
-
-Forty-nine thousand men, of which thirty-eight thousand were with the
-eagles, composed the army of the north, under Caffarelli, and were
-distributed on the grand line of communication, from St. Sebastian to
-Burgos; but of this army two divisions of infantry and one of cavalry
-with artillery, were destined to reinforce Marmont.
-
-Nineteen thousand, of which seventeen thousand were with the eagles,
-composed the army of the centre, occupying a variety of posts in a
-circle round the capital, and having a division in La Mancha.
-
-Sixty-three thousand, of which fifty-six thousand were with the
-eagles, composed the army of the south, under Soult, occupying
-Andalusia and a part of Estremadura; but some of these troops were
-detained in distant governments by other generals.
-
-The army of Portugal, under Marmont, consisted of seventy thousand
-men, fifty-two thousand being with the eagles, and a reinforcement
-of twelve thousand men were in march to join this army from France.
-Marmont occupied Leon, part of Old Castile, and the Asturias, having
-his front upon the Tormes, and a division watching Gallicia.
-
-The numerous Spanish _juramentados_ were principally employed in
-Andalusia and with the army of the centre, and the experience of
-Ocaña, of Badajos, and many other places, proved that for the
-intrusive monarch, they fought with more vigour than their countrymen
-did against him.
-
-[Sidenote: The King’s correspondence captured at Vittoria.]
-
-In March Joseph had been appointed commander-in-chief of all the
-French armies, but the generals, as usual, resisted his authority.
-Dorsenne denied it altogether, Caffarelli, who succeeded Dorsenne,
-disputed even his civil power in the governments of the north,
-Suchet evaded his orders, Marmont neglected them, and Soult firmly
-opposed his injudicious military plans. The king was distressed
-for money, and he complained that Marmont’s army had consumed or
-plundered in three months, the whole resources of the province of
-Toledo and the district of Talavera, whereby Madrid and the army
-of the centre were famished. Marmont retorted by complaints of the
-wasteful extravagance of the king’s military administration in the
-capital. Thus dissensions were generated when the most absolute union
-was required.
-
-[Sidenote: King’s correspondence, MSS.]
-
-After the fall of Badajos Joseph judged that the allies would soon
-move, either against Marmont in Castile, against himself by the
-valley of the Tagus, or against Soult in Andalusia. In the first case
-he designed to aid Marmont, with the divisions of the north, with
-the army of the centre, and with fifteen thousand men to be drawn
-from the army of the south. In the second case to draw the army of
-Portugal and a portion of the army of the south into the valley of
-the Tagus, while the divisions from the army of the north entered
-Leon. In the third case, the half of Marmont’s army reinforced by
-a division of the army of the centre, was to pass the Tagus at
-Arzobispo and follow the allies. But the army of the centre was not
-ready to take the field, and Wellington knew it, Marmont’s complaint
-was just; waste and confusion prevailed at Madrid, and there was
-so little military vigour that the Empecinado, with other partida
-chiefs, pushed their excursions to the very gates of that capital.
-
-Joseph finally ordered Suchet to reinforce the army of the centre,
-and then calling up the Italian division of Palombini from the army
-of the Ebro, directed Soult to keep Drouet, with one-third of the
-army of the south, so far advanced in Estremadura as to have direct
-communication with general Trielhard in the valley of the Tagus;
-and he especially ordered that Drouet should pass that river if
-Hill passed it. It was necessary, he said, to follow the English
-army, and fight it with advantage of numbers, to do which required
-a strict co-operation of the three armies Drouet’s corps being the
-pivot. Meanwhile Marmont and Soult being each convinced, that the
-English general would invade their separate provinces, desired that
-the king would so view the coming contest, and oblige the other to
-regulate his movements thereby. The former complained, that having
-to observe the Gallicians, and occupy the Asturias, his forces were
-disseminated, and he asked for reinforcements to chase the partidas,
-who impeded the gathering of provisions in Castile and Leon. But the
-king, who over-rated the importance of Madrid, designed rather to
-draw more troops round the capital; and he entirely disapproved of
-Soult besieging Tarifa and Carthagena, arguing that if Drouet was not
-ready to pass the Tagus, the whole of the allies could unite on the
-right bank, and penetrate without opposition to the capital, or that
-lord Wellington would concentrate to overwhelm Marmont.
-
-[Sidenote: Joseph’s correspondence captured at Vittoria, MSS.]
-
-The duke of Dalmatia would not suffer Drouet to stir, and Joseph,
-whose jealousy had been excited by the marshal’s power in Andalusia,
-threatened to deprive him of his command. The inflexible duke replied
-that the king had already virtually done so by sending orders direct
-to Drouet, that he was ready to resign, but he would not commit a
-gross military error. Drouet could scarcely arrive in time to help
-Marmont, and would be too weak for the protection of Madrid, but
-his absence would ruin Andalusia, because the allies whose force in
-Estremadura was very considerable could in five marches reach Seville
-and take it on the sixth; then communicating with the fleets at Cadiz
-they would change their line of operations without loss, and unite
-with thirty thousand other troops, British and Spanish, who were
-at Gibraltar, in the Isla, in the Niebla, on the side of Murcia,
-and under Ballesteros in the Ronda. A new army might also come from
-the ocean, and Drouet, once beyond the Tagus could not return to
-Andalusia in less than twelve days; Marmont could scarcely come there
-in a month; the force under his own immediate command was spread all
-over Andalusia, if collected it would not furnish thirty thousand
-sabres and bayonets, exclusive of Drouet, and the evacuation of the
-province would be unavoidable.
-
-The French misfortunes, he said, had invariably arisen from not
-acting in large masses, and the army of Portugal, by spreading too
-much to its right, would ruin this campaign as it had ruined the
-preceding one. “Marmont should leave one or two divisions on the
-Tormes, and place the rest of his army in position, on both sides of
-the pass of Baños, the left near Placentia, and the right, extending
-towards Somosierra, which could be occupied by a detachment. Lord
-Wellington could not then advance by the valley of the Tagus without
-lending his left flank; nor to the Tormes without lending his right
-flank. Neither could he attack Marmont with effect, because the
-latter could easily concentrate, and according to the nature of the
-attack secure his retreat by the valley of the Tagus, or by the
-province of Avila, while the two divisions on the Tormes reinforced
-by two others from the army of the north would act on the allies’
-flank.” For these reasons Soult would not permit Drouet to quit
-Estremadura, yet he promised to reinforce him and so to press Hill,
-that Graham whom he supposed still at Portalegre, should be obliged
-to bring up the first and sixth divisions. In fine he promised
-that a powerful body of the allies should be forced to remain in
-Estremadura, or Hill would be defeated and Badajos invested. This
-dispute raged during May and the beginning of June, and meanwhile
-the English general well acquainted from the intercepted letters
-with these dissensions, made his arrangements, so as to confirm each
-general in his own peculiar views.
-
-Soult was the more easily deceived, because he had obtained a
-Gibraltar newspaper, in which, so negligent was the Portuguese
-government, lord Wellington’s secret despatches to Forjas containing
-an account of his army and of his first designs against the south
-were printed, and it must be remembered that the plan of invading
-Andalusia was only relinquished about the middle of May. Hill’s
-exploit at Almaraz menaced the north and south alike, but that
-general had adroitly spread a report, that his object was to
-gain time for the invasion of Andalusia, and all Wellington’s
-demonstrations were calculated to aid this artifice and impose upon
-Soult. Graham indeed returned to Beira with the first and sixth
-divisions and Cotton’s cavalry; but as Hill was at the same time
-reinforced, and Graham’s march sudden and secret, the enemy were
-again deceived in all quarters. For Marmont and the king, reckoning
-the number of divisions, thought the bulk of the allies was in the
-north, and did not discover that Hill’s corps had been nearly doubled
-in numbers though his division seemed the same, while Soult not
-immediately aware of Graham’s departure, found Hill more than a match
-for Drouet, and still expected the allies in Andalusia.
-
-Drouet willing rather to obey the king than Soult, drew towards
-Medellin in June, but Soult, as we have seen, sent the reinforcements
-from Seville, by the road of Monasterio, and thus obliged him to
-come back. Then followed those movements and counter-movements
-in Estremadura, which have been already related, each side being
-desirous of keeping a great number of their adversaries in that
-province. Soult’s judgment was thus made manifest, for Drouet could
-only have crossed the Tagus with peril to Andalusia, whereas, without
-endangering that province, he now made such a powerful diversion for
-Marmont, that Wellington’s army in the north was reduced below the
-army of Portugal, and much below what the latter could be raised
-to, by detachments from the armies of the north, and of the centre.
-However in the beginning of June, while the French generals were
-still disputing, lord Wellington’s dispositions were completed, he
-had established at last an extensive system of gaining intelligence
-all over Spain, and as his campaign was one which posterity will
-delight to study, it is fitting to shew very exactly the foundation
-on which the operations rested.
-
-His political and military reasons for seeking a battle have been
-before shewn, but this design was always conditional; he would fight
-on advantage, but he would risk nothing beyond the usual chances of
-combat. While Portugal was his, every movement, which obliged the
-enemy to concentrate was an advantage, and his operations were ever
-in subservience to this vital condition. His whole force amounted
-to nearly ninety thousand men, of which about six thousand were in
-Cadiz, but the Walcheren expedition was still to be atoned for: the
-sick were so numerous amongst the regiments which had served there,
-that only thirty-two thousand or a little more than half of the
-British soldiers, were under arms. This number, with twenty-four
-thousand Portuguese, made fifty-six thousand sabres and bayonets in
-the field; and it is to be remembered that now and at all times the
-Portuguese infantry were mixed with the British either by brigades or
-regiments; wherefore in speaking of English divisions in battle the
-Portuguese battalions are always included, and it is to their praise,
-that their fighting was such as to justify the use of the general
-term.
-
-The troops were organized in the following manner.
-
-Two thousand cavalry and fifteen thousand infantry, with twenty-four
-guns, were under Hill, who had also the aid of four garrison
-Portuguese regiments, and of the fifth Spanish army. Twelve hundred
-Portuguese cavalry were in the Tras Os Montes, under general D’Urban,
-and about three thousand five hundred British cavalry and thirty-six
-thousand infantry, with fifty-four guns, were under Wellington’s
-immediate command, which was now enlarged by three thousand five
-hundred Spaniards, infantry and cavalry, under Carlos D’España and
-Julian Sanchez.
-
-The bridge of Almaraz had been destroyed to lengthen the French
-lateral communications, and Wellington now ordered the bridge of
-Alcantara to be repaired to shorten his own. The breach in that
-stupendous structure was ninety feet wide, and one hundred and fifty
-feet above the water line. Yet the fertile genius of colonel Sturgeon
-furnished the means of passing this chasm, with heavy artillery, and
-without the enemy being aware of the preparations made until the
-moment of execution. In the arsenal of Elvas he secretly prepared a
-net-work of strong ropes, after a fashion which permitted it to be
-carried in parts, and with the beams, planking, and other materials
-it was transported to Alcantara on seventeen carriages. Straining
-beams were then fixed in the masonry, on each side of the broken
-arch, cables were stretched across the chasm, the net-work was drawn
-over, tarpaulin blinds were placed at each side, and the heaviest
-guns passed in safety. This remarkable feat procured a new, and
-short, internal line of communication, along good roads, while the
-enemy, by the destruction of the bridge at Almaraz, was thrown upon a
-long external line, and very bad roads.
-
-Hill’s corps was thus suddenly brought a fortnight’s march nearer to
-Wellington, than Drouet was to Marmont, if both marched as armies
-with artillery; but there was still a heavy drag upon the English
-general’s operations. He had drawn so largely upon Portugal for means
-of transport, that agriculture was seriously embarrassed, and yet
-his subsistence was not secured for more than a few marches beyond
-the Agueda. To remedy this he set sailors and workmen to remove
-obstructions in the Douro and the Tagus; the latter, which in Philip
-the Second’s time had been navigable from Toledo to Lisbon, was
-opened to Malpica, not far from Alcantara, and the Douro was opened
-as high as Barca de Alba, below which it ceases to be a Spanish
-river. The whole land transport of the interior of Portugal was thus
-relieved; the magazines were brought up the Tagus, close to the
-new line of communication by Alcantara, on one side; on the other,
-the country vessels conveyed povisions to the mouth of the Douro,
-and that river then served to within a short distance of Almeida,
-Ciudad Rodrigo, and Salamanca. Still danger was to be apprehended
-from the American privateers along the coast, which the Admiralty
-neglected; and the navigation of the Douro was suddenly suspended by
-the overheated zeal of a commissary, who being thwarted by the delays
-of the boatmen, issued, of his own authority, an edict, establishing
-regulations, and pronouncing pains and penalties upon all those who
-did not conform to them. The river was immediately abandoned by the
-craft, and the government endeavoured by a formal protest, to give
-political importance to this affair, which was peculiarly vexatious,
-inasmuch as the boatmen were already so averse to passing the old
-points of navigation, that very severe measures were necessary to
-oblige them to do so.
-
-When this matter was arranged, Wellington had still to dread that
-if his operations led him far into Spain, the subsistence of his
-army would be insecure; for there were many objects of absolute
-necessity, especially meat, which could not be procured except with
-ready money, and not only was he unfurnished of specie, but his hopes
-of obtaining it were nearly extinguished, by the sweep lord William
-Bentinck had made in the Mediterranean money-market: moreover the
-English ministers chose this period of difficulty to interfere, and
-in an ignorant and injurious manner, with his mode of issuing bills
-to supply his necessities. His resolution to advance could not be
-shaken, yet before crossing the Agueda, having described his plan of
-campaign to lord Liverpool, he finished in these remarkable words.
-
-“I am not insensible to losses and risks, nor am I blind to the
-disadvantages under which I undertake this operation. My friends in
-Castile, and I believe no officer ever had better, assure me that we
-shall not want provisions even before the harvest will be reaped;
-that there exist concealed granaries which shall be opened to us,
-and that if we can pay for a part, credit will be given to us for
-the remainder, and they have long given me hopes that we should be
-able to borrow money in Castile upon British securities. In case we
-should be able to maintain ourselves in Castile, the general action
-and its results being delayed by the enemy’s manœuvres, which I
-think not improbable, I have in contemplation other resources for
-drawing supplies from the country, and I shall have at all events
-our own magazines at Almeida and Ciudad Rodrigo. _But with all these
-prospects I cannot reflect without shuddering upon the probability
-that we shall be distressed; nor upon the consequences which may
-result from our wanting money in the interior of Spain._”
-
-In the contemplated operations lord Wellington did not fail to look
-both to his own and to his enemy’s flanks. His right was secured by
-the destruction of the forts, the stores, and boats at Almaraz; for
-the valley of the Tagus was exhausted of provisions, and full of
-cross rivers which required a pontoon train to pass if the French
-should menace Portugal seriously in that line: moreover he caused
-the fortress of Monte Santos, which covered the Portuguese frontier
-between the Tagus and Ciudad Rodrigo to be put into a state of
-defence, and the restoration of Alcantara gave Hill the power of
-quickly interfering. On the other side if Marmont, strengthened by
-Caffarelli’s division, should operate strongly against the allies’
-left, a retreat was open either upon Ciudad Rodrigo, or across the
-mountains into the valley of the Tagus. Such were his arrangements
-for his own interior line of operations, and to menace his enemy’s
-flanks his measures embraced the whole Peninsula.
-
-1º. He directed Silveira and D’Urban, who were on the frontier of
-Tras os Montes, to file along the Douro, menace the enemy’s right
-flank and rear, and form a link of connection with the Gallician
-army, with which Castaños promised to besiege Astorga, as soon as
-the Anglo-Portuguese should appear on the Tormes. Meanwhile sir
-Home Popham’s expedition was to commence its operations, in concert
-with the seventh Spanish army, on the coast of Biscay and so draw
-Caffarelli’s divisions from the succour of Marmont.
-
-2º. To hinder Suchet from reinforcing the king, or making a movement
-towards Andalusia, the Sicilian expedition was to menace Catalonia
-and Valencia, in concert with the Murcian army.
-
-3º. To prevent Soult overwhelming Hill, Wellington trusted, 1º. to
-the garrison of Gibraltar, and to the Anglo-Portuguese and Spanish
-troops, in the Isla de Leon; 2º. to insurrections in the kingdom of
-Cordoba, where Echevaria going from Cadiz, by the way of Ayamonte,
-with three hundred officers, was to organize the Partidas of that
-district, as Mendizabel had done those of the northern parts; 3º. to
-Ballesteros’s army, but he ever dreaded the rashness of this general,
-who might be crushed in a moment, which would have endangered Hill
-and rendered any success in the north nugatory.
-
-It was this fear of Ballesteros’s rashness that caused Wellington to
-keep so strong a corps in Estremadura, and hence Soult’s resolution
-to prevent Drouet from quitting Estremadura, even though Hill should
-cross the Tagus, was wise and military. For though Drouet would
-undoubtedly have given the king and Marmont a vast superiority in
-Castile, the general advantage would have remained with Wellington.
-Hill could at any time have misled Drouet by crossing the bridge of
-Alcantara, and returning again, when Drouet had passed the bridge
-of Toledo or Arzobispo. The French general’s march would then have
-led to nothing, for either Hill could have joined Wellington, by
-a shorter line, and Soult, wanting numbers, could not have taken
-advantage of his absence from Estremadura; or Wellington could
-have retired within the Portuguese frontier, rendering Drouet’s
-movement to Castile a pure loss; or reinforcing Hill by the bridge of
-Alcantara, he could have gained a fortnight’s march and overwhelmed
-Soult in Andalusia. The great error of the king’s plan was that it
-depended upon exact co-operation amongst persons who jealous of each
-other were far from obedient to himself, and whose marches it was
-scarcely possible to time justly; because the armies were separated
-by a great extent of country and their lines of communication were
-external long and difficult, while their enemy was acting on
-internal short and easy lines. Moreover the French correspondence,
-continually intercepted by the Partidas, was brought to Wellington,
-and the knowledge thus gained by one side and lost by the other
-caused the timely reinforcing of Hill in Estremadura, and the keeping
-of Palombini’s Italian division from Madrid for three weeks; an event
-which in the sequel proved of vital consequence, inasmuch as it
-prevented the army of the centre moving until after the crisis of the
-campaign had passed.
-
-Hill’s exploit at Almaraz, and the disorderly state of the army
-of the centre, having in a manner isolated the army of Portugal,
-the importance of Gallicia and the Asturias, with respect to the
-projected operations of lord Wellington, was greatly increased. For
-the Gallicians could either act in Castile upon the rear of Marmont,
-and so weaken the line of defence on the Douro; or, marching through
-the Asturias, spread insurrection along the coast to the Montaña de
-Santander and there join the seventh army. Hence the necessity of
-keeping Bonet in the Asturias, and watching the Gallician passes, was
-become imperative, and Marmont, following Napoleon’s instructions,
-had fortified the different posts in Castile, but his army was too
-widely spread, and, as Soult observed, was extended to its right
-instead of concentrating on the left near Baños.
-
-The duke of Ragusa had resolved to adopt the Tormes and Douro, as
-his lines of defence, and never doubting that he was the object of
-attack, watched the augmentation of Wellington’s forces and magazines
-with the utmost anxiety. He had collected considerable magazines
-himself, and the king had formed others for him at Talavera and
-Segovia, yet he did not approach the Agueda, but continued to occupy
-a vast extent of country for the convenience of feeding them until
-June. When he heard of the restoration of the bridge of Alcantara,
-and of magazines being formed at Caceres, he observed that the latter
-would be on the left of the Guadiana if Andalusia were the object;
-and although not well placed for an army acting against himself, were
-admirably placed for an army which having fought in Castile should
-afterwards operate against Madrid, because they could be transported
-at once to the right of the Tagus by Alcantara, and could be secured
-by removing the temporary restorations. Wherefore, judging that Hill
-would immediately rejoin Wellington, to aid in the battle, that, with
-a prophetic feeling he observed, would be fought near the Tormes, he
-desired Caffarelli to put the divisions of the army of the north in
-movement; and he prayed the king to have guns, and a pontoon train
-sent from Madrid that Drouet might pass at Almaraz and join him by
-the Puerto Pico.
-
-[Sidenote: See Plan, No. 3.]
-
-Joseph immediately renewed his orders to Soult, and to Caffarelli,
-but he only sent two small boats to Almaraz; and Marmont, seeing
-the allied army suddenly concentrated on the Agueda, recalled Foy
-from the valley of the Tagus, and Bonet from the Asturias. His first
-design was to assemble the army at Medina del Campo, Valladolid,
-Valdesillas, Toro, Zamora, and Salamanca, leaving two battalions and
-a brigade of dragoons at Benavente to observe the Gallicians. Thus
-the bulk of the troops would line the Duero, while two divisions
-formed an advanced guard, on the Tormes, and the whole could be
-concentrated in five days. His ultimate object was to hold the Tormes
-until Wellington’s whole army was on that river, then to assemble
-his own troops on the Duero, and act so as to favour the defence of
-the forts at Salamanca until reinforcements from the north should
-enable him to drive the allies again within the Portuguese frontier;
-and he warned Caffarelli that the forts could not hold out more than
-fifteen days after they should be abandoned by the French army.
-
-[Sidenote: Intercepted French papers, MSS.]
-
-Marmont was a man to be feared. He possessed quickness of
-apprehension and courage, moral and physical, scientific
-acquirements, experience of war, and great facility in the moving
-of troops; he was strong of body, in the flower of life, eager for
-glory, and although neither a great nor a fortunate commander, such a
-one as might bear the test of fire. His army was weak in cavalry but
-admirably organized, for he had laboured with successful diligence,
-to restore that discipline which had been so much shaken by the
-misfortunes of Massena’s campaign, and by the unceasing operations
-from the battle of Fuentes Onoro to the last retreat from Beira.
-Upon this subject a digression must be allowed, because it has been
-often affirmed, that the bad conduct of the French in the Peninsula,
-was encouraged by their leaders, was unmatched in wickedness, and
-peculiar to the nation. Such assertions springing from morbid
-national antipathies it is the duty of the historian to correct. All
-troops will behave ill, when ill-governed, but the best commanders
-cannot at times prevent the perpetration of the most frightful
-mischief; and this truth, so important to the welfare of nations, may
-be proved with respect to the Peninsular war, by the avowal of the
-generals on either side, and by their endeavours to arrest the evils
-which they deplored. When Dorsenne returned from his expedition
-against Gallicia, in the latter end of 1811, he reproached his
-soldiers in the following terms. “The fields have been devastated and
-houses have been burned; these excesses are unworthy of the French
-soldier, they pierce the hearts of the most devoted and friendly of
-the Spaniards, they are revolting to honest men, and embarrass the
-provisioning of the army. The general-in-chief sees them with sorrow,
-and orders; that besides a permanent court-martial, there shall be
-at the head-quarters of each division, of every arm, a military
-commission which shall try the following crimes, and on conviction,
-sentence to death, without appeal; execution to be done on the spot,
-in presence of the troops.
-
-“1º. Quitting a post to pillage. 2º. Desertion of all kinds. 3º.
-Disobedience in face of the enemy. 4º. Insubordination of all kinds.
-5º. Marauding of all kinds. 6º. Pillage of all kinds.
-
-“_All persons military or others, shall be considered as pillagers,
-who quit their post or their ranks to enter houses, &c. or who use
-violence to obtain from the inhabitants more than they are legally
-entitled to._
-
-“_All persons shall be considered deserters who shall be found
-without a passport beyond the advanced posts, and frequent patroles
-day and night shall be sent to arrest all persons beyond the
-outposts._
-
-“_Before the enemy when in camp or cantonments roll-calls shall take
-place every hour, and all persons absent without leave twice running
-shall be counted deserters and judged as such. The servants and
-sutlers of the camp are amenable to this as well as the soldier._”
-
-This order Marmont, after reproaching his troops for like excesses,
-renewed with the following additions.
-
-“_Considering that the disorders of the army have arrived at the
-highest degree, and require the most vigorous measures of repression,
-it is ordered,_
-
-“1º. _All non-commissioned officers and soldiers found a quarter of
-a league from their quarters, camp, or post without leave, shall be
-judged pillagers and tried by the military commission._
-
-“2º. _The gens-d’armes shall examine the baggage of all sutlers and
-followers and shall seize all effects that appear to be pillaged,
-and shall burn what will burn, and bring the gold and silver to the
-paymaster-general under a ‘procès verbal,’ and all persons whose
-effects have been seized as pillage to the amount of one hundred
-livres shall be sent to the military commission, and on conviction
-suffer death._
-
-“3º. _All officers who shall not take proper measures to repress
-disorders under their command shall be sent in arrest to
-head-quarters there to be judged._”
-
-Then appointing the number of baggage animals to each company, upon
-a scale which coincides in a remarkable manner with the allowances
-in the British army, Marmont directed the overplus to be seized and
-delivered, under a legal process, to the nearest villages, ordering
-the provost-general to look to the execution each day, and report
-thereon. Finally, he clothed the provost-general with all the powers
-of the military commissions; and proof was soon given that his orders
-were not mere threats, for two captains were arrested for trial, and
-a soldier of the twenty-sixth regiment was condemned to death by one
-of the provisional commissions for stealing church vessels.
-
-Such was the conduct of the French, and touching the conduct of the
-English, lord Wellington, in the same month, wrote thus to lord
-Liverpool.
-
-“_The outrages committed by the British soldiers, belonging to this
-army, have become so enormous, and they have produced an effect on
-the minds of the people of the country, so injurious to the cause,
-and likely to be so dangerous to the army itself, that I request your
-Lordship’s early attention to the subject. I am sensible that the
-best measures to be adopted on this subject are those of prevention,
-and I believe there are few officers who have paid more attention
-to the subject than I have done, and I have been so far successful,
-as that few outrages are committed by the soldiers who are with
-their regiments, after the regiments have been a short time in this
-country._”
-
-“_But in the extended system on which we are acting, small
-detachments of soldiers must be marched long distances, through
-the country, either as escorts, or returning from being escorts to
-prisoners, or coming from hospitals, &c. and notwithstanding that
-these detachments are never allowed to march, excepting under the
-command of an officer or more, in proportion to its size, and that
-every precaution is taken to provide for the regularity of their
-subsistence, there is no instance of the march of one of these
-detachments that outrages of every description are not committed, and
-I am sorry to say with impunity._”
-
-“_The guard-rooms are therefore crowded with prisoners, and the
-offences of which they have been guilty remain unpunished, to the
-destruction of the discipline of the army, and to the injury of the
-reputation of the country for justice. I have thought it proper to
-lay these circumstances before your lordship. I am about to move the
-army further forward into Spain, and I assure your lordship, that
-I have not a friend in that country, who has not written to me in
-dread of the consequences, which must result to the army, and to the
-cause from a continuance of these disgraceful irregularities, which I
-declare I have it not in my power to prevent._”
-
-To this should have been added, the insubordination, and the evil
-passions, awakened by the unchecked plunder of Ciudad Rodrigo and
-Badajos. But long had the English general complained of the bad
-discipline of his army, and the following extracts, from a letter
-dated a few months later, shew that his distrust at the present
-time was not ill-founded. After observing that the constitutions of
-the soldiers were so much shaken from disorders acquired by their
-service at Walcheren, or by their own irregularities, that a British
-army was almost a moving hospital, more than one-third or about
-twenty thousand men being sick, or attending upon the sick, he thus
-describes their conduct.
-
-“_The disorders which these soldiers have, are of a very trifling
-description, they are considered to render them incapable of serving
-with their regiments, but they certainly do not incapacitate them
-from committing outrages of all descriptions on their passage through
-the country, and in the last movements of the hospitals the soldiers
-have not only plundered the inhabitants of their property, but the
-hospital stores which moved with the hospitals, and have sold the
-plunder. And all these outrages are committed with impunity, no proof
-can be brought on oath before a court-martial that any individual
-has committed an outrage, and the soldiers of the army are becoming
-little better than a band of robbers._” “_I have carried the
-establishment and authority of the provost-marshal as far as either
-will go; there are at this moment not less than one provost-marshal,
-and nineteen assistant provost-marshals, attached to the several
-divisions of cavalry and infantry and to the hospital stations, to
-preserve order, but this establishment is not sufficient, and I have
-not the means of increasing it._”
-
-The principal remedies he proposed, were the admitting less rigorous
-proof of guilt, before courts martial; the forming a military police,
-_such as the French, and other armies possessed_; the enforcing more
-attention on the part of the officers to their duties; the increasing
-the pay and responsibility of the non-commissioned officers, and the
-throwing upon them the chief care of the discipline. But in treating
-this part of the subject he broached an opinion which can scarcely be
-sustained even by his authority. Assuming, somewhat unjustly, that
-the officers of his army were, from consciousness of like demerit,
-generally too lenient in their sentences on each other for neglect
-of duty, he says, “I am inclined to entertain the opinion that in
-the British army duties of inspection and control over the conduct
-and habits of the soldiers, the performance of which by somebody
-is the only effectual check to disorder and all its consequences,
-are imposed upon the subaltern officers of regiments, which duties
-British officers, being of the class of gentlemen in society, and
-being required to appear as such, have never performed _and which
-they will never perform_. It is very necessary, however, that the
-duties should be performed by somebody, and for this reason, and
-having observed the advantage derived in the guards, from the
-respectable body of non-commissioned officers in those regiments,
-who perform all the duties required from subalterns in the marching
-regiments, I had suggested to your lordship the expediency of
-increasing the pay of the non-commissioned officers in the army.”
-
-Now it is a strange assumption, that a gentleman necessarily neglects
-his duty to his country. When well taught, which was not always
-the case, gentlemen by birth generally performed their duties in
-the Peninsula more conscientiously than others, and the experience
-of every commanding officer will bear out the assertion. If the
-non-commissioned officers could do all the duties of subaltern
-officers, why should the country bear the useless expense of the
-latter? But in truth the system of the guards produced rather a
-medium goodness, than a superior excellence; the system of sir
-John Moore, founded upon the principle, that the officers should
-thoroughly know, and be responsible for the discipline of their
-soldiers, better bore the test of experience. All the British
-regiments of the light division were formed in the camps of
-Shorn-Cliff by that most accomplished commander; very many of the
-other acknowledged good regiments of the army had been instructed
-by him in Sicily; and wherever an officer, formed under Moore,
-obtained a regiment, whether British or Portuguese, that regiment was
-distinguished in this war for its discipline and enduring qualities;
-courage was common to all.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-CAMPAIGN OF 1812.
-
-
-[Sidenote: 1812. June.]
-
-[Sidenote: See Plan, No. 2.]
-
-On the 13th of June, the periodic rains having ceased, and the field
-magazines being completed, Wellington passed the Agueda and marched
-towards the Tormes in four columns, one of which was composed of the
-Spanish troops. The 16th he reached the Valmusa stream, within six
-miles of Salamanca, and drove a French detachment across the Tormes.
-All the bridges, save that of Salamanca which was defended by the
-forts, had been destroyed, and there was a garrison in the castle of
-Alba de Tormes, but the 17th the allies passed the river above and
-below the town, by the deep fords of Santa Marta and Los Cantos, and
-general Henry Clinton invested the forts the same day with the sixth
-division. Marmont, with two divisions, and some cavalry, retired to
-Fuente el Sauco, on the road of Toro, followed by an advanced guard
-of the allies; Salamanca instantly became a scene of rejoicing,
-the houses were illuminated, and the people shouting, singing, and
-weeping for joy, gave Wellington their welcome while his army took a
-position on the mountain of San Cristoval about five miles in advance.
-
-
-SIEGE OF THE FORTS AT SALAMANCA.
-
-[Sidenote: Jones’s Sieges.]
-
-[Sidenote: Wellington’s despatches, MSS.]
-
-Four eighteen-pounders had followed the army from Almeida, three
-twenty-four pound howitzers were furnished by the field-artillery,
-and the battering train used by Hill at Almaraz, had passed the
-bridge of Alcantara the 11th. These were the means of offence, but
-the strength of the forts had been under-rated; they contained eight
-hundred men, and it was said that thirteen convents and twenty-two
-colleges had been destroyed in their construction. San Vincente, so
-called from the large convent it enclosed, was the key-fort. Situated
-on a perpendicular cliff overhanging the Tormes, and irregular in
-form, but well flanked, it was separated by a deep ravine from the
-other forts, which were called St. Cajetano and La Merced. These were
-also on high ground, smaller than San Vincente, and of a square form,
-but with bomb-proofs, and deep ditches, having perpendicular scarps
-and counterscarps.
-
-In the night of the 17th colonel Burgoyne, the engineer directing the
-siege, commenced a battery, for eight guns, at the distance of two
-hundred and fifty yards from the main wall of Vincente, and as the
-ruins of the destroyed convents rendered it impossible to excavate,
-earth was brought from a distance; but the moon was up, the night
-short, the enemy’s fire of musketry heavy, the workmen of the sixth
-division were inexperienced, and at day-break the battery was still
-imperfect. Meanwhile an attempt had been made to attach the miner
-secretly to the counterscarp, and when the vigilance of a trained
-dog baffled this design, the enemy’s picquet was driven in, and the
-attempt openly made, yet it was rendered vain by a plunging fire from
-the top of the convent.
-
-On the 18th eight hundred Germans, placed in the ruins, mastered all
-the enemy’s fire save that from loop-holes, and colonel May, who
-directed the artillery service, then placed two field-pieces on a
-neighbouring convent, called San Bernardo, overlooking the fort,
-however these guns could not silence the French artillery.
-
-In the night, the first battery was armed, covering for two
-field-pieces as a counter-battery was raised a little to its right,
-and a second breaching battery for two howitzers, was constructed on
-the Cajetano side of the ravine.
-
-At day-break on the 19th seven guns opened, and at nine o’clock the
-wall of the convent was cut away to the level of the counterscarp.
-The second breaching battery, which saw lower down the scarp, then
-commenced its fire; but the iron howitzers proved unmeet battering
-ordnance, and the enemy’s musketry being entirely directed on this
-point, because the first battery, to save ammunition, had ceased
-firing, brought down a captain and more than twenty gunners. The
-howitzers did not injure the wall, ammunition was scarce, and as the
-enemy could easily cut off the breach in the night, the fire ceased.
-
-The 20th at mid-day, colonel Dickson arrived with the iron howitzers
-from Elvas, and the second battery being then reinforced with
-additional pieces, revived its fire, against a re-entering angle of
-the convent a little beyond the former breach. The wall here was
-soon broken through, and in an instant a huge cantle of the convent,
-with its roof, went to the ground, crushing many of the garrison and
-laying bare the inside of the building: carcasses were immediately
-thrown into the opening, to burn the convent, but the enemy
-undauntedly maintained their ground and extinguished the flames. A
-lieutenant and fifteen gunners were lost this day, on the side of
-the besiegers, and the ammunition being nearly gone, the attack was
-suspended until fresh stores could come up from Almeida.
-
-During the progress of this siege, the general aspect of affairs had
-materially changed on both sides. Lord Wellington had been deceived
-as to the strength of the forts, and intercepted returns of the
-armies of the south and of Portugal now shewed to him, that they also
-were far stronger than he had expected; at the same time he heard of
-Ballesteros’s defeat at Bornos, and of Slade’s unfortunate cavalry
-action of Llera. He had calculated that Bonet would not quit the
-Asturias, and that general was in full march for Leon, Caffarelli
-also was preparing to reinforce Marmont, and thus the brilliant
-prospect of the campaign was suddenly clouded. But on the other hand
-Bonet had unexpectedly relinquished the Asturias after six days’
-occupation; three thousand Gallicians were in that province and in
-communication with the seventh army, and the maritime expedition
-under Popham had sailed for the coast of Biscay.
-
-Neither was the king’s situation agreeable. The Partidas intercepted
-his despatches so surely, that it was the 19th ere Marmont’s letter
-announcing Wellington’s advance, and saying that Hill also was in
-march for the north reached Madrid. Soult detained Drouet, Suchet
-refused to send more than one brigade towards Madrid, and Caffarelli,
-disturbed that Palombini should march upon the capital instead of
-Burgos, kept back the divisions promised to Marmont. Something was
-however gained in vigour, for the king, no longer depending upon the
-assistance of the distant armies, gave orders to blow up Mirabete
-and abandon La Mancha on one side, and the forts of Somosierra and
-Buitrago on the other, with a view to unite the army of the centre.
-
-A detachment of eight hundred men under colonel Noizet, employed
-to destroy Buitrago, was attacked on his return by the Empecinado
-with three thousand, but Noizet, an able officer, defeated him and
-reached Madrid with little loss. Palombini’s march was then hastened,
-and imperative orders directed Soult to send ten thousand men to
-Toledo. The garrison of Segovia was reinforced to preserve one of the
-communications with Marmont, that marshal was informed of Hill’s true
-position, and the king advised him to give battle to Wellington, for
-he supposed the latter to have only eighteen thousand English troops;
-but he had twenty-four thousand, and had yet left Hill so strong that
-he desired him to fight Drouet if occasion required.
-
-Meanwhile Marmont, who had remained in person at Fuente el Sauco,
-united there, on the 20th, four divisions of infantry and a brigade
-of cavalry, furnishing about twenty-five thousand men of all arms,
-with which he marched to the succour of the forts. His approach
-over an open country was descried at a considerable distance, and
-a brigade of the fifth division was immediately called off from
-the siege, the battering train was sent across the Tormes, and the
-army, which was in bivouac on the Salamanca side of St. Christoval,
-formed in order of battle on the top. This position of Christoval
-was about four miles long, and rather concave, the ascent in front
-steep, and tangled with hollow roads and stone enclosures, belonging
-to the villages, but the summit was broad, even, and covered with
-ripe corn; the right was flanked by the Upper Tormes, and the left
-dipped into the country bordering the Lower Tormes, for in passing
-Salamanca, that river makes a sweep round the back of the position.
-The infantry, the heavy cavalry, and the guns crowned the summit
-of the mountain, but the light cavalry fell back from the front to
-the low country on the left, where there was a small stream and a
-marshy flat. The villages of Villares and Monte Rubio were behind the
-left of the position; the village of Cabrerizos marked the extreme
-right, though the hill still trended up the river. The villages of
-Christoval, Castillanos, and Moresco, were nearly in a line, along
-the foot of the heights in front, the last was somewhat within the
-allies’ ground, and nothing could be stronger than the position,
-which completely commanded all the country for many miles; but the
-heat was excessive and there was neither shade, nor fuel to cook
-with, nor water nearer than the Tormes.
-
-[Sidenote: See Plan, No. 3.]
-
-About five o’clock in the evening the enemy’s horsemen approached,
-pointing towards the left of the position, as if to turn it by the
-Lower Tormes, whereupon the British light cavalry made a short
-forward movement and a partial charge took place; but the French
-opened six guns, and the British retired to their own ground near
-Monte Rubio and Villares. The light division which was held in
-reserve, immediately closed towards the left of the position until
-the French cavalry halted and then returned to the centre. Meanwhile
-the main body of the enemy bore, in one dark volume, against the
-right, and halting at the very foot of the position, sent a flight of
-shells on to the lofty summit; nor did this fire cease until after
-dark, when the French general, after driving back all the outposts,
-obtained possession of Moresco, and established himself behind that
-village and Castellanos within gun-shot of the allies.
-
-The English general slept that night on the ground, amongst the
-troops, and at the first streak of light the armies were again under
-arms. Nevertheless, though some signals were interchanged between
-Marmont and the forts, both sides were quiet until towards evening,
-when Wellington detached the sixty-eighth regiment from the line,
-to drive the French from Moresco. This attack, made with vigour,
-succeeded, but the troops being recalled just as day-light failed, a
-body of French coming unperceived through the standing corn, broke
-into the village as the British were collecting their posts from the
-different avenues, and did considerable execution. In the skirmish an
-officer of the sixty-eighth, named Mackay, being suddenly surrounded,
-refused to surrender, and singly fighting against a multitude,
-received more wounds than the human frame was thought capable of
-sustaining, yet he still lives to shew his honourable scars.
-
-On the 22d three divisions, and a brigade of cavalry joined Marmont,
-who having now nearly forty thousand men in hand, extended his left
-and seized a part of the height in advance of the allies’ right wing,
-from whence he could discern the whole of their order of battle, and
-attack their right on even terms. However general Graham advancing
-with the seventh division dislodged this French detachment with a
-sharp skirmish before it could be formidably reinforced, and that
-night Marmont withdrew from his dangerous position to some heights
-about six miles in his rear.
-
-It was thought that the French general’s tempestuous advance to
-Moresco with such an inferior force, on the evening of the 20th,
-should have been his ruin. Lord Wellington saw clearly enough the
-false position of his enemy, but he argued, that if Marmont came up
-to fight, it was better to defend a very strong position, than to
-descend and combat in the plain, seeing that the inferiority of force
-was not such as to insure the result of the battle being decisive of
-the campaign; and in case of failure, a retreat across the Tormes
-would have been very difficult. To this may be added, that during the
-first evening there was some confusion amongst the allies, before the
-troops of the different nations could form their order of battle.
-Moreover, as the descent of the mountain towards the enemy was by no
-means easy, because of the walls and avenues, and the two villages,
-which covered the French front, it is probable that Marmont, who had
-plenty of guns and whose troops were in perfect order and extremely
-ready of movement, could have evaded the action, until night. This
-reasoning, however, will not hold good on the 21st. The allies, whose
-infantry was a third more and their cavalry three times as numerous
-and much better mounted than the French, might have been poured down
-by all the roads passing over the position at day-break; then Marmont
-turned on both flanks and followed vehemently, could never have made
-his retreat to the Douro through the open country; but on the 22d,
-when the French general had received his other divisions, the chances
-were no longer the same.
-
-[Sidenote: See Plan, No. 3.]
-
-Marmont’s new position was skilfully chosen; one flank rested on
-Cabeza Vellosa, the other at Huerta, the centre was at Aldea Rubia.
-He thus refused his right and abandoned the road of Toro to the
-allies, but he covered the road of Tordesillas, and commanded the
-fort of Huerta with his left; and he could in a moment pass the
-Tormes, and operate by the left bank to communicate with the forts.
-Wellington made corresponding dispositions, closing up his left
-towards Moresco, and pushing the light division along the salient
-part of his position to Aldea Lengua, where it overhung a ford, which
-was however scarcely practicable at this period. General Graham with
-two divisions was placed at the fords of Santa Marta, and the heavy
-German cavalry under general Bock crossed the Tormes to watch the
-ford of Huerta. By this disposition the allies covered Salamanca, and
-could operate on either side of the Tormes on a shorter line than the
-French could operate.
-
-The 23d the two armies again remained tranquil, but at break of day
-on the 24th some dropping pistol-shots, and now and then a shout,
-came faintly from the mist which covered the lower ground beyond the
-river; the heavy sound of artillery succeeded, and the hissing of the
-bullets as they cut through the thickened atmosphere, plainly told
-that the French were over the Tormes. After a time the fog cleared
-up, and the German horsemen were seen in close and beautiful order,
-retiring before twelve thousand French infantry, who in battle array
-were marching steadily onwards. At intervals, twenty guns, ranged
-in front, would start forwards and send their bullets whistling and
-tearing up the ground beneath the Germans, while scattered parties of
-light cavalry, scouting out, capped all the hills in succession, and
-peering abroad, gave signals to the main body. Wellington immediately
-sent Graham across the river by the fords of Santa Marta with the
-first and seventh divisions and Le Marchant’s brigade of English
-cavalry; then concentrating the rest of the army between Cabrerizos
-and Moresco, he awaited the progress of Marmont’s operation.
-
-Bock continued his retreat in the same fine and equable order,
-regardless alike of the cannonade and of the light horsemen on his
-flanks, until the enemy’s scouts had gained a height above Calvarisa
-Abaxo, from whence, at the distance of three miles, they for the
-first time, perceived Graham’s twelve thousand men, and eighteen
-guns, ranged on an order of battle, perpendicular to the Tormes.
-From the same point also Wellington’s heavy columns were to be seen,
-clustering on the height above the fords of Santa Marta, and the
-light division was descried at Aldea Lengua, ready either to advance
-against the French troops left on the position of Aldea Rubia, or to
-pass the river to the aid of Graham. This apparition made the French
-general aware of his error, whereupon hastily facing about, and
-repassing the Tormes he resumed his former ground.
-
-Wellington’s defensive dispositions on this occasion were very
-skilful, but it would appear that unwilling to stir before the forts
-fell, he had again refused the advantage of the moment; for it is
-not to be supposed that he misjudged the occasion, since the whole
-theatre of operation was distinctly seen from St. Christoval, and
-he had passed many hours in earnest observation; his faculties were
-indeed so fresh and vigorous, that after the day’s work he wrote
-a detailed memoir upon the proposal for establishing a bank in
-Portugal, treating that and other financial schemes in all their
-bearings, with a master hand. Against the weight of his authority,
-therefore, any criticism must be advanced.
-
-[Sidenote: See Plan, No. 2.]
-
-Marmont had the easiest passage over the Tormes, namely, that by the
-ford of Huerta; the allies had the greatest number of passages and
-the shortest line of operations. Hence if Graham had been ordered
-vigorously to attack the French troops on the left bank, they must
-have been driven upon the single ford of Huerta, if not reinforced
-from the heights of Aldea Rubia. But the allies could also have been
-reinforced by the fords of Santa Marta and those of Cabrerizos,
-and even by that of Aldea Lengua, although it was not good at this
-early season. A partial victory would then have been achieved, or a
-general battle would have been brought on, when the French troops
-would have been disadvantageously cooped up in the loop of the Tormes
-and without means of escaping if defeated. Again, it is not easy to
-see how the French general could have avoided a serious defeat if
-Wellington had moved with all the troops on the right bank, against
-the divisions left on the hill of Aldea Rubia; for the French army
-would then have been separated, one part on the hither, one on the
-further bank of the Tormes. It was said at the time that Marmont
-hoped to draw the whole of the allies across the river, when he
-would have seized the position of Christoval, raised the siege and
-maintained the line of the Tormes. It may however be doubted that he
-expected Wellington to commit so gross an error. It is more likely
-that holding his own army to be the quickest of movement, his object
-was to separate the allies’ force in the hopes of gaining some
-partial advantage to enable him to communicate with his forts, which
-were now in great danger.
-
-When the French retired to the heights at Aldea Rubia on the night
-of the 23d, the heavy guns had been already brought to the right of
-the Tormes, and a third battery, to breach San Cajetano, was armed
-with four pieces, but the line of fire being oblique, the practice,
-at four hundred and fifty yards, only beat down the parapet and
-knocked away the palisades. Time was however of vital importance,
-the escalade of that fort and La Merced was ordered, and the attack
-commenced at ten o’clock, but in half an hour failed with a loss of
-one hundred and twenty men and officers. The wounded were brought
-off the next day under truce and the enemy had all the credit of the
-fight, yet the death of general Bowes must ever be admired. That
-gallant man, whose rank might have excused his leading so small a
-force, being wounded early, was having his hurt dressed when he heard
-that the troops were yielding, and returning to the combat fell.
-
-The siege was now perforce suspended for want of ammunition, and the
-guns were sent across the river, but were immediately brought back
-in consequence of Marmont having crossed to the left bank. Certain
-works were meanwhile pushed forward to cut off the communication
-between the forts and otherwise to straiten them, and the miner was
-attached to the cliff on which La Merced stood. The final success was
-not however influenced by these operations, and they need no further
-notice.
-
-The 26th ammunition arrived from Almeida, the second and third
-batteries were re-armed, the field-pieces were again placed in the
-convent of San Bernardo, and the iron howitzers, throwing hot shot,
-set the convent of San Vincente on fire in several places. The
-garrison again extinguished the flames, and this balanced combat
-continued during the night, but on the morning of the 27th the fire
-of both batteries being redoubled, the convent of San Vincente
-was in a blaze, the breach of San Cajetano was improved, a fresh
-storming party assembled, and the white flag waved from Cajetano. A
-negociation ensued, but lord Wellington, judging it an artifice to
-gain time, gave orders for the assault; then the forts fell, for San
-Cajetano scarcely fired a shot, and the flames raged so violently at
-San Vincente that no opposition could be made.
-
-Seven hundred prisoners, thirty pieces of artillery, provisions,
-arms, and clothing, and a secure passage over the Tormes, were the
-immediate fruits of this capture, which was not the less prized, that
-the breaches were found to be more formidable than those at Ciudad
-Rodrigo. The success of a storm would have been very doubtful if
-the garrison could have gained time to extinguish the flames in the
-convent of San Vincente, and as it was the allies had ninety killed;
-their whole loss since the passage of the Tormes was nearly five
-hundred men and officers, of which one hundred and sixty men with
-fifty horses, fell outside Salamanca, the rest in the siege.
-
-[Sidenote: Confidential official reports, obtained from the French
-War-office, MSS.]
-
-Marmont had allotted fifteen days as the term of resistance for
-these forts, but from the facility with which San Vincente caught
-fire, five would have been too many if ammunition had not failed.
-His calculation was therefore false. He would however have fought on
-the 23d, when his force was united, had he not on the 22d received
-intelligence from Caffarelli, that a powerful body of infantry, with
-twenty-two guns and all the cavalry of the north, were actually
-in march to join him. It was this which induced him to occupy the
-heights of Villa Rubia, on that day, to avoid a premature action,
-but on the evening of the 26th the signals, from the forts, having
-indicated that they could still hold out three days, Marmont, from
-fresh intelligence, no longer expected Caffarelli’s troops, and
-resolved to give battle on the 28th. The fall of the forts, which
-was made known to him on the evening of the 27th, changed this
-determination, the reasons for fighting on such disadvantageous
-ground no longer existed, and hence, withdrawing his garrison from
-the castle of Alba de Tormes, he retreated during the night towards
-the Duero, by the roads of Tordesillas and Toro.
-
-Wellington ordered the works both at Alba and the forts of Salamanca
-to be destroyed, and following the enemy by easy marches, encamped
-on the Guarena the 30th. The next day he reached the Trabancos,
-his advanced guard being at Nava del Rey. On the 2d he passed the
-Zapardiel in two columns, the right marching by Medina del Campo,
-the left following the advanced guard towards Rueda. From this place
-the French rear-guard was cannonaded and driven upon the main body,
-which was filing over the bridge of Tordesillas. Some were killed and
-some made prisoners, not many, but there was great confusion, and a
-heavy disaster would have befallen the French if the English general
-had not been deceived by false information, that they had broken the
-bridge the night before. For as he knew by intercepted letters that
-Marmont intended to take a position near Tordesillas, this report
-made him suppose the enemy was already over the Duero, and hence he
-had spread his troops, and was not in sufficient force to attack
-during the passage of the river.
-
-[Sidenote: July.]
-
-[Sidenote: See Plan, No. 3.]
-
-Marmont, who had fortified posts at Zamora and Toro, and had
-broken the bridges at those places and at Puente Duero and Tudela,
-preserving only that of Tordesillas, now took a position on the
-right of the Duero. His left was at Simancas on the Pisuerga, which
-was unfordable, and the bridges at that place and Valladolid, were
-commanded by fortified posts. His centre was at Tordesillas, and
-very numerous, and his right was on some heights opposite to Pollos.
-Wellington indeed caused the third division to seize the ford at the
-last place which gave him a command of the river, because there was
-a plain between it and the enemy’s heights, but the ford itself was
-difficult and insufficient for passing the whole army. Head-quarters
-were therefore fixed at Rueda, and the forces were disposed in a
-compact form, the head placed in opposition to the ford of Pollos and
-the bridge of Tordesillas, the rear occupying Medina del Campo and
-other points on the Zapardiel and Trabancos rivers, ready to oppose
-the enemy if he should break out from the Valladolid side. Marmont’s
-line of defence, measured from Valladolid to Zamora, was sixty miles;
-from Simancas to Toro above thirty, but the actual line of occupation
-was not above twelve; the bend of the river gave him the chord, the
-allies the arc, and the fords were few and difficult. The advantage
-was therefore on the side of the enemy, but to understand the true
-position of the contending generals it is necessary to know the
-secondary coincident operations.
-
-While the armies were in presence at Salamanca, Silveira had filed
-up the Duero, to the Esla river, menacing the French communications
-with Benavente. D’Urban’s horsemen had passed the Duero below Zamora
-on the 25th and cut off all intercourse between the French army and
-that place; but when Marmont fell back from Aldea Rubia, D’Urban
-recrossed the Duero at Fresno de la Ribera to avoid being crushed,
-yet immediately afterwards advanced beyond Toro to Castromonte,
-behind the right wing of the enemy’s new position. It was part of
-Wellington’s plan, that Castaños, after establishing the siege
-of Astorga, should come down by Benavente with the remainder of
-his army, and place himself in communication with Silveira. This
-operation, without disarranging the siege of Astorga, would have
-placed twelve or fifteen thousand men, infantry, cavalry, and
-artillery, behind the Esla, and with secure lines of retreat;
-consequently able to check all the enemy’s foraging parties, and
-reduce him to live upon his fixed magazines, which were scanty. The
-usual Spanish procrastination defeated this plan.
-
-Castaños, by the help of the succours received from England, had
-assembled fifteen thousand men at Ponteferada, under the command of
-Santocildes, but he pretended that he had no battering guns until sir
-Howard Douglas actually pointed them out in the arsenal of Ferrol,
-and shewed him how to convey them to the frontier. Then Santocildes
-moved, though slowly, and when Bonet’s retreat from the Asturias was
-known, eleven thousand men invested Astorga, and four thousand others
-marched to Benavente, but not until Marmont had called his detachment
-in from that place. The Spanish battering train only reached Villa
-Franca del Bierzo on the 1st of July. However the Guerilla chief,
-Marquinez, appeared about Palencia, and the other Partidas of
-Castile acting on a line from Leon to Segovia, intercepted Marmont’s
-correspondence with the king. Thus the immense tract called the
-_Campo de Tierras_ was secured for the subsistence of the Gallician
-army; and to the surprise of the allies, who had so often heard of
-the enemy’s terrible devastations that they expected to find Castile
-a desert, those vast plains, and undulating hills, were covered with
-ripe corn or fruitful vines, and the villages bore few marks of the
-ravages of war.
-
-[Sidenote: King’s papers captured at Vittoria, MSS.]
-
-[Sidenote: Wellington’s despatches, MSS.]
-
-While the main body of the Gallicians was still at Ponte Ferrada, a
-separate division had passed along the coast road into the Asturias,
-and in concert with part of the seventh army had harassed Bonet’s
-retreat from that kingdom; the French general indeed forced his way
-by the eastern passes, and taking post the 30th of June at Reynosa
-and Aguilar del Campo, chased the neighbouring bands away, but this
-movement was one of the great errors of the campaign. Napoleon and
-Wellington felt alike the importance of holding the Asturias at
-this period. The one had ordered that they should be retained, the
-other had calculated that such would be the case, and the judgment
-of both was quickly made manifest. For the Gallicians, who would not
-have dared to quit the Bierzo if Bonet had menaced their province by
-Lugo, or by the shore line, invested Astorga the moment he quitted
-the Asturias. And the Partidas of the north, who had been completely
-depressed by Mina’s defeat, recovering courage, now moved towards the
-coast, where Popham’s expedition, which had sailed on the 18th of
-June from Coruña, soon appeared, a formidable spectacle, for there
-were five sail of the line, with many frigates and brigs, in all
-twenty ships of war.
-
-The port of Lesquito was immediately attacked on the sea-board by
-this squadron, on the land side by the Pastor, and when captain
-Bouverie got a gun up to breach the convent the Spanish chief
-assaulted but was repulsed; however the garrison, two hundred and
-fifty strong, surrendered to the squadron the 22d, and on the two
-following days Bermeo and Plencia fell. The Partidas failed to
-appear at Guetaria, but Castro and Portagalete, in the Bilbao river,
-were attacked the 6th of July, in concert with Longa, and though
-the latter was rebuffed at Bilbao the squadron took Castro. The
-enemy recovered some of their posts on the 10th, and on the 19th
-the attempt on Guetaria being renewed, Mina and Pastor came down to
-co-operate, but a French column beat those chiefs, and drove the
-British seamen to their vessels, with the loss of thirty men and two
-guns.
-
-It was the opinion of general Carrol who accompanied this expedition,
-that the plan of operations was ill-arranged, but the local successes
-merit no attention, the great object of distracting the enemy was
-obtained. Caffarelli heard at one and the same time, that Palombini’s
-division had been called to Madrid; that Bonet had abandoned the
-Asturias; that a Gallician division had entered that province;
-that a powerful English fleet, containing troops, was on the coast,
-and acting in concert with all the Partidas of the north; that the
-seventh army was menacing Burgos, and that the whole country was in
-commotion. Trembling for his own districts he instantly arrested the
-march of the divisions destined for Marmont; and although the king,
-who saw very clearly the real object of the maritime expedition,
-reiterated the orders to march upon Segovia or Cuellar, with a view
-to reinforce either the army of the centre or the army of Portugal,
-Caffarelli delayed obedience until the 13th of July, and then sent
-but eighteen hundred cavalry, with twenty guns.
-
-Thus Bonet’s movement which only brought a reinforcement of six
-thousand infantry to Marmont, kept away Caffarelli’s reserves, which
-were twelve thousand of all arms, uncovered the whole of the great
-French line of communication, and caused the siege of Astorga to be
-commenced. And while Bonet was in march by Palencia and Valladolid to
-the position of Tordesillas, the king heard of Marmont’s retreat from
-the Tormes, and that an English column menaced Arevalo; wherefore
-not being ready to move with the army of the centre, and fearing for
-Avila, he withdrew the garrison from that place, and thus lost his
-direct line of correspondence with the army of Portugal, because
-Segovia was environed by the Partidas. In this state of affairs
-neither Wellington nor Marmont had reason to fight upon the Duero.
-The latter because his position was so strong he could safely wait
-for Bonet’s and Caffarelli’s troops, and meanwhile the king could
-operate against the allies’ communications. The former because he
-could not attack the French, except at great disadvantage; for
-the fords of the Duero were little known, and that of Pollos was
-very deep. To pass the river there, and form within gun-shot of
-the enemy’s left, without other combinations, promised nothing but
-defeat, and the staff officers, sent to examine the course of the
-river, reported that the advantage of ground was entirely on the
-enemy’s side, except at Castro Nuño, half-way between Pollos and Toro.
-
-While the enemy commanded the bridge at Tordesillas, no attempt to
-force the passage of the river could be safe, seeing that Marmont
-might fall on the allies’ front and rear if the operation was within
-his reach; and if beyond his reach, that is to say near Zamora, he
-could cut their communication with Ciudad Rodrigo and yet preserve
-his own with Caffarelli and with the king. Wellington therefore
-resolved to wait until the fords should become lower, or the
-combined operations of the Gallicians and Partidas, should oblige
-the enemy, either to detach men, or to dislodge altogether for want
-of provisions. In this view he urged Santocildes to press the siege
-of Astorga vigorously and to send every man he could spare down
-the Esla; and an intercepted letter gave hopes that Astorga would
-surrender on the 7th, yet this seems to have been a device to keep
-the Gallicians in that quarter for it was in no danger. Santocildes,
-expecting its fall, would not detach men, but the vicinity of
-D’Urban’s cavalry, which remained at Castromonte, so incommoded
-the French right, that Foy marched to drive them beyond the Esla.
-General Pakenham however crossed the ford of Pollos, with some of
-the third division, which quickly brought Foy back, and Marmont then
-endeavoured to augment the number and efficiency of his cavalry, by
-taking a thousand horses from the infantry officers and the sutlers.
-
-On the 8th Bonet arrived, and the French marshal immediately
-extending his right to Toro, commenced repairing the bridge there.
-Wellington, in like manner, stretched his left to the Guarena, yet
-kept his centre still on the Trabancos, and his right at Rueda, with
-posts near Tordesillas and the ford of Pollos. In this situation the
-armies remained for some days. Generals Graham and Picton went to
-England in bad health, and the principal powder magazine at Salamanca
-exploded with hurt to many, but no other events worth recording
-occurred. The weather was very fine, the country rich, and the troops
-received their rations regularly; wine was so plentiful, that it was
-hard to keep the soldiers sober; the caves of Rueda, either natural
-or cut in the rock below the surface of the earth, were so immense
-and so well stocked, that the drunkards of two armies failed to make
-any very sensible diminution in the quantity. Many men of both sides
-perished in that labyrinth, and on both sides also, the soldiers,
-passing the Duero in groups, held amicable intercourse, conversing of
-the battles that were yet to be fought; the camps on the banks of the
-Duero seemed at times to belong to one army, so difficult is it to
-make brave men hate each other.
-
-To the officers of the allies all looked prosperous, their only
-anxiety was to receive the signal of battle, their only discontent,
-that it was delayed; and many amongst them murmured that the French
-had been permitted to retreat from Christoval. Had Wellington been
-finally forced back to Portugal his reputation would have been
-grievously assailed by his own people, for the majority, peering
-through their misty politics, saw Paris in dim perspective,
-and overlooked the enormous French armies that were close at
-hand. Meanwhile their general’s mind was filled with care and
-mortification, and all cross and evil circumstances seemed to combine
-against him.
-
-The mediation for the Spanish colonies had just failed at Cadiz,
-under such circumstances, as left no doubt that the English influence
-was powerless and the French influence visibly increasing in the
-Cortez. Soult had twenty-seven gun-boats in the Trocadero canal,
-shells were cast day and night into the city, and the people were
-alarmed; two thousand French had marched from Santa Mary to Seville,
-apparently to reinforce Drouet in Estremadura; Echevaria had effected
-nothing in the kingdom of Cordoba, and a French division was
-assembling at Bornos, to attack Ballesteros, whose rashness, inviting
-destruction, might alone put an end to the campaign in Leon and bring
-Wellington back to the Tagus. In the north of Spain also affairs
-appeared equally gloomy, Mina’s defeats, and their influence upon the
-other Partidas, were positively known, but the effect of Popham’s
-operations was unknown, or at least doubtful. Bonet’s division had
-certainly arrived, and the Gallicians who had done nothing at Astorga
-were already in want of ammunition. In Castile the activity of the
-Partidas instead of increasing, had diminished after Wellington
-crossed the Tormes, and the chiefs seemed inclined to leave the
-burthen of the war entirely to their allies. Nor was this feeling
-confined to them. It had been arranged, that new corps, especially
-of cavalry, should be raised, as the enemy receded in this campaign,
-and the necessary clothing and equipments, supplied by England, were
-placed at the disposal of lord Wellington, who to avoid the burthen
-of carriage had directed them to Coruña; yet now, when Leon and the
-Asturias were in a manner recovered, no man would serve voluntarily.
-There was great enthusiasm, in words, there had always been so, but
-the fighting men were not increased, and even the _juramentados_,
-many of whom deserted at this time from the king, well clothed and
-soldier-like men, refused to enter the English ranks.
-
-Now also came the news that lord William Bentinck’s plans were
-altered, and the intercepted despatches shewed that the king had
-again ordered Drouet to pass the Tagus, but Soult’s resistance to
-this order was not known. Wellington therefore at the same moment,
-saw Marmont’s army increase, heard that the king’s army, reinforced
-by Drouet, was on the point of taking the field; that the troops
-from Sicily, upon whose operations he depended to keep all the army
-of Aragon in the eastern part of Spain, and even to turn the king’s
-attention that way, were to be sent to Italy; and that two millions
-of dollars, which he hoped to have obtained at Gibraltar, had been
-swept off by lord William Bentinck for this Italian expedition,
-which thus at once deprived him of men and money! The latter was the
-most serious blow, the promised remittances from England had not
-arrived, and as the insufficiency of land-carriage rendered it nearly
-impossible to feed the army even on the Duero, to venture further
-into Spain without money would be akin to madness. From Gallicia,
-where no credit was given, came the supply of meat, a stoppage there
-would have made the war itself stop, and no greater error had been
-committed by the enemy, than delaying to conquer Gallicia, which
-could many times have been done.
-
-To meet the increasing exigences for money, the English general
-had, for one resource, obtained a credit of half a million from the
-Treasury to answer certain certificates, or notes of hand, which his
-Spanish correspondents promised to get cashed; but of this resource
-he was now suddenly deprived by the English ministers, who objected
-to the irregular form of the certificates, because he, with his
-usual sagacity, had adapted them to the habits of the people he was
-to deal with. Meanwhile his troops were four, his staff six, his
-muleteers nearly twelve months in arrears of pay, and he was in debt
-every where, and for every thing. The Portuguese government had
-become very clamorous for the subsidy, Mr. Stuart acknowledged that
-their distress was very great, and the desertion from the Portuguese
-army, which augmented in an alarming manner, and seemed rather to
-be increased than repressed by severity, sufficiently proved their
-misery. The personal resources of Wellington alone enabled the army
-to maintain its forward position, for he had, to a certain extent,
-carried his commercial speculations into Gallicia, as well as
-Portugal; and he had persuaded the Spanish authorities in Castile
-to give up a part of their revenue in kind to the army, receiving
-bills on the British embassy at Cadiz in return. But the situation of
-affairs may be best learned from the mouths of the generals.
-
-“The arrears of the army are certainly getting to an alarming pitch,
-and if it is suffered to increase, we cannot go on: we have only here
-two brigades of infantry, fed by our own commissariat, and we are
-now reduced to one of them having barely bread for this day, and the
-commissary has not a farthing of money. I know not how we shall get
-on!”
-
-Such were Beresford’s words on the 8th of July, and on the 15th
-Wellington wrote even more forcibly.
-
-“I have never,” said he, “been in such distress as at present, and
-some serious misfortune must happen, if the government do not attend
-seriously to the subject, and supply us regularly with money. The
-arrears and distresses of the Portuguse government, are a joke
-to ours, and if our credit was not better than theirs, we should
-certainly starve. As it is, if we don’t find means to pay our bills
-for butcher’s meat there will be an end to the war at once.”
-
-Thus stript as it were to the skin, the English general thought
-once more to hide his nakedness in the mountains of Portugal, when
-Marmont, proud of his own unripened skill, and perhaps, from the
-experience of San Cristoval, undervaluing his adversary’s tactics,
-desirous also, it was said, to gain a victory without the presence
-of a king, Marmont, pushed on by fate, madly broke the chain which
-restrained his enemy’s strength.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-
-[Sidenote: 1812. July.]
-
-When Wellington found by the intercepted letters, that the
-king’s orders for Drouet to cross the Tagus, were reiterated,
-and imperative, he directed Hill to detach troops, in the same
-proportion. And as this reinforcement, coming by the way of
-Alcantara, could reach the Duero as soon as Drouet could reach
-Madrid, he hoped still to maintain the Tormes, if not the Duero,
-notwithstanding the king’s power; for some money, long expected
-from England, had at last arrived in Oporto, and he thought the
-Gallicians, maugre their inertness, must soon be felt by the enemy.
-Moreover the harvest on the ground, however abundant, could not long
-feed the French multitudes, if Drouet and the king should together
-join Marmont. Nevertheless, fearing the action of Joseph’s cavalry,
-he ordered D’Urban’s horsemen to join the army on the Duero. But to
-understand the remarkable movements which were now about to commence,
-the reader must bear in mind, that the French army, from its peculiar
-organization, could, while the ground harvest lasted, operate without
-any regard to lines of communication; it had supports on all sides
-and procured its food every where, for the troops were taught to reap
-the standing corn, and grind it themselves if their cavalry could
-not seize flour in the villages. This organization approaching the
-ancient Roman military perfection, gave them great advantages; in
-the field it baffled the irregular, and threw the regular force of
-the allies, entirely upon the defensive; because when the flanks were
-turned, a retreat only could save the communications, and the French
-offered no point, for retaliation in kind. Wherefore, with a force
-composed of four different nations, Wellington was to execute the
-most difficult evolutions, in an open country, his chances of success
-being to arise only from the casual errors of his adversary, who was
-an able general, who knew the country perfectly, and was at the head
-of an army, brave, excellently disciplined, and of one nation. The
-game would have been quite unequal if the English general had not
-been so strong in cavalry.
-
-
-FRENCH PASSAGE OF THE DUERO.
-
-[Sidenote: See plan No. 3.]
-
-In the course of the 15th and 16th Marmont, who had previously made
-several deceptive movements, concentrated his beautiful and gallant
-army between Toro and the Hornija river; and intercepted letters,
-the reports of deserters, and the talk of the peasants had for
-several days assigned the former place as his point of passage. On
-the morning of the 16th the English exploring officers, passing the
-Duero near Tordesillas, found only the garrison there, and in the
-evening the reports stated, that two French divisions had already
-passed the repaired bridge of Toro. Wellington united his centre and
-left at Canizal on the Guarena during the night, intending to attack
-those who had passed at Toro; but as he had still some doubts of
-the enemy’s real object, he caused sir Stapleton Cotton to halt on
-the Trabancos with the right wing, composed of the fourth and light
-divisions and Anson’s cavalry. Meanwhile Marmont, recalling his
-troops from the left bank of the Duero, returned to Tordesillas and
-Pollos, passed that river at those points and occupied Nava del Rey,
-where his whole army was concentrated in the evening of the 17th,
-some of his divisions having marched above forty miles, and some
-above fifty miles, without a halt. The English cavalry posts being
-thus driven over the Trabancos, advice of the enemy’s movement was
-sent to lord Wellington, but he was then near Toro, it was midnight
-ere it reached him, and the troops, under Cotton, remained near
-Castrejon behind the Trabancos during the night of the 17th without
-orders, exposed, in a bad position, to the attack of the whole French
-army. Wellington hastened to their aid in person, and he ordered
-Bock’s, Le Marchant’s, and Alten’s brigades of cavalry, to follow him
-to Alaejos, and the fifth division to take post at Torrecilla de la
-Orden six miles in rear of Castrejon.
-
-At day-break Cotton’s outposts were again driven in by the enemy, and
-the bulk of his cavalry with a troop of horse artillery immediately
-formed in front of the two infantry divisions, which were drawn up,
-the fourth division on the left, the light division on the right, but
-at a considerable distance from each other and separated by a wide
-ravine. The country was open and hilly, like the downs of England,
-with here and there water-gulleys, dry hollows, and bold naked heads
-of land, and behind the most prominent of these last, on the other
-side of the Trabancos, lay the whole French army. Cotton however,
-seeing only horsemen, pushed his cavalry again towards the river,
-advancing cautiously by his right along some high table-land, and
-his troops were soon lost to the view of the infantry, for the
-morning fog was thick on the stream, and at first nothing could be
-descried beyond. But very soon the deep tones of artillery shook
-the ground, the sharp ring of musketry was heard in the mist, and
-the forty-third regiment was hastily brought through Castrejon to
-support the advancing cavalry; for besides the ravine which separated
-the fourth from the light division, there was another ravine with a
-marshy bottom, between the cavalry and infantry, and the village of
-Castrejon was the only good point of passage.
-
-The cannonade now became heavy, and the spectacle surprisingly
-beautiful, for the lighter smoke and mist, curling up in fantastic
-pillars, formed a huge and glittering dome tinged of many colours by
-the rising sun; and through the grosser vapour below, the restless
-horsemen were seen or lost as the fume thickened from the rapid play
-of the artillery, while the bluff head of land, beyond the Trabancos,
-covered with French troops, appeared, by an optical deception close
-at hand, dilated to the size of a mountain, and crowned with gigantic
-soldiers, who were continually breaking off and sliding down into the
-fight. Suddenly a dismounted cavalry officer stalked from the midst
-of the smoke towards the line of infantry; his gait was peculiarly
-rigid, and he appeared to hold a bloody handkerchief to his heart,
-but that which seemed a cloth, was a broad and dreadful wound; a
-bullet had entirely effaced the flesh from his left shoulder and
-from his breast, and had carried away part of his ribs, his heart
-was bared, and its movement plainly discerned. It was a piteous and
-yet a noble sight, for his countenance though ghastly was firm, his
-step scarcely indicated weakness, and his voice never faltered. This
-unyielding man’s name was Williams; he died a short distance from the
-field of battle, and it was said, in the arms of his son, a youth of
-fourteen, who had followed his father to the Peninsula in hopes of
-obtaining a commission, for they were not in affluent circumstances.
-
-General Cotton maintained this exposed position with skill and
-resolution, from day-light until seven o’clock, at which time
-Wellington arrived, in company with Beresford, and proceeded to
-examine the enemy’s movements. The time was critical, and the two
-English generals were like to have been slain together by a body
-of French cavalry, not very numerous, which breaking away from the
-multitude on the head of land beyond the Trabancos, came galloping
-at full speed across the valley. It was for a moment thought they
-were deserting, but with headlong course they mounted the table-land
-on which Cotton’s left wing was posted, and drove a whole line
-of British cavalry skirmishers back in confusion. The reserves
-indeed soon came up from Alaejos, and these furious swordsmen being
-scattered in all directions were in turn driven away or cut down, but
-meanwhile thirty or forty, led by a noble officer, had brought up
-their right shoulders, and came over the edge of the table-land above
-the hollow which separated the British wings at the instant when
-Wellington and Beresford arrived on the same slope. There were some
-infantry picquets in the bottom, and higher up, near the French, were
-two guns covered by a squadron of light cavalry which was disposed
-in perfect order. When the French officer saw this squadron, he
-reined in his horse with difficulty, and his troopers gathered in a
-confused body round him as if to retreat. They seemed lost men, for
-the British instantly charged, but with a shout the gallant fellows
-soused down upon the squadron, and the latter turning, galloped
-through the guns; then the whole mass, friends and enemies, went
-like a whirlwind to the bottom, carrying away lord Wellington, and
-the other generals, who with drawn swords and some difficulty, got
-clear of the tumult. The French horsemen were now quite exhausted,
-and a reserve squadron of heavy dragoons coming in cut most of them
-to pieces; yet their invincible leader, assaulted by three enemies at
-once, struck one dead from his horse, and with surprising exertions
-saved himself from the others, though they rode hewing at him on each
-side for a quarter of a mile.
-
-While this charge was being executed, Marmont, who had ascertained
-that a part only of Wellington’s army was before him, crossed the
-Trabancos in two columns, and passing by Alaejos, turned the left of
-the allies, marching straight upon the Guarena. The British retired
-by Torecilla de la Orden, the fifth division being in one column on
-the left, the fourth division on the right as they retreated, and the
-light division on an intermediate line and nearer to the enemy. The
-cavalry were on the flanks and rear, the air was extremely sultry,
-the dust rose in clouds, and the close order of the troops rendered
-it very oppressive, but the military spectacle was exceedingly
-strange and grand. For then were seen the hostile columns of
-infantry, only half musket-shot from each other, marching impetuously
-towards a common goal, the officers on each side pointing forwards
-with their swords, or touching their caps, and waving their hands
-in courtesy, while the German cavalry, huge men, on huge horses,
-rode between in a close compact body as if to prevent a collision.
-At times the loud tones of command, to hasten the march, were heard
-passing from the front to the rear, and now and then the rushing
-sound of bullets came sweeping over the columns whose violent pace
-was continually accelerated.
-
-Thus moving for ten miles, yet keeping the most perfect order, both
-parties approached the Guarena, and the enemy seeing that the light
-division, although more in their power than the others, were yet
-outstripping them in the march, increased the fire of their guns and
-menaced an attack with infantry. But the German cavalry instantly
-drew close round, the column plunged suddenly into a hollow dip of
-ground on the left which offered the means of baffling the enemy’s
-aim, and ten minutes after the head of the division was in the
-stream of the Guarena between Osmo and Castrillo. The fifth division
-entered the river at the same time but higher up on the left, and the
-fourth division passed it on the right. The soldiers of the light
-division, tormented with thirst, yet long used to their enemy’s
-mode of warfare, drunk as they marched, and the soldiers of the
-fifth division stopped in the river for only a few moments, but on
-the instant forty French guns gathered on the heights above sent a
-tempest of bullets amongst them. So nicely timed was the operation.
-
-The Guarena, flowing from four distinct sources which are united
-below Castrillo, offered a very strong line of defence, and Marmont,
-hoping to carry it in the first confusion of the passage, and so
-seize the table-land of Vallesa, had brought up all his artillery
-to the front; and to distract the allies’ attention he had directed
-Clausel to push the head of the right column over the river at
-Castrillo, at the same time. But Wellington expecting him at Vallesa
-from the first, had ordered the other divisions of his army,
-originally assembled at Canizal, to cross one of the upper branches
-of the river; and they reached the table-land of Vallesa, before
-Marmont’s infantry, oppressed by the extreme heat and rapidity of the
-march, could muster in strength to attempt the passage of the other
-branch. Clausel, however, sent Carier’s brigade of cavalry across the
-Guarena at Castrillo and supported it with a column of infantry; and
-the fourth division had just gained the heights above Canizal, after
-passing the stream, when Carier’s horsemen entered the valley on
-their left, and the infantry in one column menaced their front. The
-sedgy banks of the river would have been difficult to force in face
-of an enemy, but Victor Alten though a very bold man in action, was
-slow to seize an advantage, and suffered the French cavalry to cross
-and form in considerable numbers without opposition; he assailed them
-too late and by successive squadrons instead of by regiments, and
-the result was unfavourable at first. The fourteenth and the German
-hussars were hard-pressed, the third dragoons came up in support, but
-they were immediately driven back again by the fire of some French
-infantry, the fight waxed hot with the others, and many fell, but
-finally general Carier was wounded and taken, and the French retired.
-During this cavalry action the twenty-seventh and fortieth regiments
-coming down the hill, broke the enemy’s infantry with an impetuous
-bayonet charge, and Alten’s horsemen being then disengaged sabred
-some of the fugitives.
-
-This combat cost the French who had advanced too far without support,
-a general and five hundred soldiers; but Marmont, though baffled
-at Vallesa, and beaten at Castrillo, concentrated his army at the
-latter place in such a manner as to hold both banks of the Guarena.
-Whereupon Wellington recalled his troops from Vallesa; and as the
-whole loss of the allies during the previous operations was not more
-than six hundred, nor that of the French more than eight hundred, and
-that both sides were highly excited, the day still young, and the
-positions although strong, open, and within cannon-shot, a battle was
-expected. Marmont’s troops had however been marching for two days and
-nights incessantly, and Wellington’s plan did not admit of fighting
-unless forced to it in defence, or under such circumstances, as would
-enable him to crush his opponent, and yet keep the field afterwards
-against the king.
-
-By this series of signal operations, the French general had passed
-a great river, taken the initiatory movement, surprised the right
-wing of the allies, and pushed it back above ten miles. Yet these
-advantages are to be traced to the peculiarities of the English
-general’s situation which have been already noticed, and Wellington’s
-tactical skill was manifested by the extricating of his troops from
-their dangerous position at Castrejon without loss, and without
-being forced to fight a battle. He however appears to have erred in
-extending his troops to the right when he first reached the Duero,
-for seeing that Marmont could at pleasure pass that river and turn
-his flanks, he should have remained concentrated on the Guarena,
-and only pushed cavalry posts to the line of the Duero above Toro.
-Neither should he have risked his right wing so far from his main
-body from the evening of the 16th to the morning of the 18th. He
-could scarcely have brought it off without severe loss, if Marmont
-had been stronger in cavalry, and instead of pushing forwards at once
-to the Guarena had attacked him on the march. On the other hand the
-security of the French general’s movements, from the Trabancos to
-the Guarena, depended entirely on their rapidity; for as his columns
-crossed the open country on a line parallel to the march of the
-allies, a simple wheel by companies to the right would have formed
-the latter in order of battle on his flank while the four divisions
-already on the Guarena could have met them in front.
-
-But it was on the 16th that the French general failed in the most
-glaring manner. His intent was, by menacing the communication with
-Salamanca and Ciudad Rodrigo, to force the allies back, and strike
-some decisive blow during their retreat. Now on the evening of the
-16th he had passed the Duero at Toro, gained a day’s march, and
-was then actually nearer to Salamanca than the allies were; and
-had he persisted in his movement Wellington must have fought him
-to disadvantage or have given up Salamanca, and passed the Tormes
-at Huerta to regain the communication with Ciudad Rodrigo. This
-advantage Marmont relinquished, to make a forced march of eighty
-miles in forty-eight hours, and to risk the execution of a variety of
-nice and difficult evolutions, in which he lost above a thousand men
-by the sword or by fatigue, and finally found his adversary on the
-18th still facing him in the very position which he had turned on the
-evening of the 16th!
-
-On the 19th the armies maintained their respective ground in quiet
-until the evening, when Marmont concentrated his troops in one mass
-on his left near the village of Tarazona, and Wellington, fearing
-for his right, again passed the second branch of the Guarena, at
-Vallesa, and El Olmo, and took post on the table-land above those
-villages. The light division, being in front, advanced to the edge of
-the table-land, overlooking the enemy’s main body which was at rest
-round the bivouac fires; yet the picquets would have been quietly
-posted, if sir Stapleton Cotton coming up at the moment, had not
-ordered captain Ross to turn his battery of six-pounders upon a group
-of French officers. At the first shot the enemy seemed surprised, at
-the second their gunners run to their pieces, and in a few moments
-a reply from twelve eight-pounders shewed the folly of provoking a
-useless combat. An artillery officer was wounded in the head, several
-of the British soldiers fell in different parts of the line, one shot
-swept away a whole section of Portuguese, and finally the division
-was obliged to withdraw several hundred yards in a mortifying manner
-to avoid a great and unnecessary effusion of blood.
-
-The allies being now formed in two lines on the table-land of Vallesa
-offered a fair though not an easy field to the enemy; Wellington
-expected a battle the next day, because the range of heights which
-he occupied, trended backwards to the Tormes on the shortest line;
-and as he had thrown a Spanish garrison into the castle of Alba
-de Tormes, he thought Marmont could not turn his right, or if he
-attempted it, that he would be shouldered off the Tormes at the ford
-of Huerta. He was mistaken. The French general was more perfectly
-acquainted with the ground and proved that he could move an army with
-wonderful facility.
-
-On the 20th at day-break instead of crossing the Guarena to dispute
-the high land of Vallesa, Marmont marched rapidly in several columns,
-covered by a powerful rear-guard, up the river to Canta la Piedra,
-and crossed the stream there, though the banks were difficult, before
-any disposition could be made to oppose him. He thus turned the
-right flank of the allies and gained a new range of hills trending
-towards the Tormes, and parallel to those leading from Vallesa.
-Wellington immediately made a corresponding movement. Then commenced
-an evolution similar to that of the 18th, but on a greater scale
-both as to numbers and length of way. The allies moving in two lines
-of battle within musket-shot of the French endeavoured to gain upon
-and cross their march at Cantalpino; the guns on both sides again
-exchanged their rough salutations as the accidents of ground favoured
-their play; and again the officers, like gallant gentlemen who bore
-no malice and knew no fear, made their military recognitions, while
-the horsemen on each side watched with eager eyes, for an opening to
-charge; but the French general moving his army as one man along the
-crest of the heights, preserved the lead he had taken, and made no
-mistake.
-
-At Cantalpino it became evident that the allies were outflanked,
-and all this time Marmont had so skilfully managed his troops that
-he furnished no opportunity even for a partial attack. Wellington
-therefore fell off a little and made towards the heights of Cabeça
-Vellosa and Aldea Rubia, intending to halt there while the sixth
-division and Alten’s cavalry, forcing their march, seized Aldea
-Lengua and secured the position of Christoval. But he made no effort
-to seize the ford of Huerta, for his own march had been long and the
-French had passed over nearly twice as much ground, wherefore he
-thought they would not attempt to reach the Tormes that day. However
-when night approached, although his second line had got possession
-of the heights of Vellosa, his first line was heaped up without
-much order in the low ground between that place and Hornillos; the
-French army crowned all the summit of the opposite hills, and their
-fires, stretching in a half circle from Villaruela to Babila Fuente,
-shewed that they commanded the ford of Huerta. They could even have
-attacked the allies with great advantage had there been light for the
-battle. The English general immediately ordered the bivouac fires to
-be made, but filed the troops off in succession with the greatest
-celerity towards Vellosa and Aldea Rubia, and during the movement
-the Portuguese cavalry, coming in from the front, were mistaken for
-French and lost some men by cannon-shot ere they were recognised.
-
-[Sidenote: King’s correspondence, MSS.]
-
-Wellington was deeply disquieted at the unexpected result of this
-day’s operations which had been entirely to the advantage of the
-French general. Marmont had shewn himself perfectly acquainted with
-the country, had outflanked and outmarched the allies, had gained
-the command of the Tormes, and as his junction with the king’s
-army was thus secured he might fight or wait for reinforcements
-or continue his operations as it seemed good to himself. But the
-scope of Wellington’s campaign was hourly being more restricted. His
-reasons for avoiding a battle except at advantage, were stronger than
-before, because Caffarelli’s cavalry was known to be in march, and
-the army of the centre was on the point of taking the field; hence
-though he should fight and gain a victory, unless it was decisive,
-his object would not be advanced. That object was to deliver the
-Peninsula, which could only be done by a long course of solid
-operations incompatible with sudden and rash strokes unauthorized by
-any thing but hope; wherefore yielding to the force of circumstances,
-he prepared to return to Portugal and abide his time; yet with a
-bitter spirit, which was not soothed by the recollection, that he
-had refused the opportunity of fighting to advantage, exactly one
-month before and upon the very hills he now occupied. Nevertheless
-that stedfast temper, which then prevented him from seizing an
-adventitious chance, would not now let him yield to fortune more than
-she could ravish from him: he still hoped to give the lion’s stroke,
-and resolved to cover Salamanca and the communication with Ciudad
-Rodrigo to the last moment. A letter stating his inability to hold
-his ground was however sent to Castaños, but it was intercepted by
-Marmont, who exultingly pushed forwards without regard to the king’s
-movements; and it is curious that Joseph afterwards imagined this to
-have been a subtlety of Wellington’s to draw the French general into
-a premature battle.
-
-On the 21st while the allies occupied the old position of Christoval,
-the French threw a garrison into Alba de Tormes, from whence
-the Spaniards had been withdrawn by Carlos D’España, without the
-knowledge of the English general. Marmont then passed the Tormes,
-by the fords between Alba and Huerta, and moving up the valley of
-Machechuco encamped behind Calvariza Ariba, at the edge of a forest
-which extended from the river to that place. Wellington also passed
-the Tormes in the course of the evening by the bridges, and by
-the fords of Santa Marta and Aldea Lengua; but the third division
-and D’Urban’s cavalry remained on the right bank, and entrenched
-themselves at Cabrerizos, lest the French, who had left a division on
-the heights of Babila Fuente, should recross the Tormes in the night
-and overwhelm them.
-
-It was late when the light division descended the rough side of the
-Aldea Lengua mountain to cross the river, and the night came suddenly
-down, with more than common darkness, for a storm, that common
-precursor of a battle in the Peninsula, was at hand. Torrents of
-rain deepened the ford, the water foamed and dashed with encreasing
-violence, the thunder was frequent and deafening, and the lightning
-passed in sheets of fire close over the column, or played upon the
-points of the bayonets. One flash falling amongst the fifth dragoon
-guards, near Santa Marta, killed many men and horses, while hundreds
-of frightened animals breaking loose from their piquet ropes, and
-galloping wildly about, were supposed to be the enemy’s cavalry
-charging in the darkness, and indeed some of their patroles were at
-hand; but to a military eye there was nothing more imposing than the
-close and beautiful order in which the soldiers of that noble light
-division, were seen by the fiery gleams to step from the river to
-the bank and pursue their march amidst this astounding turmoil,
-defying alike the storm and the enemy.
-
-[Sidenote: See Plan 3.]
-
-The position now taken by the allies was nearly the same as that
-occupied by general Graham a month before, when the forts of
-Salamanca were invested. The left wing rested in the low ground on
-the Tormes, near Santa Marta, having a cavalry post in front towards
-Calvariza de Abaxo. The right wing extended along a range of heights
-which ended also in low ground, near the village of Arapiles, and
-this line being perpendicular to the course of the Tormes from Huerta
-to Salamanca, and parallel to its course from Alba to Huerta, covered
-Salamanca. But the enemy extending his left along the edge of the
-forest, still menaced the line of communication with Ciudad Rodrigo;
-and in the night advice came that general Chauvel, with near two
-thousand of Caffarelli’s horsemen, and twenty guns, had actually
-reached Pollos on the 20th, and would join Marmont the 22nd or 23rd.
-Hence Wellington, feeling that he must now perforce retreat to Ciudad
-Rodrigo, and fearing that the French cavalry thus reinforced would
-hamper his movements, determined, unless the enemy attacked him, or
-committed some flagrant fault, to retire before Chauvel’s horsemen
-could arrive.
-
-At day-break on the 22nd, Marmont who had called the troops at Babila
-Fuente over the Tormes, by the ford of Encina, brought Bonet’s and
-Maucune’s divisions up from the forest and took possession of the
-ridge of Calvariza de Ariba; he also occupied in advance of it a
-wooded height on which was an old chapel called Nuestra Señora de la
-Pena. But at a little distance from his left, and from the English
-right, stood a pair of solitary hills, called the _Two Arapiles_,
-about half cannon-shot from each other; steep and savagely rugged
-they were, and the possession of them would have enabled the French
-general to form his army across Wellington’s right, and thus bring
-on a battle with every disadvantage to the allies, confined, as the
-latter would have been, between the French army and the Tormes. These
-hills were neglected by the English general until a staff officer,
-who had observed the enemy’s detachments stealing towards them, first
-informed Beresford, and afterwards Wellington of the fact. The former
-thought it was of no consequence, but the latter immediately sent
-the seventh Caçadores to seize the most distant of the rocks, and
-then a combat occurred similar to that which happened between Cæsar
-and Afranius at Lerida; for the French seeing the allies’ detachment
-approaching, broke their own ranks, and running without order to the
-encounter gained the first Arapiles and kept it, but were repulsed in
-an endeavour to seize the second. This skirmish was followed by one
-at Nuestra Señora de la Pena, which was also assailed by a detachment
-of the seventh division, and so far successfully, that half that
-height was gained; yet the enemy kept the other half, and Victor
-Alten, flanking the attack with a squadron of German hussars, lost
-some men and was himself wounded by a musket-shot.
-
-The result of the dispute for the Arapiles rendered a retreat
-difficult to the allies during day-light; for though the rock
-gained by the English was a fortress in the way of the French army,
-Marmont, by extending his left, and by gathering a force behind his
-own Arapiles, could still frame a dangerous battle and pounce upon
-the allies during their movement. Wherefore Wellington immediately
-extended his right into the low ground, placing the light companies
-of the guards in the village of Arapiles, and the fourth division,
-with exception of the twenty-seventh regiment, which remained at the
-rock, on a gentle ridge behind them. The fifth and sixth divisions he
-gathered in one mass upon the internal slope of the English Arapiles,
-where from the hollow nature of the ground they were quite hidden
-from the enemy; and during these movements a sharp cannonade was
-exchanged from the tops of those frowning hills, on whose crowning
-rocks the two generals sat like ravenous vultures watching for their
-quarry.
-
-Marmont’s project was not yet developed; his troops coming from
-Babila Fuente were still in the forest, and some miles off; he had
-only two divisions close up, and the occupation of Calvariza Ariba,
-and Nuestra Señora de la Pena, was a daring defensive measure to
-cover the formation of his army. The occupation of the Arapiles was
-however a start forward, for an advantage to be afterwards turned to
-profit, and seemed to fix the operations on the left of the Tormes.
-Wellington, therefore, brought up the first and the light divisions
-to confront the enemy’s troops on the height of Calvariza Ariba;
-and then calling the third division and D’Urban’s cavalry over the
-river, by the fords of Santa Marta, he posted them in a wood near
-Aldea Tejada, entirely refused to the enemy and unseen by him, yet
-in a situation to secure the main road to Ciudad Rodrigo. Thus the
-position of the allies was suddenly reversed; the left rested on the
-English Arapiles, the right on Aldea Tejada; that which was the rear
-became the front, and the interval between the third and the fourth
-division was occupied by Bradford’s Portuguese infantry, by the
-Spaniards, and by the British cavalry.
-
-This ground had several breaks and hollows, so that few of these
-troops could be viewed by the enemy, and those which were, seemed,
-both from their movement and from their position, to be pointing to
-the Ciudad Rodrigo road as in retreat. The commissariat and baggage
-had also been ordered to the rear, the dust of their march was
-plainly to be seen many miles off, and hence there was nothing in the
-relative position of the armies, save their proximity, to indicate
-an approaching battle. Such a state of affairs could not last long.
-About twelve o’clock Marmont, fearing that the important bearing of
-the French Arapiles on Wellington’s retreat would induce the latter
-to drive him thence, hastily brought up Foy’s and Ferey’s divisions
-in support, placing, the first, with some guns, on a wooded height
-between the Arapiles and Nuestra Señora de la Pena, the second, and
-Boyer’s dragoons, behind Foy on the ridge of Calvariza de Ariba. Nor
-was this fear ill-founded, for the English general, thinking that
-he could not safely retreat in day-light without possessing both
-Arapiles, had actually issued orders for the seventh division to
-attack the French, but perceiving the approach of more troops, gave
-counter-orders lest he should bring on the battle disadvantageously.
-He judged it better to wait for new events, being certain that at
-night he could make his retreat good, and wishing rather that Marmont
-should attack him in his now strong position.
-
-The French troops coming from Babila Fuente had not yet reached
-the edge of the forest, when Marmont, seeing that the allies would
-not attack, and fearing that they would retreat before his own
-dispositions were completed, ordered Thomieres’ division, covered by
-fifty guns and supported by the light cavalry, to menace the Ciudad
-Rodrigo road. He also hastened the march of his other divisions,
-designing, when Wellington should move in opposition to Thomieres,
-to fall upon him, by the village of Arapiles, with six divisions of
-infantry and Boyer’s dragoons, which last, he now put in march to
-take fresh ground on the left of the Arapiles rocks, leaving only one
-regiment of cavalry, to guard Foy’s right flank at Calvariza.
-
-In these new circumstances, the positions of the two armies embraced
-an oval basin formed by different ranges of hills, that rose like
-an amphitheatre of which the Arapiles rocks might be considered
-the door-posts. This basin was about a mile broad from north to
-south, and more than two miles long from east to west. The northern
-and western half-formed the allies’ position, which extended from
-the English Arapiles on the left to Aldea Tejada on the right. The
-eastern heights were held by the French right, and their left,
-consisting of Thomieres’ division with the artillery and light
-cavalry, was now moving along the southern side of the basin; but the
-march was wide and loose, there was a long space between Thomieres’
-and the divisions, which, coming from the edge of the forest were
-destined to form the centre, and there was a longer space between
-him and the divisions about the Arapiles. Nevertheless, the mass of
-artillery placed on his right flank was very imposing, and opened its
-fire grandly, taking ground to the left by guns, in succession, as
-the infantry moved on; and these last marched eagerly, continually
-contracting their distance from the allies, and bringing up their
-left shoulders as if to envelope Wellington’s position and embrace
-it with fire. At this time also, Bonet’s troops, one regiment of
-which held the French Arapiles, carried the village of that name, and
-although soon driven from the greatest part of it again, maintained a
-fierce struggle.
-
-Marmont’s first arrangements had occupied several hours, yet as they
-gave no positive indication of his designs, Wellington ceasing to
-watch him, had retired from the Arapiles. But at three o’clock, a
-report reached him that the French left was in motion and pointing
-towards the Ciudad Rodrigo road; then starting up he repaired to
-the high ground, and observed their movements for some time, with
-a stern contentment, for their left wing was entirely separated
-from the centre. The fault was flagrant, and he fixed it with the
-stroke of a thunderbolt. A few orders issued from his lips like
-the incantations of a wizard, and suddenly the dark mass of troops
-which covered the English Arapiles, was seemingly possessed by some
-mighty spirit, and rushing violently down the interior slope of the
-mountain, entered the great basin amidst a storm of bullets which
-seemed to shear away the whole surface of the earth over which the
-soldiers moved. The fifth division instantly formed on the right of
-the fourth, connecting the latter with Bradford’s Portuguese, who
-hastened forward at the same time from the right of the army, and
-the heavy cavalry galloping up on the right of Bradford, closed this
-front of battle. The sixth and seventh divisions flanked on the right
-by Anson’s light cavalry, which had now moved from the Arapiles,
-were ranged at half cannon-shot in a second line, which was prolonged
-by the Spaniards in the direction of the third division; and this
-last, reinforced by two squadrons of the fourteenth dragoons, and by
-D’Urban’s Portuguese horsemen, formed the extreme right of the army.
-Behind all, on the highest ground, the first and light divisions and
-Pack’s Portuguese were disposed in heavy masses as a reserve.
-
-When this grand disposition was completed, the third division and its
-attendant horsemen, the whole formed in four columns and flanked on
-the left by twelve guns, received orders to cross the enemy’s line of
-march. The remainder of the first line, including the main body of
-the cavalry was directed to advance whenever the attack of the third
-division should be developed; and as the fourth division must in this
-forward movement necessarily lend its flank to the enemy’s troops
-stationed on the French Arapiles, Pack’s brigade was commanded to
-assail that rock the moment the left of the British line should pass
-it. Thus, after long coiling and winding, the armies came together,
-and drawing up their huge trains like angry serpents mingled in
-deadly strife.
-
-
-BATTLE OF SALAMANCA.
-
-Marmont, from the top of the French Arapiles, saw the country beneath
-him suddenly covered with enemies at a moment when he was in the act
-of making a complicated evolution, and when, by the rash advance of
-his left, his troops were separated into three parts, each at too
-great a distance to assist the other, and those nearest the enemy
-neither strong enough to hold their ground, nor aware of what they
-had to encounter. The third division was, however, still hidden from
-him by the western heights, and he hoped that the tempest of bullets
-under which the British line was moving in the basin beneath, would
-check it until he could bring up his reserve divisions, and by the
-village of Arapiles fall on what was now the left of the allies’
-position. But even this, his only resource for saving the battle,
-was weak, for on that point there were still the first and light
-divisions and Pack’s brigade, forming a mass of twelve thousand
-troops with thirty pieces of artillery; the village itself was well
-disputed, and the English Arapiles rock stood out as a strong bastion
-of defence. However, the French general, nothing daunted, despatched
-officer after officer, some to hasten up the troops from the forest,
-others to stop the progress of his left wing, and with a sanguine
-expectation still looked for the victory until he saw Pakenham with
-the third division shoot like a meteor across Thomieres’ path; then
-pride and hope alike died within him, and desperately he was hurrying
-in person to that fatal point, when an exploding shell stretched
-him on the earth with a broken arm and two deep wounds in his side.
-Confusion ensued and the troops distracted by ill-judged orders and
-counter-orders knew not where to move, who to fight or who to avoid.
-
-It was about five o’clock when Pakenham fell upon Thomieres, and it
-was at the instant when that general, the head of whose column had
-gained an open isolated hill at the extremity of the southern range
-of heights, expected to see the allies, in full retreat towards the
-Ciudad Rodrigo road, closely followed by Marmont from the Arapiles.
-The counter-stroke was terrible! Two batteries of artillery placed
-on the summit of the western heights suddenly took his troops in
-flank, and Pakenham’s massive columns supported by cavalry, were
-coming on full in his front, while two-thirds of his own division,
-lengthened out and unconnected, were still behind in a wood where
-they could hear, but could not see the storm which was now bursting.
-From the chief to the lowest soldier all felt that they were lost,
-and in an instant Pakenham the most frank and gallant of men
-commenced the battle.
-
-[Sidenote: Appendix I.]
-
-The British columns formed lines as they marched, and the French
-gunners standing up manfully for the honour of their country, sent
-showers of grape into the advancing masses, while a crowd of light
-troops poured in a fire of musketry, under cover of which the main
-body endeavoured to display a front. But bearing onwards through the
-skirmishers with the might of a giant, Pakenham broke the half-formed
-lines into fragments, and sent the whole in confusion upon the
-advancing supports; one only officer, with unyielding spirit,
-remained by the artillery; standing alone he fired the last gun at
-the distance of a few yards, but whether he lived or there died could
-not be seen for the smoke. Some squadrons of light cavalry fell on
-the right of the third division, but the fifth regiment repulsed
-them, and then D’Urban’s Portuguese horsemen, reinforced by two
-squadrons of the fourteenth dragoons under Felton Harvey, gained the
-enemy’s flank. The Oporto regiment, led by the English Major Watson,
-instantly charged the French infantry, yet vainly, Watson fell deeply
-wounded and his men retired.
-
-Pakenham continued his tempestuous course against the remainder of
-Thomieres’ troops, which were now arrayed on the wooded heights
-behind the first hill, yet imperfectly, and offering two fronts the
-one opposed to the third division and its attendant horsemen, the
-other to the fifth division, to Bradford’s brigade and the main body
-of cavalry and artillery, all of which were now moving in one great
-line across the basin. Meanwhile Bonet’s troops having failed at the
-village of Arapiles were sharply engaged with the fourth division,
-Maucune kept his menacing position behind the French Arapiles, and
-as Clauzel’s division had come up from the forest, the connection of
-the centre and left was in some measure restored; two divisions were
-however still in the rear, and Boyer’s dragoons were in march from
-Calvariza Ariba. Thomieres had been killed, and Bonet, who succeeded
-Marmont, had been disabled, hence more confusion; but the command of
-the army devolved on Clauzel, and he was of a capacity to sustain
-this terrible crisis.
-
-The fourth and fifth divisions, and Bradford’s brigade, were now
-hotly engaged and steadily gaining ground; the heavy cavalry,
-Anson’s light dragoons and Bull’s troop of artillery were advancing
-at a trot on Pakenham’s left; and on that general’s right D’Urban’s
-horsemen overlapped the enemy. Thus in less than half an hour, and
-before an order of battle had even been formed by the French, their
-commander-in-chief and two other generals had fallen, and the left of
-their army was turned, thrown into confusion and enveloped. Clauzel’s
-division had indeed joined Thomieres’, and a front had been spread on
-the southern heights, but it was loose and unfit to resist; for the
-troops were, some in double lines, some in columns, some in squares;
-a powerful sun shone full in their eyes, the light soil, stirred up
-by the trampling of men and horses, and driven forward by a breeze,
-which arose in the west at the moment of attack, came full upon them
-mingled with smoke in such stifling clouds, that scarcely able to
-breathe and quite unable to see, their fire was given at random.
-
-In this situation, while Pakenham, bearing onward with a conquering
-violence, was closing on their flank and the fifth division advancing
-with a storm of fire on their front, the interval between the two
-attacks was suddenly filled with a whirling cloud of dust, which
-moving swiftly forward carried within its womb the trampling sound
-of a charging multitude. As it passed the left of the third division
-Le Marchant’s heavy horsemen flanked by Anson’s light cavalry, broke
-forth from it at full speed, and the next instant twelve hundred
-French infantry though formed in several lines were trampled down
-with a terrible clamour and disturbance. Bewildered and blinded, they
-cast away their arms and run through the openings of the British
-squadrons stooping and demanding quarter, while the dragoons, big men
-and on big horses, rode onwards smiting with their long glittering
-swords in uncontroulable power, and the third division followed at
-speed, shouting as the French masses fell in succession before this
-dreadful charge.
-
-Nor were these valiant swordsmen yet exhausted. Their own general,
-Le Marchant, and many officers had fallen, but Cotton and all his
-staff was at their head, and with ranks confused, and blended
-together in one mass, still galloping forward they sustained from
-a fresh column an irregular stream of fire which emptied a hundred
-saddles; yet with fine courage, and downright force, the survivors
-broke through this the third and strongest body of men that had
-encountered them, and lord Edward Somerset, continuing his course at
-the head of one squadron, with a happy perseverance captured five
-guns. The French left was entirely broken, more than two thousand
-prisoners were taken, the French light horsemen abandoned that part
-of the field, and Thomieres’ division no longer existed as a military
-body. Anson’s cavalry which had passed quite over the hill and had
-suffered little in the charge, was now joined by D’Urban’s troopers,
-and took the place of Le Marchant’s exhausted men; the heavy German
-dragoons followed in reserve, and with the third and fifth divisions
-and the guns, formed one formidable line, two miles in advance of
-where Pakenham had first attacked; and that impetuous officer with
-unmitigated strength still pressed forward spreading terror and
-disorder on the enemy’s left.
-
-While these signal events, which occupied about forty minutes, were
-passing on the allies’ right, a terrible battle raged in the centre.
-For when the first shock of the third division had been observed from
-the Arapiles, the fourth division, moving in a line with the fifth,
-had passed the village of that name under a prodigious cannonade, and
-vigourously driving Bonet’s troops backwards, step by step, to the
-southern and eastern heights, obliged them to mingle with Clauzel’s
-and with Thomieres’ broken remains. When the combatants had passed
-the French Arapiles, which was about the time of Le Marchant’s
-charge, Pack’s Portuguese assailed that rock, and the front of
-battle was thus completely defined, because Foy’s division was now
-exchanging a distant cannonade with the first and light divisions.
-However Bonet’s troops, notwithstanding Marmont’s fall, and the loss
-of their own general, fought strongly, and Clauzel made a surprising
-effort, beyond all men’s expectations, to restore the battle. Already
-a great change was visible. Ferey’s division drawn off from the
-height of Calvaraza Ariba arrived in the centre behind Bonet’s men;
-the light cavalry, Boyer’s dragoons, and two divisions of infantry,
-from the forest, were also united there, and on this mass of fresh
-men, Clauzel rallied the remnants of his own and Thomieres’ division.
-Thus by an able movement, Sarrut’s, Brennier’s, and Ferey’s unbroken
-troops, supported by the whole of the cavalry, were so disposed as to
-cover the line of retreat to Alba de Tormes, while Maucune’s division
-was still in mass behind the French Arapiles, and Foy’s remained
-untouched on the right.
-
-But Clauzel, not content with having brought the separated part of
-his army together and in a condition to effect a retreat, attempted
-to stem the tide of victory in the very fulness of its strength and
-roughness. His hopes were founded on a misfortune which had befallen
-general Pack; for that officer ascending the French Arapiles in
-one heavy column, had driven back the enemy’s skirmishers and was
-within thirty yards of the summit, believing himself victorious, when
-suddenly the French reserves leaped forward from the rocks upon his
-front, and upon his left flank. The hostile masses closed, there was
-a thick cloud of smoke, a shout, a stream of fire, and the side of
-the hill was covered to the very bottom with the dead the wounded
-and the flying Portuguese, who were scoffed at for this failure
-without any justice; no troops could have withstood that crash upon
-such steep ground, and the propriety of attacking the hill at all
-seems very questionable. The result went nigh to shake the whole
-battle. For the fourth division had just then reached the southern
-ridge of the basin, and one of the best regiments in the service was
-actually on the summit when twelve hundred fresh adversaries, arrayed
-on the reverse slope, charged up hill; and as the British fire was
-straggling and ineffectual, because the soldiers were breathless
-and disordered by the previous fighting, the French who came up
-resolutely and without firing won the crest. They were even pursuing
-down the other side when two regiments placed in line below, checked
-them with a destructive volley.
-
-This vigorous counter-blow took place at the moment when Pack’s
-defeat permitted Maucune, who was no longer in pain for the Arapiles
-hill, to menace the left flank and rear of the fourth division, but
-the left wing of the fortieth regiment immediately wheeled about
-and with a rough charge cleared the rear. Maucune would not engage
-himself more deeply at that time, but general Ferey’s troops pressed
-vigorously against the front of the fourth division, and Brennier
-did the same by the first line of the fifth division, Boyer’s
-dragoons also came on rapidly, and the allies being outflanked and
-over-matched lost ground. Fiercely and fast the French followed
-and the fight once more raged in the basin below. General Cole had
-before this fallen deeply wounded, and Leith had the same fortune,
-but Beresford promptly drew Spry’s Portuguese brigade from the second
-line of the fifth division and thus flanked the advancing columns
-of the enemy; yet he also fell desperately wounded, and Boyer’s
-dragoons then came freely into action because Anson’s cavalry had
-been checked after Le Marchant’s charge by a heavy fire of artillery.
-
-The crisis of the battle had now arrived and the victory was for the
-general who had the strongest reserves in hand. Wellington, who was
-seen that day at every point of the field exactly when his presence
-was most required, immediately brought up from the second line, the
-sixth division, and its charge was rough, strong, and successful.
-Nevertheless the struggle was no slight one. The men of general
-Hulse’s brigade, which was on the left, went down by hundreds, and
-the sixty-first and eleventh regiments won their way desperately and
-through such a fire, as British soldiers only, can sustain. Some
-of Boyer’s dragoons also breaking in between the fifth and sixth
-divisions slew many men, and caused some disorder in the fifty-third;
-but that brave regiment lost no ground, nor did Clauzel’s impetuous
-counter-attack avail at any point, after the first burst, against
-the steady courage of the allies. The southern ridge was regained,
-the French general Menne was severely, and general Ferey, mortally
-wounded, Clauzel himself was hurt, and the reserve of Boyer’s
-dragoons coming on at a canter were met and broken by the fire of
-Hulse’s noble brigade. Then the changing current of the fight once
-more set for the British. The third division continued to outflank
-the enemy’s left, Maucune abandoned the French Arapiles, Foy retired
-from the ridge of Calvariza, and the allied host righting itself
-as a gallant ship after a sudden gust, again bore onwards in blood
-and gloom, for though the air, purified by the storm of the night
-before, was peculiarly clear, one vast cloud of smoke and dust rolled
-along the basin, and within it was the battle with all its sights and
-sounds of terror.
-
-When the English general had thus restored the fight in the centre,
-he directed the commander of the first division to push between
-Foy and the rest of the French army, which would have rendered it
-impossible for the latter to rally or escape; but this order was
-not executed, and Foy’s and Maucune’s divisions were skilfully used
-by Clauzel to protect the retreat. The first, posted on undulating
-ground and flanked by some squadrons of dragoons, covered the roads
-to the fords of Huerta and Encina; the second, reinforced with
-fifteen guns, was placed on a steep ridge in front of the forest,
-covering the road to Alba de Tormes; and behind this ridge, the rest
-of the army, then falling back in disorder before the third, fifth,
-and sixth divisions, took refuge. Wellington immediately sent the
-light division, formed in two lines and flanked by some squadrons of
-dragoons, against Foy; and he supported them by the first division in
-columns, flanked on the right by two brigades of the fourth division
-which he had drawn off from the centre when the sixth division
-restored the fight. The seventh division and the Spaniards followed
-in reserve, the country was covered with troops, and a new army
-seemed to have risen out of the earth.
-
-Foy throwing out a cloud of skirmishers retired slowly by wings,
-turning and firing heavily from every rise of ground upon the light
-division, which marched steadily forward without returning a shot,
-save by its skirmishers; for three miles the march was under this
-musketry, which was occasionally thickened by a cannonade, and yet
-very few men were lost, because the French aim was baffled, partly
-by the twilight, partly by the even order and rapid gliding of
-the lines. But the French general Desgraviers was killed, and the
-flanking brigades from the fourth division having now penetrated
-between Maucune and Foy, it seemed difficult for the latter to
-extricate his troops from the action; nevertheless he did it and
-with great dexterity. For having increased his skirmishers on the
-last defensible ridge, along the foot of which run a marshy stream,
-he redoubled his fire of musketry, and made a menacing demonstration
-with his horsemen just as the darkness fell; the British guns
-immediately opened their fire, a squadron of dragoons galloped
-forwards from the left, the infantry, crossing the marshy stream,
-with an impetuous pace hastened to the summit of the hill, and a
-rough shock seemed at hand, but there was no longer an enemy; the
-main body of the French had gone into the thick forest on their own
-left during the firing, and the skirmishers fled swiftly after,
-covered by the smoke and by the darkness.
-
-Meanwhile Maucune maintained a noble battle. He was outflanked and
-outnumbered, but the safety of the French army depended on his
-courage; he knew it, and Pakenham, marking his bold demeanour,
-advised Clinton, who was immediately in his front, not to assail him
-until the third division should have turned his left. Nevertheless
-the sixth division was soon plunged afresh into action under great
-disadvanatge, for after being kept by its commander a long time
-without reason, close under Maucune’s batteries which ploughed
-heavily through the ranks, it was suddenly directed by a staff
-officer to attack the hill. Assisted by a brigade of the fourth
-division, the troops then rushed up, and in the darkness of the night
-the fire shewed from afar how the battle went. On the side of the
-British a sheet of flame was seen, sometimes advancing with an even
-front, sometimes pricking forth in spear heads, now falling back
-in waving lines, and anon darting upwards in one vast pyramid, the
-apex of which often approached yet never gained the actual summit of
-the mountain; but the French musketry, rapid as lightning, sparkled
-along the brow of the height with unvarying fulness, and with
-what destructive effects the dark gaps and changing shapes of the
-adverse fire showed too plainly. Yet when Pakenham had again turned
-the enemy’s left, and Foy’s division had glided into the forest,
-Maucune’s task was completed, the effulgent crest of the ridge became
-black and silent, and the whole French army vanished as it were in
-the darkness.
-
-Meanwhile Wellington, who was with the leading regiment of the light
-division, continued to advance towards the ford of Huerta leaving the
-forest to his right, for he thought the Spanish garrison was still in
-the castle of Alba de Tormes, and that the enemy must of necessity
-be found in a confused mass at the fords. It was for this final
-stroke that he had so skilfully strengthened his left wing, nor was
-he diverted from his aim by marching through standing corn where no
-enemy could have preceded him; nor by Foy’s retreat into the forest,
-because it pointed towards the fords of Encina and Gonzalo, which
-that general might be endeavouring to gain, and the right wing of the
-allies would find him there. A squadron of French dragoons also burst
-hastily from the forest in front of the advancing troops, soon after
-dark, and firing their pistols passed at full gallop towards the ford
-of Huerta, thus indicating great confusion in the defeated army, and
-confirming the notion that its retreat was in that direction. Had the
-castle of Alba been held, the French could not have carried off a
-third of their army, nor would they have been in much better plight
-if Carlos D’España, who soon discovered his error in withdrawing the
-garrison, had informed Wellington of the fact; but he suppressed
-it and suffered the colonel who had only obeyed his orders to be
-censured; the left wing therefore continued their march to the ford
-without meeting any enemy, and, the night being far spent, were there
-halted; the right wing, exhausted by long fighting, had ceased to
-pursue after the action with Maucune, and thus the French gained Alba
-unmolested; but the action did not terminate without two remarkable
-accidents. While riding close behind the forty-third regiment,
-Wellington was struck in the thigh by a spent musket-ball, which
-passed through his holster; and the night picquets had just been set
-at Huerta, when sir Stapleton Cotton, who had gone to the ford and
-returned a different road, was shot through the arm by a Portuguese
-sentinel whose challenge he had disregarded. These were the last
-events of this famous battle, in which the skill of the general was
-worthily seconded by troops whose ardour may be appreciated by the
-following anecdotes.
-
-Captain Brotherton of the fourteenth dragoons, fighting on the 18th
-at the Guarena, amongst the foremost, as he was always wont to
-do, had a sword thrust quite through his side, yet on the 22d he
-was again on horseback, and being denied leave to remain in that
-condition with his own regiment, secretly joined Pack’s Portuguese
-in an undress, and was again hurt in the unfortunate charge at the
-Arapiles. Such were the officers. A man of the forty-third, one by
-no means distinguished above his comrades, was shot through the
-middle of the thigh, and lost his shoes in passing the marshy stream;
-but refusing to quit the fight, he limped under fire in rear of
-his regiment, and with naked feet, and streaming of blood from his
-wound, he marched for several miles over a country covered with sharp
-stones. Such were the soldiers, and the devotion of a woman was not
-wanting to the illustration of this great day.
-
-The wife of colonel Dalbiac, an English lady of a gentle disposition
-and possessing a very delicate frame, had braved the dangers, and
-endured the privations of two campaigns, with the patient fortitude
-which belongs only to her sex; and in this battle, forgetful of every
-thing but that strong affection which had so long supported her,
-she rode deep amidst the enemy’s fire, trembling yet irresistibly
-impelled forwards by feelings more imperious than horror, more
-piercing than the fear of death.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-
-[Sidenote: 1812. July.]
-
-During the few hours of darkness, which succeeded the cessation
-of the battle, Clauzel had with a wonderful diligence, passed the
-Tormes by the narrow bridge of Alba and the fords below it, and at
-day-light was in full retreat upon Peneranda, covered by an organized
-rear-guard. Wellington also, having brought up the German dragoons
-and Anson’s cavalry to the front, crossed the river with his left
-wing at day-light, and moving up the stream, came about ten o’clock
-upon the French rear which was winding without much order along
-the Almar, a small stream at the foot of a height near the village
-of La Serna. He launched his cavalry against them, and the French
-squadrons, flying from Anson’s troopers towards their own left,
-abandoned three battalions of infantry, who in separate columns were
-making up a hollow slope on their right, hoping to gain the crest
-of the heights before the cavalry could fall on. The two foremost
-did reach the higher ground and there formed squares, general Foy
-being in the one, and general Chemineau in the other; but the last
-regiment when half-way up, seeing Bock’s dragoons galloping hard on,
-faced about and being still in column commenced a disorderly fire.
-The two squares already formed above, also plied their muskets with
-far greater effect; and as the Germans, after crossing the Almar
-stream, had to pass a turn of narrow road, and then to clear some
-rough ground before they could range their squadrons on a charging
-front, the troopers dropt fast under the fire. By two’s, by three’s,
-by ten’s, by twenties they fell, but the rest keeping together,
-surmounted the difficulties of the ground, and hurtling on the column
-went clean through it; then the squares above retreated and several
-hundred prisoners were made by these able and daring horsemen.
-
-This charge had been successful even to wonder, the joyous victors
-standing in the midst of their captives and of thousands of admiring
-friends seemed invincible; yet those who witnessed the scene, nay
-the actors themselves remained with the conviction of this military
-truth, that cavalry are not able to cope with veteran infantry save
-by surprize. The hill of La Serna offered a frightful spectacle of
-the power of the musket, that queen of weapons, and the track of
-the Germans was marked by their huge bodies. A few minutes only
-had the combat lasted and above a hundred had fallen; fifty-one
-were killed outright; and in several places man and horse had died
-simultaneously, and so suddenly, that falling together on their sides
-they appeared still alive, the horse’s legs stretched out as in
-movement, the rider’s feet in the stirrup, his bridle in hand, the
-sword raised to strike, and the large hat fastened under the chin,
-giving to the grim, but undistorted countenance, a supernatural and
-terrible expression.
-
-When the French main body found their rear-guard attacked, they
-turned to its succour, but seeing the light division coming up
-recommenced the retreat and were followed to Nava de Sotroval.
-Near that place Chauvel’s horsemen joined them from the Duero, and
-covered the rear with such a resolute countenance that the allied
-cavalry, reduced in numbers and fatigued with continual fighting, did
-not choose to meddle again. Thus Clauzel carried his army clear off
-without further loss, and with such celerity, that his head-quarters
-were that night at Flores de Avila forty miles from the field of
-battle. After remaining a few hours there he crossed the Zapardiel,
-and would have halted the 24th, but the allied cavalry entered Cisla,
-and the march was then continued to Arevalo. This was a wonderful
-retreat, and the line was chosen with judgment, for Wellington
-naturally expected the French army would have made for Tordesillas
-instead of the Adaja. The pursuit was however somewhat slack, for
-on the very night of the action, the British left wing, being
-quite fresh, could have ascended the Tormes and reached the Almar
-before day-light, or, passing at Huerta, have marched by Ventosa to
-Peneranda; but the vigorous following of a beaten enemy was never
-a prominent characteristic of Lord Wellington’s campaigns in the
-Peninsula.
-
-[Sidenote: See Plan 3.]
-
-[Sidenote: King’s correspondence, MSS.]
-
-The 25th the allied army halted on the Zapardiel, and Adaja rivers,
-to let the commissariat, which had been sent to the rear the morning
-of the battle, come up. Meanwhile the king having quitted Madrid
-with fourteen thousand men on the 21st reached the Adaja and pushed
-his cavalry towards Fontiveros; he was at Blasco Sancho the 24th,
-within a few hours’ march of Arevalo, and consequently able to
-effect a junction with Clauzel, yet he did not hurry his march,
-for he knew only of the advance upon Salamanca not of the defeat,
-and having sent many messengers to inform Marmont of his approach,
-concluded that general would await his arrival. The next day he
-received letters from the duke of Ragusa and Clauzel, dated Arevalo,
-describing the battle, and telling him that the defeated army must
-pass the Duero immediately to save the dépôt of Valladolid, and
-to establish new communications with the army of the north. Those
-generals promised however to halt behind that river, if possible,
-until the king could receive reinforcements from Suchet and Soult.
-
-Joseph by a rapid movement upon Arevalo could still have effected
-a junction, but he immediately made a forced march to Espinar,
-leaving in Blasco Sancho two officers and twenty-seven troopers, who
-were surprised and made prisoners on the evening of the 25th by a
-corporal’s patrole; Clauzel at the same time marched upon Valladolid,
-by Olmedo, thus abandoning Zamora, Toro, and Tordesillas, with their
-garrisons, to the allies. Wellington immediately brought Santo
-Cildes, who was now upon the Esla with eight thousand Gallicians,
-to the right bank of the Duero, across which river he communicated
-by Castro Nuño with the left of the allies which was then upon the
-Zapardiel.
-
-The 27th the British whose march had become more circumspect from the
-vicinity of the king’s army entered Olmedo. At this place, general
-Ferrey had died of his wounds, and the Spaniards tearing his body
-from the grave were going to mutilate it, when the soldiers of the
-light division who had so often fought against this brave man rescued
-his corpse, re-made his grave and heaped rocks upon it for more
-security, though with little need; for the Spaniards, with whom the
-sentiment of honor is always strong when not stifled by the violence
-of their passions, applauded the action.
-
-On the 26th Clauzel, finding the pursuit had slackened, sent Colonel
-Fabvier to advise the king of it, and then sending his own right wing
-across the Duero, by the ford near Boecillo, to cover the evacuation
-of Valladolid, marched with the other wing towards the bridge of
-Tudela; he remained however still on the left bank, in the hope that
-Fabvier’s mission would bring the king back. Joseph who had already
-passed the Puerta de Guadarama immediately repassed it without delay
-and made a flank movement to Segovia, which he reached the 27th, and
-pushed his cavalry to Santa Maria de Nieva. Here he remained until
-the 31st expecting Clauzel would join him, for he resolved not to
-quit his hold of the passes over the Guadarama, nor to abandon his
-communication with Valencia and Andalusia. But Wellington brought
-Santo Cildes over the Duero to the Zapardiel, and crossing the Eresma
-and Ciga rivers himself, with the first and light divisions and the
-cavalry, had obliged Clauzel to retire over the Duero in the night
-of the 29th; and the next day the French general whose army was very
-much discouraged, fearing that Wellington would gain Aranda and Lerma
-while the Gallicians seized Dueñas and Torquemada, retreated in three
-columns by the valleys of the Arlanza, the Duero and the Esquiva
-towards Burgos.
-
-[Sidenote: Wellington’s despatch.]
-
-The English general entered Valladolid amidst the rejoicings of the
-people and there captured seventeen pieces of artillery, considerable
-stores, and eight hundred sick and wounded men; three hundred other
-prisoners were taken by the Partida chief Marquinez, and a large
-French convoy intended for Andalusia returned to Burgos. While the
-left wing of the allies pursued the enemy up the Arlanza, Wellington,
-marching with the right wing against the king, reached Cuellar
-the 1st of August; on the same day the garrison of Tordesillas
-surrendered to the Gallicians, and Joseph having first dismantled
-the castle of Segovia and raised a contribution of money and church
-plate retreated through the Puerta de Guadarama, leaving a rear-guard
-of cavalry which escaped by the Ildefonso pass on the approach of
-the allied horsemen. Thus the army of the centre was irrevocably
-separated from the army of Portugal, the operations against the
-latter were terminated, and new combinations were made conformable to
-the altered state of affairs; but to understand these it is necessary
-to look at the transactions in other parts of the Peninsula.
-
-[Sidenote: See Chap. IV. Book XVIII.]
-
-[Sidenote: Intercepted correspondence.]
-
-In Estremadura, after Drouet’s retreat to Azagua, Hill placed a
-strong division at Merida ready to cross the Tagus, but no military
-event occurred until the 24th of July, when general Lallemand, with
-three regiments of cavalry pushed back some Portuguese horsemen
-from Ribera to Villa Franca. He was attacked in front by general
-Long, while general Slade menaced his left, but he succeeded in
-repassing the defile of Ribera; Long then turned him by both flanks,
-and aided by Lefebre’s horse artillery, drove him with the loss of
-fifty men and many horses upon Llera, a distance of twenty miles.
-Drouet, desirous to retaliate, immediately executed a flank march
-towards Merida, and Hill fearing for his detachments there made a
-corresponding movement, whereupon the French general returned to
-the Serena; but though he received positive orders from Soult to
-give battle no action followed and the affairs of that part of the
-Peninsula remained balanced.
-
-[Sidenote: August.]
-
-In Andalusia, Ballesteros surprised colonel Beauvais, at Ossuna, took
-three hundred prisoners and destroyed the French dépôt there. After
-this he moved against Malaga, and was opposed by general Laval in
-front, while general Villatte, detached from the blockade of Cadiz,
-cut off his retreat to San Roque. The road to Murcia was still open
-to him, but his rashness, though of less consequence since the battle
-of Salamanca, gave Wellington great disquietude, and the more so that
-Joseph O’Donel had just sustained a serious defeat near Alicant.
-This disaster, which shall be described in a more fitting place, was
-however in some measure counterbalanced by the information, that the
-revived expedition from Sicily had reached Majorca, where it had been
-reinforced by Whittingham’s division, and by the stores and guns sent
-from Portugal to Gibraltar. It was known also, that in the northern
-provinces Popham’s armament had drawn all Caffarelli’s troops to the
-coast, and although the littoral warfare was not followed up the
-French were in confusion and the diversion complete.
-
-In Castile the siege of Astorga still lingered, but the division
-of Santo Cildes, seven thousand strong, was in communication with
-Wellington, Silveira’s militia were on the Duero, Clauzel had
-retreated to Burgos, and the king joined by two thousand men from
-Suchet’s army, could concentrate twenty thousand to dispute the
-passes of the Guadarama. Hence Wellington, having nothing immediate
-to fear from Soult, nor from the army of Portugal, nor from the army
-of the north, nor from Suchet, menaced as that marshal was by the
-Sicilian expedition, resolved to attack the king in preference to
-following Clauzel. The latter general could not be pursued without
-exposing Salamanca and the Gallicians to Joseph, who was strong in
-cavalry; but the monarch could be assailed without risking much in
-other quarters, seeing that Clauzel could not be very soon ready
-to renew the campaign, and it was expected Castaños would reduce
-Astorga in a few days which would give eight thousand additional
-men to the field army. Moreover a strong British division could be
-spared to co-operate with Santo Cildes, Silveira, and the Partidas,
-in the watching of the beaten army of Portugal while Wellington gave
-the king a blow in the field, or forced him to abandon Madrid; and
-it appeared probable that the moral effect of regaining the capital
-would excite the Spaniards’ energy every where, and would prevent
-Soult from attacking Hill. If he did attack him, the allies by
-choosing this line of operations, would be at hand to give succour.
-
-These reasons being weighed, Wellington posted general Clinton at
-Cuellar with the sixth division, which he increased to eight thousand
-men by the addition of some sickly regiments and by Anson’s cavalry;
-Santo Cildes also was put in communication with him, and the Partidas
-of Marquinez, Saornil, and El Principe agreed to act with Anson on
-a prescribed plan. Thus exclusive of Silveira’s militia, and of the
-Gallicians about Astorga, eighteen thousand men were left on the
-Duero, and the English general was still able to march against Joseph
-with twenty-eight thousand old troops, exclusive of Carlos D’España’s
-Spaniards. He had also assurance from lord Castlereagh, that a
-considerable sum in hard money, to be followed by other remittances,
-had been sent from England, a circumstance of the utmost importance
-because grain could be purchased in Spain at one-third the cost of
-bringing it up from Portugal.
-
-[Sidenote: King’s correspondence, MSS.]
-
-Meanwhile the king, who had regained Madrid, expecting to hear that
-ten thousand of the army of the south were at Toledo, received
-letters from Soult positively refusing to send that detachment; and
-from Clausel, saying that the army of Portugal was in full retreat
-to Burgos. This retreat he regarded as a breach of faith, because
-Clausel had promised to hold the line of the Duero if Wellington
-marched upon Madrid; but Joseph was unable to appreciate Wellington’s
-military combinations; he did not perceive, that, taking advantage of
-his central position, the English general, before he marched against
-Madrid, had forced Clausel to abandon the Duero to seek some safe and
-distant point to re-organize his army. Nor was the king’s perception
-of his own situation much clearer. He had the choice of several lines
-of operations; that is, he might defend the passes of the Guadarama
-while his court and enormous convoys evacuated Madrid and marched
-either upon Zaragoza, Valencia or Andalusia; or he might retire, army
-and convoy together, in one of those directions.
-
-Rejecting the defence of the passes, lest the allies should then
-march by their right to the Tagus, and so intercept his communication
-with the south, he resolved to direct his march towards the Morena,
-and he had from Segovia sent Soult orders to evacuate Andalusia and
-meet him on the frontier of La Mancha; but to avoid the disgrace
-of flying before a detachment, he occupied the Escurial mountain,
-and placed his army across the roads leading from the passes of the
-Guadarama to Madrid. While in this position Wellington’s advanced
-guard, composed of D’Urban’s Portuguese a troop of horse artillery
-and a battalion of infantry, passed the Guadarama, and the 10th
-the whole army was over the mountains. Then the king, retaining
-only eight thousand men in position, sent the rest of his troops to
-protect the march of his court, which quitted Madrid the same day,
-with two or three thousand carriages of different kinds and nearly
-twenty thousand persons of all ages and sexes.
-
-The 11th D’Urban drove back Trielhard’s cavalry posts, and entered
-Majadahonda, whilst some German infantry, Bock’s heavy cavalry, and
-a troop of horse artillery, occupied Las Rozas about a mile in his
-rear. In the evening, Trielhard, reinforced by Schiazzetti’s Italian
-dragoons and the lancers of Berg, returned, whereupon D’Urban called
-up the horse artillery and would have charged the enemy’s leading
-squadrons, but the Portuguese cavalry fled. The artillery officer
-thus abandoned, made a vigorous effort to save his guns, yet three
-of them being overturned on the rough ground were taken, and the
-victorious cavalry passed through Majadahonda in pursuit. The German
-dragoons, although surprised in their quarters, mounted and stopped
-the leading French squadrons until Schiazzetti’s Italians came up,
-when the fight was like to end badly; but Ponsonby’s cavalry and
-the seventh division arrived, and Trielhard immediately abandoned
-Majadahonda, leaving the captured guns behind him, yet carrying away
-prisoners, the Portuguese general Visconde de Barbacena, the colonel
-of the German cavalry, and others of less rank. The whole loss of the
-allies was above two hundred, and when the infantry passed through
-Rozas, a few hours after the combat, the German dead were lying
-thickly in the streets, many of them in their shirts and trousers,
-and thus stretched across the sills of the doors, they furnished
-proof at once of the suddenness of the action and of their own
-bravery. Had the king been prepared to follow up this blow with his
-whole force the allies must have suffered severely, for Wellington,
-trusting to the advanced guard, had not kept his divisions very close
-together.
-
-After this combat the king retired to Valdemoro where he met his
-convoy from Madrid, and when the troops of the three different
-nations forming his army thus came together, a horrible confusion
-arose; the convoy was plundered, and the miserable people who
-followed the court, were made a prey by the licentious soldiers.
-Marshal Jourdan, a man at all times distinguished for the noblest
-sentiments, immediately threw himself into the midst of the
-disorderly troops, and aided by the other generals, with great
-personal risk arrested the mischief, and succeeded in making the
-multitude file over the bridge of Aranjues. The procession was
-however lugubrious and shocking, for the military line of march was
-broken by crowds of weeping women and children and by despairing men,
-and courtiers of the highest rank were to be seen in full dress,
-desperately struggling with savage soldiers for the possession of
-even the animals on which they were endeavouring to save their
-families. The cavalry of the allies could have driven the whole
-before them into the Tagus, yet Lord Wellington did not molest them.
-Either from ignorance of their situation, or what is more probable
-compassionating their misery, and knowing that the troops by
-abandoning the convoy could easily escape over the river, he would
-not strike where the blow could only fall on helpless people without
-affecting the military operations. Perhaps also he thought it wise to
-leave Joseph the burthen of his court.
-
-In the evening of the 13th the whole multitude was over the Tagus,
-the garrisons of Aranjues and Toledo joined the army, order was
-restored, and the king received letters from Soult and Suchet. The
-first named marshal opposed the evacuation of Andalusia; the second
-gave notice, that the Sicilian expedition had landed at Alicant, and
-that a considerable army was forming there. Then irritated by Soult
-and alarmed for the safety of Suchet, the king relinquished his march
-towards the Morena and commenced his retreat to Valencia. The 15th
-the advanced guard moved with the sick and wounded, who were heaped
-on country cars, and the main body of the convoy followed under
-charge of the infantry, while the cavalry, spreading to the right and
-left, endeavoured to collect provisions. But the people, remembering
-the wanton devastation committed a few months before by Montbrun’s
-troops, on their return from Alicant, fled with their property; and
-as it was the hottest time of the year, and the deserted country was
-sandy and without shade, this march, of one hundred and fifty miles
-to Almanza, was one of continual suffering. The Partida chief Chaleco
-hovered constantly on the flanks and rear, killing without mercy all
-persons, civil or military, who straggled or sunk from exhaustion;
-and while this disastrous journey was in progress, another misfortune
-befel the French on the side of Requeña. For the hussars and infantry
-belonging to Suchet’s army, having left Madrid to succour Cuenca
-before the king returned from Segovia, carried off the garrison of
-that place in despite of the Empecinado, and made for Valencia;
-but Villa Campa crossing their march on the 25th of August, at the
-passage of a river, near Utiel, took all their baggage, their guns,
-and three hundred men. And after being driven away from Cuenca the
-Empecinado invested Guadalaxara where the enemy had left a garrison
-of seven hundred men.
-
-Wellington seeing that the king had crossed the Tagus in retreat
-entered Madrid, a very memorable event were it only from the
-affecting circumstances attending it. He, a foreigner and marching
-at the head of a foreign army, was met and welcomed to the capital
-of Spain by the whole remaining population. The multitude who before
-that hour had never seen him, came forth to hail his approach, not
-with feigned enthusiasm, not with acclamations extorted by the fear
-of a conqueror’s power, nor yet excited by the natural proneness of
-human nature to laud the successful, for there was no tumultuous
-exultation; famine was amongst them, and long-endured misery had
-subdued their spirits, but with tears, and every other sign of deep
-emotion, they crowded around his horse, hung upon his stirrups,
-touched his clothes, or throwing themselves upon the earth, blessed
-him aloud as the friend of Spain. His triumph was as pure, and
-glorious, as it was uncommon, and he felt it to be so.
-
-Madrid was however still disturbed by the presence of the enemy. The
-Retiro contained enormous stores, twenty thousand stand of arms, more
-than one hundred and eighty pieces of artillery, and the eagles of
-two French regiments, and it had a garrison of two thousand fighting
-men, besides invalids and followers, but its inherent weakness was
-soon made manifest. The works consisted of an interior fort called
-La China, with an exterior entrenchment; but the fort was too small,
-the entrenchment too large, and the latter could be easily deprived
-of water. In the lodgings of a French officer also was found an
-order, directing the commandant to confine his real defence to the
-fort, and accordingly, in the night of the 13th, being menaced, he
-abandoned the entrenchment, and the next day accepted honourable
-terms, because La China was so contracted and filled with combustible
-buildings, that his fine troops would with only a little firing have
-been smothered in the ruins; yet they were so dissatisfied that
-many broke their arms and their commander was like to have fallen a
-victim to their wrath. They were immediately sent to Portugal, and
-French writers with too much truth assert, that the escort basely
-robbed and murdered many of the prisoners. This disgraceful action
-was perpetrated, either at Avila or on the frontier of Portugal,
-wherefore the British troops, who furnished no escorts after the
-first day’s march from Madrid, are guiltless.
-
-Coincident with the fall of the Retiro was that of Guadalaxara,
-which surrendered to the Empecinado. This mode of wasting an army,
-and its resources, was designated by Napoleon as the most glaring
-and extraordinary of all the errors committed by the king and by
-Marmont. And surely it was so. For including the garrisons of Toro,
-Tordesillas, Zamora and Astorga, which were now blockaded, six
-thousand men had been delivered, as it were bound, to the allies,
-and with them, stores and equipments sufficient for a new army.
-These forts had been designed by the emperor to resist the partidas,
-but his lieutenants exposed them to the British army, and thus the
-positive loss of men from the battle of Salamanca was doubled.
-
-Napoleon had notice of Marmont’s defeat as early as the 2d of
-September, a week before the great battle of Borodino; the news was
-carried by colonel Fabvier, who made the journey from Valladolid in
-one course, and having fought on the 22d of July at the Arapiles,
-was wounded on the heights of Moskowa the 7th of September! However,
-the duke of Ragusa, suffering alike in body and in mind, had excused
-himself with so little strength, or clearness, that the emperor
-contemptuously remarking, that the despatch contained more complicate
-stuffing than a clock, desired his war minister to demand, why
-Marmont had delivered battle without the orders of the king? why
-he had not made his operations subservient to the general plan of
-the campaign? why he broke from defensive into offensive operations
-before the army of the centre joined him? why he would not even wait
-two days for Chauvel’s cavalry, which he knew were close at hand?
-“From personal vanity,” said the emperor, with seeming sternness,
-“the duke of Ragusa has sacrificed the interests of his country, and
-the good of my service, he is guilty of the crime of insubordination,
-and is the author of all this misfortune.”
-
-[Sidenote: September]
-
-[Sidenote: Appendix, 4, 5, 6.]
-
-But Napoleon’s wrath so just, and apparently so dangerous, could not,
-even in its first violence, overpower his early friendship. With a
-kindness, the recollection of which must now pierce Marmont’s inmost
-soul, twice, in the same letter, he desired that these questions
-might not even be put to his unhappy lieutenant until his wounds
-were cured and his health re-established. Nor was this generous
-feeling shaken by the arrival of the king’s agent, colonel Desprez,
-who reached Moscow the 18th of October, just after Murat had lost
-a battle at the outposts and when all hopes of peace with Russia
-were at an end. Joseph’s dispatches bitter against all the generals,
-were especially so against Marmont and Soult; the former for having
-lost the battle, the latter because of his resistance to the royal
-plan. The recal of the duke of Dalmatia was demanded imperatively,
-because he had written a letter to the emperor, extremely offensive
-to the king; and it was also hinted, that Soult designed to make
-himself king of Andalusia. Idle stories of that marshal’s ambition
-seem always to have been resorted to, when his skilful plans were
-beyond the military judgement of ordinary generals; but Marmont was
-deeply sunk in culpable misfortune, and the king’s complaints against
-him were not unjust. Napoleon had however then seen Wellington’s
-dispatch, which was more favourable to the duke of Ragusa, than
-Joseph’s report; for the latter was founded on a belief, that the
-unfortunate general, knowing the army of the centre was close at
-hand, would not wait for it; whereas the partidas had intercepted
-so many of Joseph’s letters, it is doubtful if any reached Marmont
-previous to the battle. It was in vain therefore, that Desprez
-pressed the king’s discontent on the emperor; that great man, with
-unerring sagacity, had already disentangled the truth, and Desprez
-was thus roughly interrogated as to the conduct of his master.
-
-Why was not the army of the centre in the field a month sooner to
-succour Marmont? Why was the emperor’s example, when, in a like case,
-he marched from Madrid against sir John Moore, forgotten? Why, after
-the battle, was not the Duero passed, and the beaten troops rallied
-on the army of the centre? Why were the passes of the Guadarama so
-early abandoned? Why was the Tagus crossed so soon? Finally, why were
-the stores and gun-carriages in the Retiro not burnt, the eagles and
-the garrison carried off?
-
-To these questions the king’s agent could only reply by excuses which
-must have made the energetic emperor smile; but when, following his
-instructions, Desprez harped upon Soult’s demeanour, his designs in
-Andalusia, and still more upon the letter so personally offensive
-to the king, and which shall be noticed hereafter, Napoleon replied
-sharply, that he could not enter into such pitiful disputes while
-he was at the head of five hundred thousand men and occupied with
-such immense operations. With respect to Soult’s letter, he said he
-knew his brother’s real feelings, but those who judged Joseph by his
-language could only think with Soult, whose suspicions were natural
-and partaken by the other generals; wherefore he would not, by
-recalling him, deprive the armies in Spain of the only military head
-they possessed. And then in ridicule of Soult’s supposed treachery,
-he observed, that the king’s fears on that head must have subsided,
-as the English newspapers said the duke of Dalmatia was evacuating
-Andalusia, and he would of course unite with Suchet and with the army
-of the centre to retake the offensive.
-
-The emperor, however, admitted all the evils arising from these
-disputes between the generals and the king, but said that at such a
-distance he could not give precise orders for their conduct. He had
-foreseen the mischief he observed, and regretted more than ever that
-Joseph had disregarded his counsel not to return to Spain in 1811,
-and thus saying he closed the conversation, but this expression about
-Joseph not returning to Spain is very remarkable. Napoleon spoke of
-it as of a well known fact, yet Joseph’s letters shew that he not
-only desired but repeatedly offered to resign the crown of Spain and
-live a private man in France! Did the emperor mean that he wished
-his brother to remain a crowned guest at Paris? or had some subtle
-intriguers misrepresented the brothers to each other? The noblest
-buildings are often defiled in secret by vile and creeping things.
-
-
-OBSERVATIONS.
-
-1º. _Menace your enemy’s flanks, protect your own, and be ready to
-concentrate on the important points_:
-
-These maxims contain the whole spirit of Napoleon’s instructions to
-his generals, after Badajos was succoured in 1811. At that time he
-ordered the army of Portugal to occupy the valley of the Tagus and
-the passes of the Gredos mountains, in which position it covered
-Madrid, and from thence it could readily march to aid either the army
-of the south, or the army of the north. Dorsenne, who commanded the
-latter, could bring twenty-six thousand men to Ciudad Rodrigo, and
-Soult could bring a like number to Badajos, but Wellington could
-not move against one or the other without having Marmont upon his
-flank; he could not move against Marmont, without having the others
-on both flanks, and he could not turn his opponent’s flanks save
-from the ocean. If notwithstanding this combination he took Ciudad
-Rodrigo and Badajos, it was by surprise, and because the French did
-not concentrate on the important points, which proved indeed his
-superiority to the executive general opposed to him but in no manner
-affected the principle of Napoleon’s plan.
-
-Again, when the preparations for the Russian war had weakened the
-army of the north, the emperor, giving Marmont two additional
-divisions, ordered him to occupy Castile, not as a defensive
-position, but as a central offensive one from whence he could keep
-the Gallicians in check, and by prompt menacing movements, prevent
-Wellington from commencing serious operations elsewhere. This plan
-also had reference to the maxim respecting flanks. For Marmont was
-forbidden to invade Portugal while Wellington was on the frontier
-of Beira, that is when he could not assail him in flank; and he was
-directed to guard the Asturias carefully as a protection to the great
-line of communication with France; in May also he was rebuked for
-having withdrawn Bonet from Oviedo, and for delaying to reoccupy the
-Asturias when the incursion against Beira terminated. But neither
-then nor afterwards did the duke of Ragusa comprehend the spirit
-of the Emperor’s views, and that extraordinary man, whose piercing
-sagacity seized every chance of war, was so disquieted by his
-lieutenant’s want of perception, that all the pomp, and all the vast
-political and military combinations of Dresden, could not put it from
-his thoughts.
-
-[Sidenote: Appendix No. 2.]
-
-“Twice,” said he, “has the duke of Ragusa placed an interval of
-thirty leagues between his army and the enemy, contrary to all the
-rules of war; the English general goes where he will, the French
-general loses the initial movements and is of no weight in the
-affairs of Spain. Biscay and the north are exposed by the evacuation
-of the Asturias; Santona and St. Sebastian are endangered, and
-the guerillas communicate freely with the coast. If the duke of
-Ragusa has not kept some bridges on the Agueda, he cannot know what
-Wellington is about, and he will retire before light cavalry instead
-of operating so as to make the English general concentrate his
-whole army. The false direction already given to affairs by marshal
-Marmont, makes it necessary that Caffarelli should keep a strong
-corps always in hand; that the commander of the reserve, at Bayonne,
-should look to the safety of St. Sebastian, holding three thousand
-men always ready to march; finally that the provisional battalions,
-and troops from the dépôts of the interior, should immediately
-reinforce the reserve at Bayonne, be encamped on the Pyrennees, and
-exercised and formed for service. _If Marmont’s oversights continue,
-these troops will prevent the disasters from becoming extreme._”
-
-Napoleon was supernaturally gifted in warlike matters. It has been
-recorded of Cæsar’s generalship, that he foretold the cohorts mixed
-with his cavalry would be the cause of victory at Pharsalia. But this
-letter was written by the French emperor on the 28th of May before
-the allies were even collected on the Agueda, and when a hundred
-thousand French troops were between the English general and Bayonne,
-and yet its prescience was vindicated at Burgos in October!
-
-2º. To fulfil the conditions of the emperor’s design, Marmont should
-have adopted Soult’s recommendation, that is, leaving one or two
-divisions on the Tormes he should have encamped near Baños, and
-pushed troops towards the upper Agueda to watch the movements of the
-allies. Caffarelli’s divisions could then have joined those on the
-Tormes, and thus Napoleon’s plan for 1811 would have been exactly
-renewed; Madrid would have been covered, a junction with the king
-would have been secured, Wellington could scarcely have moved beyond
-the Agueda, and the disaster of Salamanca would have been avoided.
-
-The duke of Ragusa, apparently because he would not have the king
-in his camp, run counter both to the emperor and to Soult. 1º. He
-kept no troops on the Agueda, which might be excused on the ground
-that the feeding of them there was beyond his means; but then he
-did not concentrate behind the Tormes to sustain his forts, neither
-did he abandon his forts, when he abandoned Salamanca, and thus
-eight hundred men were sacrificed merely to secure the power of
-concentrating behind the Duero. 2º. He adopted a line of operations
-perpendicular to the allies’ front, instead of lying on their flank;
-he abandoned sixty miles of country between the Tormes and the
-Agueda, and he suffered Wellington to take the initial movements of
-the campaign. 3º. He withdrew Bonet’s division from the Asturias,
-whereby he lost Caffarelli’s support and realized the emperor’s
-fears for the northern provinces. It is true that he regained the
-initial power, by passing the Duero on the 18th, and had he deferred
-the passage until the king was over the Guadarama, Wellington must
-have gone back upon Portugal with some shew of dishonour if not great
-loss. But if Castaños, instead of remaining with fifteen thousand
-Gallicians, before Astorga, a weak place with a garrison of only
-twelve hundred men, had blockaded it with three or four thousand, and
-detached Santocildes with eleven or twelve thousand down the Esla to
-co-operate with Silveira and D’Urban, sixteen thousand men would have
-been acting upon Marmont’s right flank in June; and as Bonet did not
-join until the 8th of July the line of the Duero would scarcely have
-availed the French general.
-
-3º. The secret of Wellington’s success is to be found in the extent
-of country occupied by the French armies, and the impediments to
-their military communication. Portugal was an impregnable central
-position, from whence the English general could rush out unexpectedly
-against any point. This strong post was however of his own making,
-he had chosen it, had fortified it, had defended it, he knew its
-full value and possessed quickness and judgement to avail himself
-of all its advantages; the battle of Salamanca was accidental in
-itself, but the tree was planted to bear such fruit, and Wellington’s
-profound combinations must be estimated from the general result.
-He had only sixty thousand disposable troops, and above a hundred
-thousand French were especially appointed to watch and controul him,
-yet he passed the frontier, defeated forty-five thousand in a pitched
-battle, and drove twenty thousand others from Madrid in the greatest
-confusion, without risking a single strategic point, of importance
-to his own operations. His campaign up to the conquest of Madrid was
-therefore strictly in accord with the rules of art, although his
-means and resources have been shewn to be precarious, shifting, and
-uncertain. Indeed the want of money alone would have prevented him
-from following up his victory if he had not persuaded the Spanish
-authorities, in the Salamanca country, to yield him the revenues of
-the government in kind under a promise of repayment at Cadiz. No
-general was ever more entitled to the honours of victory.
-
-4º. The success of Wellington’s daring advance would seem to indicate
-a fault in the French plan of invasion. The army of the south,
-numerous, of approved valour and perfectly well commanded, was yet of
-so little weight in this campaign as to prove that Andalusia was a
-point pushed beyond the true line of operations. The conquest of that
-province in 1811 was an enterprize of the king’s, on which he prided
-himself, yet it seems never to have been much liked by Napoleon,
-although he did not absolutely condemn it. The question was indeed a
-very grave one. While the English general held Portugal, and while
-Cadiz was unsubdued, Andalusia was a burthen, rather than a gain. It
-would have answered better, either to have established communications
-with France by the southern line of invasion, which would have
-brought the enterprize within the rules of a methodical war, or to
-have held the province partially by detachments, keeping the bulk
-of the army of the south in Estremadura, and thus have strengthened
-the northern line of invasion. For in Estremadura, Soult would have
-covered the capital, and have been more strictly connected with
-the army of the centre; and his powerful co-operation with Massena
-in 1810 would probably have obliged the English general to quit
-Portugal. The same result could doubtless have been obtained by
-reinforcing the army of the south, with thirty or forty thousand men,
-but it is questionable if Soult could have fed such a number; and in
-favour of the invasion of Andalusia it may be observed, that Seville
-was the great arsenal of Spain, that a formidable power might have
-been established there by the English without abandoning Portugal,
-that Cadiz would have compensated for the loss of Lisbon, and finally
-that the English ministers were not at that time determined to defend
-Portugal.
-
-5º. When the emperor declared that Soult possessed the only military
-head in the Peninsula he referred to a proposition made by that
-marshal which shall be noticed in the next chapter; but having regard
-merely to the disputes between the duke of Dalmatia, Marmont, and
-the king, Suchet’s talents not being in question, the justice of the
-remark may be demonstrated. Napoleon always enforced with precept
-and example, the vital military principle of concentration on the
-important points; but the king and the marshals, though harping
-continually upon this maxim, desired to follow it out, each in his
-own sphere. Now to concentrate on a wrong point, is to hurt yourself
-with your own sword, and as each French general desired to be strong,
-the army at large was scattered instead of being concentrated.
-
-The failure of the campaign was, by the king, attributed to Soult’s
-disobedience, inasmuch as the passage of the Tagus by Drouet would
-have enabled the army of the centre to act, before Palombini’s
-division arrived. But it has been shewn that Hill could have brought
-Wellington an equal, or superior reinforcement, in less time,
-whereby the latter could either have made head until the French
-dispersed for want of provisions, or, by a rapid counter-movement,
-he could have fallen upon Andalusia. And if the king had menaced
-Ciudad Rodrigo in return it would have been no diversion, for he had
-no battering train, still less could he have revenged himself by
-marching on Lisbon, because Wellington would have overpowered Soult
-and established a new base at Cadiz, before such an operation could
-become dangerous to the capital of Portugal. Oporto might indeed
-have been taken, yet Joseph would have hesitated to exchange Madrid
-for that city. But the ten thousand men required of Soult by the
-king, on the 19th of June, could have been at Madrid before August,
-and thus the passes of the Guadarama could have been defended until
-the army of Portugal was reorganized! Aye! but Hill could then have
-entered the valley of the Tagus, or, being reinforced, could have
-invaded Andalusia while Wellington kept the king’s army in check.
-It would appear therefore that Joseph’s plan of operations, if all
-its combinations had been exactly executed, might have prevented
-Wellington’s progress on some points, but to effect this the French
-must have been concentrated in large masses from distant places
-without striking any decisive blow, which was the very pith and
-marrow of the English general’s policy. Hence it follows that Soult
-made the true and Joseph the false application of the principle of
-concentration.
-
-6º. If the king had judged his position truly he would have early
-merged the monarch in the general, exchanged the palace for the
-tent; he would have held only the Retiro and a few fortified posts
-in the vicinity of Madrid, he would have organized a good pontoon
-train and established his magazines in Segovia, Avila, Toledo, and
-Talavera; finally he would have kept his army constantly united in
-the field, and exercised his soldiers, either by opening good roads
-through the mountains, or in chasing the partidas, while Wellington
-remained quiet. Thus acting, he would have been always ready to march
-north or south, to succour any menaced point. By enforcing good order
-and discipline in his own army, he would also have given a useful
-example, and he could by vigilance and activity have ensured the
-preponderance of force in the field on whichever side he marched.
-He would thus have acquired the esteem of the French generals, and
-obtained their willing obedience, and the Spaniards would more
-readily have submitted to a warlike monarch. A weak man may safely
-wear an inherited crown, it is of gold and the people support it;
-but it requires the strength of a warrior to bear the weight of an
-usurped diadem, it is of iron.
-
-7º. If Marmont and the king were at fault in the general plan of
-operations, they were not less so in the particular tactics of the
-campaign.
-
-[Sidenote: Appendix, Nos. 19, 20.]
-
-On the 18th of July the army of Portugal passed the Douro in advance.
-On the 30th it repassed that river in retreat, having, in twelve
-days, marched two hundred miles, fought three combats, and a general
-battle. One field-marshal, seven generals, twelve thousand five
-hundred men and officers had been killed, wounded, or taken; and two
-eagles, besides those taken in the Retiro, several standards, twelve
-guns, and eight carriages, exclusive of the artillery and stores
-captured at Valladolid, fell into the victors’ hands. In the same
-period, the allies marched one hundred and sixty miles, and had one
-field-marshal, four generals, and somewhat less than six thousand
-officers and soldiers killed or wounded.
-
-This comparison furnishes the proof of Wellington’s sagacity, when
-he determined not to fight except at great advantage. The French
-army, although surprised in the midst of an evolution and instantly
-swept from the field, killed and wounded six thousand of the allies;
-the eleventh and sixty-first regiments of the sixth division had
-not together more than one hundred and sixty men and officers left
-standing at the end of the battle; twice six thousand then would
-have fallen in a more equal contest, the blow would have been less
-decisive, and as Chauvel’s cavalry and the king’s army were both
-at hand, a retreat into Portugal would probably have followed a
-less perfect victory. Wherefore this battle ought not, and would
-not have been fought, but for Marmont’s false movement on the 22d.
-Yet it is certain that if Wellington had retired without fighting,
-the murmurs of his army, already louder than was seemly, would have
-been heard in England, and if an accidental shot had terminated his
-career all would have terminated. The cortez, ripe for a change,
-would have accepted the intrusive king, and the American war, just
-declared against England, would have rendered the complicated affairs
-of Portugal so extremely embarrassed that no new man could have
-continued the contest. Then the cries of disappointed politicians
-would have been raised. Wellington, it would have been said,
-Wellington, desponding, and distrusting his brave troops, dared not
-venture a battle on even terms, hence these misfortunes! His name
-would have been made, as sir John Moore’s was, a butt for the malice
-and falsehood of faction, and his military genius would have been
-measured by the ignorance of his detractors.
-
-[Sidenote: Appendix, Nos. 19, 20.]
-
-8º. In the battle Marmont had about forty-two thousand sabres and
-bayonets; Wellington who had received some detachments on the
-19th had above forty-six thousand, but the excess was principally
-Spanish. The French had seventy-four guns, the allies, including a
-Spanish battery, had only sixty pieces. Thus, Marmont, over-matched
-in cavalry and infantry, was superior in artillery, and the fight
-would have been most bloody, if the generals had been equal, for
-courage and strength were in even balance until Wellington’s genius
-struck the beam. Scarcely can a fault be detected in his conduct. It
-might indeed be asked why the cavalry reserves were not, after Le
-Marchant’s charge, brought up closer to sustain the fourth, fifth,
-and sixth divisions and to keep off Boyer’s dragoons, but it would
-seem ill to cavil at an action which was described at the time by
-a French officer, as the “_beating of forty thousand men in forty
-minutes_.”
-
-9º. The battle of Salamanca remarkable in many points of view, was
-not least so in this that it was the first decided victory gained by
-the allies in the Peninsula. In former actions the French had been
-repulsed, here they were driven headlong as it were before a mighty
-wind, without help or stay, and the results were proportionate.
-Joseph’s secret negociations with the Cortez were crushed, his
-partizans in every part of the Peninsula were abashed, and the
-sinking spirit of the Catalans was revived; the clamours of the
-opposition in England were checked, the provisional government of
-France was dismayed, the secret plots against the French in Germany
-were resuscitated, and the shock, reaching even to Moscow, heaved and
-shook the colossal structure of Napoleon’s power to its very base.
-
-Nevertheless Salamanca was as most great battles are, an accident;
-an accident seized upon with astonishing vigour and quickness, but
-still an accident. Even its results were accidental, for the French
-could never have repassed the Tormes as an army, if Carlos D’España
-had not withdrawn the garrison from Alba, and hidden the fact from
-Wellington; and this circumstance alone would probably have led to
-the ruin of the whole campaign, but for another of those chances,
-which, recurring so frequently in war, render bad generals timid,
-and make great generals trust their fortune under the most adverse
-circumstances. This is easily shewn. Joseph was at Blasco Sancho
-on the 24th, and notwithstanding his numerous cavalry, the army of
-Portugal passed in retreat across his front at the distance of only a
-few miles, without his knowledge; he thus missed one opportunity of
-effecting his junction with Clauzel. On the 25th this junction could
-still have been made at Arevalo, and Wellington, as if to mock the
-king’s generalship, halted that day behind the Zapardiel; yet Joseph
-retreated towards the Guadarama, wrathful that Clauzel made no effort
-to join him, and forgetful that as a beaten and pursued army must
-march, it was for him to join Clauzel. But the true cause of these
-errors was the different inclinations of the generals. The king
-wished to draw Clauzel to Madrid, Clauzel desired to have the king
-behind the Duero, and if he had succeeded the probable result may be
-thus traced.
-
-Clauzel during the first confusion wrote that only twenty thousand
-men could be reorganised, but in this number he did not include the
-stragglers and marauders who always take advantage of a defeat to
-seek their own interest; a reference to the French loss proves that
-there were nearly thirty thousand fighting men left, and in fact
-Clauzel did in a fortnight reorganise twenty thousand infantry, two
-thousand cavalry and fifty guns, besides gaining a knowledge of five
-thousand stragglers and marauders. In fine no soldiers rally quicker
-after a defeat, than the French, and hence as Joseph brought to
-Blasco Sancho thirty guns and fourteen thousand men of which above
-two thousand were horsemen, forty thousand infantry, and more than
-six thousand cavalry with a powerful artillery, might then have been
-rallied behind the Duero, exclusive of Caffarelli’s divisions. Nor
-would Madrid have been meanwhile exposed to an insurrection, nor to
-the operation of a weak detachment from Wellington’s army; for the
-two thousand men, sent by Suchet, had arrived in that capital on the
-30th, and there were in the several fortified points of the vicinity,
-six or seven thousand other troops who could have been united at
-the Retiro, to protect that dépôt and the families attached to the
-intrusive court.
-
-Thus Wellington without committing any fault, would have found a more
-powerful army than Marmont’s, again on the Duero, and capable of
-renewing the former operations with the advantage of former errors as
-warning beacons. But his own army would not have been so powerful
-as before, for the reinforcements sent from England did not even
-suffice to replace the current consumption of men; and neither the
-fresh soldiers nor the old Walcheren regiments were able to sustain
-the toil of the recent operations. Three thousand troops had joined
-since the battle, yet the general decrease, including the killed and
-wounded, was above eight thousand men, and the number of sick was
-rapidly augmenting from the extreme heat. It may therefore be said
-that if Marmont was stricken deeply by Wellington the king poisoned
-the wound. The English general had fore-calculated all these superior
-resources of the enemy, and it was only Marmont’s flagrant fault, on
-the 22d, that could have wrung the battle from him; yet he fought
-it as if his genius disdained such trial of its strength. I saw him
-late in the evening of that great day, when the advancing flashes
-of cannon and musketry, stretching as far as the eye could command,
-shewed in the darkness how well the field was won; he was alone,
-the flush of victory was on his brow, and his eyes were eager and
-watchful, but his voice was calm, and even gentle. More than the
-rival of Marlborough, since he had defeated greater warriors than
-Marlborough ever encountered, with a prescient pride he seemed only
-to accept this glory, as an earnest of greater things.
-
-
-
-
-BOOK XIX.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-
-[Sidenote: 1812.]
-
-As Wellington’s operations had now deeply affected the French affairs
-in the distant provinces, it is necessary again to revert to the
-general progress of the war, lest the true bearings of his military
-policy should be overlooked. The battle of Salamanca, by clearing
-all the centre of Spain, had reduced the invasion to its original
-lines of operation. For Palombini’s division having joined the army
-of the centre, the army of the Ebro was broken up; Caffarelli had
-concentrated the scattered troops of the army of the north; and when
-Clauzel had led back the vanquished army of Portugal to Burgos, the
-whole French host was divided in two distinct parts, each having
-a separate line of communication with France, and a circuitous,
-uncertain, attenuated line of correspondence with each other by
-Zaragoza instead of a sure and short one by Madrid. But Wellington
-was also forced to divide his army in two parts, and though, by the
-advantage of his central position, he retained the initial power,
-both of movement and concentration, his lines of communication were
-become long, and weak because the enemy was powerful at either flank.
-Wherefore on his own simple strength in the centre of Spain he could
-not rely, and the diversions he had projected against the enemy’s
-rear and flanks became more important than ever. To these we must now
-turn.
-
-
-EASTERN OPERATIONS.
-
-[Sidenote: See Book XVII. Chap. II.]
-
-[Sidenote: Captain Addington’s correspondence, MSS.]
-
-[Sidenote: History of the conspiracies against the French army in
-Catalonia, published at Barcelona, 1813.]
-
-It will be recollected that the narrative of Catalonian affairs
-ceased at the moment when Decaen, after fortifying the coast line
-and opening new roads beyond the reach of shot from the English
-ships, was gathering the harvest of the interior. Lacy, inefficient
-in the field and universally hated, was thus confined to the
-mountain chain which separates the coast territory from the plains
-of Lerida, and from the Cerdaña. The insurrectionary spirit of the
-Catalonians was indeed only upheld by Wellington’s successes, and
-by the hope of English succour from Sicily; for Lacy, devoted to
-the republican party in Spain, had now been made captain-general
-as well as commander-in-chief, and sought to keep down the people,
-who were generally of the priestly and royal faction. He publicly
-spoke of exciting a general insurrection, yet, in his intercourse
-with the English naval officers, avowed his wish to repress the
-patriotism of the Somatenes; he was not ashamed to boast of his
-assassination plots, and received with honour, a man who had murdered
-the aide-de-camp of Maurice Mathieu; he sowed dissentions amongst
-his generals, intrigued against all of them in turn, and when Eroles
-and Manso, who were the people’s favourites, raised any soldiers, he
-transferred the latter as soon as they were organized to Sarzfield’s
-division, at the same time calumniating that general to depress his
-influence. He quarrelled incessantly with captain Codrington, and
-had no desire to see an English force in Catalonia lest a general
-insurrection should take place, for he feared that the multitude
-once gathered and armed would drive him from the province and declare
-for the opponents of the cortez. And in this view the constitution
-itself, although emanating from the cortez, was long withheld from
-the Catalans, lest the newly declared popular rights should interfere
-with the arbitrary power of the chief.
-
-[Sidenote: July.]
-
-[Sidenote: See Book XVII. Chap. II.]
-
-Such was the state of the province when intelligence that the
-Anglo-Sicilian expedition had arrived at Mahon, excited the hopes
-of the Spaniards and the fears of the French. The coast then became
-the great object of interest to both, and the Catalans again opened
-a communication with the English fleet by Villa Nueva de Sitjes, and
-endeavoured to collect the grain of the Campo de Taragona. Decaen,
-coming to meet Suchet who had arrived at Reus with two thousand men,
-drove the Catalans to the hills again; yet the Lerida district was
-thus opened to the enterprises of Lacy, because it was at this period
-that Reille had detached general Paris from Zaragoza to the aid of
-Palombini; and that Severoli’s division was broken up to reinforce
-the garrisons of Lerida, Taragona, Barcelona, and Zaragoza. But the
-army of the Ebro being dissolved, Lacy resolved to march upon Lerida,
-where he had engaged certain Spaniards in the French service to
-explode the powder magazine when he should approach; and this odious
-scheme, which necessarily involved the destruction of hundreds of his
-own countrymen, was vainly opposed by Eroles and Sarzfield.
-
-[Sidenote: Sarzfield’s Vindication, MSS.]
-
-On the 12th of July, Eroles’ division, that general being absent,
-was incorporated with Sarzfield’s and other troops at Guisona,
-and the whole journeying day and night reached Tremp on the 13th.
-Lacy having thus turned Lerida, would have resumed the march at
-mid-day, intending to attack the next morning at dawn, but the men
-were without food, and exhausted by fatigue, and fifteen hundred
-had fallen behind. A council of war being then held, Sarzfield,
-who thought the plot wild, would have returned, observing that all
-communication with the sea was abandoned, and the harvests of the
-Camps de Taragona and Valls being left to be gathered by the enemy,
-the loss of the corn would seriously affect the whole principality.
-Displeased at the remonstrance, Lacy immediately sent him back to
-the plain of Urgel with some infantry and the cavalry, to keep the
-garrison of Balaguer in check; but in the night of the 16th when
-Sarzfield had reached the bridge of Alentorna on the Segre, fresh
-orders caused him to return to Limiana on the Noguera. Meanwhile
-Lacy himself had advanced by Agen towards Lerida, the explosion of
-the magazine took place, many houses were thrown down, two hundred
-inhabitants and one hundred and fifty soldiers were destroyed; two
-bastions fell, and the place was laid open.
-
-[Sidenote: Captain Codrington’s Papers, MSS.]
-
-Henriod the governor, although ignorant of the vicinity of the
-Spaniards, immediately manned the breaches, the garrison of Balaguer,
-hearing the explosion marched to his succour, and when the Catalan
-troops appeared, the citizens enraged by the destruction of their
-habitations aided the French; Lacy then fled back to Tremp, bearing
-the burthen of a crime which he had not feared to commit, but wanted
-courage to turn to his country’s advantage. To lessen the odium
-thus incurred, he insidiously attributed the failure to Sarzfield’s
-disobedience; and as that general, to punish the people of Barbastro
-for siding with the French and killing twenty of his men, had raised
-a heavy contribution of money and corn in the district, he became so
-hateful, that some time after, when he endeavoured to raise soldiers
-in those parts, the people threw boiling water at him from the
-windows as he passed.
-
-[Sidenote: Idem.]
-
-[Sidenote: Laffaille’s Campaigns in Catalonia.]
-
-Before this event Suchet had returned to Valencia, and Dacaen and
-Maurice Mathieu marched against colonel Green, who was entrenched in
-the hermitage of St. Dimas, one of the highest of the peaked rocks
-overhanging the convent of Montserrat. Manso immediately raised
-the Somatenes to aid Green, and as the latter had provisions the
-inaccessible strength of his post seemed to defy capture; yet he
-surrendered in twenty-four hours, and at a moment when the enemy,
-despairing of success, were going to relinquish the attack. He
-excused himself as being forced by his own people, but he signed the
-capitulation. Decaen then set fire to the convent of Montserrat and
-the flames seen for miles around was the signal that the warfare
-on that holy mountain was finished. After this the French general
-marched to Lerida to gather corn and Lacy again spread his troops in
-the mountains.
-
-[Sidenote: Codrington’s Papers, MSS.]
-
-During his absence Eroles had secretly been preparing a general
-insurrection to break out when the British army should arrive, and it
-was supposed that his object was to effect a change in the government
-of the province; for though Lacy himself again spoke of embodying
-the Somatenes if arms were given to him by sir Edward Pellew, there
-was really no scarcity of arms, the demand was a deceit to prevent
-the muskets from being given to the people, and there was no levy.
-Hence the discontent increased and a general desire for the arrival
-of the British troops became prevalent; the miserable people turned
-anxiously towards any quarter for aid, and this expression of
-conscious helplessness was given in evidence by the Spanish chiefs,
-and received as proof of enthusiasm by the English naval commanders,
-who were more sanguine of success than experience would warrant. All
-eyes were however directed towards the ocean, the French in fear, the
-Catalans in hope; and the British armament did appear off Palamos,
-but after three days, spread its sails again and steered for Alicant,
-leaving the principality stupified with grief and disappointment.
-
-This unexpected event was the natural result of previous errors
-on all sides, errors which invariably attend warlike proceedings
-when not directed by a superior genius, and even then not always to
-be avoided. It has been shewn how ministerial vacillation marred
-lord William Bentinck’s first intention of landing in person with
-ten or twelve thousand men on the Catalonian coast; and how after
-much delay general Maitland had sailed to Palma with a division of
-six thousand men, Calabrians, Sicilians and others, troops of no
-likelihood save that some three thousand British and Germans were
-amongst them. This force was afterwards joined by the transports
-from Portugal having engineers and artillery officers on board, and
-that honoured battering train which had shattered the gory walls
-of Badajos. Wellington had great hopes of this expedition; he had
-himself sketched the general plan of operations; and his own campaign
-had been conceived in the expectation, that lord William Bentinck, a
-general of high rank and reputation, with ten thousand good troops,
-aided with at least as many Spanish soldiers, disciplined under the
-two British officers Whittingham and Roche, would have early fallen
-on Catalonia to the destruction of Suchet’s plans. And when this
-his first hope was quashed, he still expected that a force would be
-disembarked of strength, sufficient, in conjunction with the Catalan
-army, to take Taragona.
-
-[Sidenote: August.]
-
-[Sidenote: Gen. Donkin’s papers, MSS.]
-
-Roche’s corps was most advanced in discipline, but the Spanish
-government delayed to place it under general Maitland, and hence
-it first sailed from the islands to Murcia, then returned without
-orders, again repaired to Murcia, and at the moment of general
-Maitland’s arrival off Palamos, was, under the command of Joseph
-O’Donel, involved in a terrible catastrophe already alluded to and
-hereafter to be particularly narrated. Whittingham’s levy remained,
-but when inspected by the quarter-master general Donkin it was
-found in a raw state, scarcely mustering four thousand effective
-men, amongst which were many French deserters from the island of
-Cabrera. The sumptuous clothing and equipments of Whittingham’s and
-Roche’s men, their pay regularly supplied from the British subsidy,
-and very much exceeding that of the other Spanish corps, excited
-envy and dislike; there was no public inspection, no check upon
-the expenditure, nor upon the delivery of the stores, and Roche’s
-proceedings on this last head, whether justly or unjustly I know not,
-were very generally and severely censured. Whittingham acknowledged
-that he could not trust his people near the enemy without the aid of
-British troops, and though the captain-general Coupigny desired their
-departure, his opinion was against a descent in Catalonia. Maitland
-hesitated, but sir Edward Pellew urged this descent so very strongly,
-that he finally assented and reached Palamos with nine thousand
-men of all nations on the 31st of July, yet in some confusion as to
-the transport service, which the staff officers attributed to the
-injudicious meddling of the naval chiefs.
-
-[Sidenote: Notes by general Maitland, MSS.]
-
-[Sidenote: General Donkin’s papers, MSS.]
-
-Maitland’s first care was to open a communication with the Spanish
-commanders. Eroles came on board at once and vehemently and
-unceasingly urged an immediate disembarkation, declaring that the
-fate of Catalonia and his own existence depended upon it; the other
-generals shewed less eagerness, and their accounts differed greatly
-with respect to the relative means of the Catalans and the French.
-Lacy estimated the enemy’s disposable troops at fifteen thousand, and
-his own at seven thousand infantry and three hundred cavalry; and
-even that number he said he could with difficulty feed or provide
-with ammunition. Sarzfield judged the French to be, exclusive of
-Suchet’s moveable column, eighteen thousand infantry and five
-hundred cavalry; he thought it rash to invest Taragona with a less
-force, and that a free and constant communication with the fleet
-was absolutely essential in any operation. Eroles rated the enemy
-at thirteen thousand infantry and five hundred cavalry, including
-Suchet’s column; but the reports of the deserters gave twenty-two
-thousand infantry, exclusive of Suchet’s column and of the garrisons
-and Miguelettes in the enemy’s service.
-
-No insurrection of the Somatenes had yet taken place, nor was there
-any appearance that such an event would happen, as the French were
-descried conducting convoys along the shore with small escorts,
-and concentrating their troops for battle without molestation. The
-engineers demanded from six to ten days to reduce Taragona after
-investment, and Decaen and Maurice Mathieu were then near Montserrat
-with seven or eight thousand good troops, which number could be
-doubled in a few days; the Catalans could not so soon unite and join
-Maitland’s force, and there was a general, although apparently,
-an unjust notion abroad, that Lacy was a Frenchman at heart. It
-was feared also, that the Toulon fleet might come out and burn the
-transports at their anchorage during the siege, and thus Wellington’s
-battering train and even the safety of the army would be involved in
-an enterprize promising little success. A full council of war was
-unanimous not to land, and the reluctance of the people to rise,
-attributed by captain Codrington to the machinations of traitors,
-was visible; Maitland also was farther swayed by the generous and
-just consideration, that as the Somatenes had not voluntarily taken
-arms, it would be cruel to excite them to such a step, when a few
-days might oblige him to abandon them to the vengeance of the enemy.
-Wherefore as Palamos appeared too strong for a sudden assault, the
-armament sailed towards Valencia with intent to attack that place,
-after a project, furnished by the quarter-master general Donkin and
-in unison with lord Wellington’s plan of operations; but Maitland,
-during the voyage, changed his mind and proceeded at once to Alicant.
-
-[Sidenote: Captain Codrington’s papers, MSS.]
-
-The Catalans were not more displeased than the British naval
-commanders at seeing the principality thus shaken off; yet the
-judgment of the latter seems to have been swayed partly from
-having given stronger hopes of assistance to the former than the
-circumstances would rigorously warrant; partly from that confidence,
-which inspired by continual success, is strength on their own
-element, but rashness on shore. Captain Codrington, from the great
-interest he took in the struggle, was peculiarly discontented; yet
-his own description of the state of Catalonia at the time, shows
-that his hopes rested more on some vague notions of the Somatenes’
-enthusiasm, than upon any facts which a general ought to calculate
-upon. Lord Wellington indeed said, that he could see no reason
-why the plan he had recommended, should not have been successful;
-an observation made, however, when he was somewhat excited by the
-prospect of having Suchet on his own hands, and probably under some
-erroneous information. He had been deceived about the strength of
-the forts at Salamanca, although close to them; and as he had only
-just established a sure channel of intelligence in Catalonia, it was
-probable that he was also deceived with respect to Taragona, which if
-not strong in regular works was well provided and commanded by a very
-bold active governor, and offered great resources in the facility of
-making interior retrenchments.
-
-The force of the Catalans lord Wellington knew principally from
-sir Edward Pellew, who had derived his information chiefly from
-Eroles, who very much exaggerated it, and lessened the enemy’s power
-in proportion. And general Maitland could scarcely be called a
-commander-in-chief, for lord William Bentinck forbade him to risk the
-loss of his division lest Sicily itself should thereby be endangered;
-and to avoid mischief from the winter season, he was instructed to
-quit the Spanish coast in the second week of September. Lord William
-and lord Wellington were therefore not agreed in the object to be
-attained. The first considered the diversion on the Spanish coast as
-secondary to the wants of Sicily, whereas Wellington looked only to
-the great interests at stake in the Peninsula, and thought Sicily in
-no danger until the French should reinforce their army in Calabria.
-He desired vigorous combined efforts of the military and naval
-forces, to give a new aspect to the war in Catalonia, and his plan
-was that Taragona should be attacked; if it fell the warfare he said
-would be once more established on a good base in Catalonia; if it was
-succoured by the concentration of the French troops, Valencia would
-necessarily be weak, and the armament could then proceed to attack
-that place, and if unsuccessful return to assail Taragona again.
-
-This was an excellent plan no doubt, but Napoleon never lost sight
-of that great principle of war, so concisely expressed by Sertorius
-when he told Pompey that a good general should look behind him rather
-than before. The emperor acting on the proverb that fortune favours
-the brave, often urged his lieutenants to dare desperately with a few
-men in the front, but he invariably covered their communications with
-heavy masses, and there is no instance of his plan of invasion being
-shaken by a flank or rear attack, except where his instructions were
-neglected. His armies made what are called points, in war, such as
-Massena’s invasion of Portugal, Moncey’s attack on Valencia, Dupont’s
-on Andalusia; but the general plan of operation was invariably
-supported by heavy masses protecting the communications. Had his
-instructions, sent from Dresden, been strictly obeyed, the walls of
-Lerida and Taragona would have been destroyed, and only the citadels
-of each occupied with small garrisons easily provisioned for a long
-time. The field army would thus have been increased by at least
-three thousand men, the moveable columns spared many harassing
-marches, and Catalonia would have offered little temptation for a
-descent.
-
-But notwithstanding this error of Suchet, Maitland’s troops were too
-few, and too ill-composed to venture the investment of Taragona. The
-imperial muster-rolls give more than eighty thousand men, including
-Reille’s divisions at Zaragosa, for the armies of Aragon and
-Catalonia, and twenty-seven thousand of the first and thirty-seven
-thousand of the second, were actually under arms with the eagles;
-wherefore to say that Decaen could have brought at once ten thousand
-men to the succour of Taragona, and, by weakening his garrisons, as
-many more in a very short time, is not to over-rate his power; and
-this without counting Paris’ brigade, three thousand strong, which
-belonged to Reille’s division and was disposable. Suchet had just
-before come to Reus with two thousand select men of all arms, and as
-O’Donel’s army had since been defeated near Alicant, he could have
-returned with a still greater force to oppose Maitland.
-
-Now the English fleet was descried by the French off Palamos on the
-evening of the 31st of July, although it did not anchor before the
-1st of August; Decaen and Maurice Mathieu with some eight thousand
-disposable men were then between Montserrat and Barcelona, that is
-to say, only two marches from Taragona; Lamarque with from four to
-five thousand, was between Palamos and Mataro, five marches from
-Taragona; Quesnel with a like number was in the Cerdaña, being about
-seven marches off; Suchet and Paris could have arrived in less
-than eight days, and from the garrisons, and minor posts, smaller
-succours might have been drawn; Tortoza alone could have furnished
-two thousand. But Lacy’s division was at Vich, Sarzfield’s at Villa
-Franca, Eroles’ divided between Montserrat and Urgel, Milan’s in
-the Grao D’Olot, and they required five days even to assemble; when
-united, they would not have exceeded seven thousand men, and with
-their disputing, captious generals, would have been unfit to act
-vigorously; nor could they have easily joined the allies without
-fighting a battle in which their defeat would have been certain.
-
-Sarzfield judged that ten days at least were necessary to reduce
-Taragona, and positively affirmed that the army must be entirely fed
-from the fleet, as the country could scarcely supply the Catalonian
-troops alone. Thus Maitland would have had to land his men, his
-battering train and stores, and to form his investment, in the face
-of Decaen’s power, or, following the rules of war, have defeated
-that general first. But Decaen’s troops numerically equal, without
-reckoning the garrison of Taragona two thousand strong, were in
-composition vastly superior to the allies, seeing that only three
-thousand British and German troops in Maitland’s army, were to be
-at all depended upon in battle; neither does it appear that the
-platforms, sand-bags, fascines and other materials, necessary for a
-siege, were at this period prepared and on board the vessels.
-
-It is true Maitland would, if he had been able to resist Decaen at
-first, which seems doubtful, have effected a great diversion, and
-Wellington’s object would have been gained if a re-embarkation had
-been secure; but the naval officers, having reference to the nature
-of the coast, declared that a safe re-embarkation could not be
-depended upon. The soundness of this opinion has indeed been disputed
-by many seamen, well acquainted with the coast, who maintain, that
-even in winter the Catalonian shore is remarkably safe and tranquil;
-and that Cape Salou, a place in other respects admirably adapted for
-a camp, affords a certain retreat, and facility of re-embarking on
-one or other of its sides in all weather. However, to Maitland the
-coast of Catalonia was represented as unsafe, and this view of the
-question is also supported by very able seamen likewise acquainted
-with that sea.
-
-
-OPERATIONS IN MURCIA.
-
-[Sidenote: July.]
-
-The Anglo-Sicilian armament arrived at Alicant at a critical moment;
-the Spanish cause was there going to ruin. Joseph O’Donel, brother
-to the regent, had with great difficulty organized a new Murcian
-army after Blake’s surrender at Valencia, and this army, based
-upon Alicant and Carthagena, was independent of a division under
-general Frere, which always hung about Baza, and Lorca, on the
-frontier of Grenada, and communicated through the Alpuxaras with the
-sea-coast. Both Suchet and Soult were paralyzed in some degree by
-the neighbourhood of these armies, which holding a central position
-were supported by fortresses, supplied by sea from Gibraltar to
-Cadiz, and had their existence guaranteed by Wellington’s march into
-Spain, by his victory of Salamanca, and by his general combinations.
-For the two French commanders were forced to watch his movements,
-and to support at the same time, the one a blockade of the Isla de
-Leon, the other the fortresses in Catalonia; hence they were in no
-condition to follow up the prolonged operations necessary to destroy
-these Murcian armies, which were moreover supported by the arrival of
-general Ross with British troops at Carthagena.
-
-[Sidenote: See Plan 6.]
-
-O’Donel had been joined by Roche in July, and Suchet, after detaching
-Maupoint’s brigade towards Madrid, departed himself with two thousand
-men for Catalonia, leaving general Harispe with not more than four
-thousand men beyond the Xucar. General Ross immediately advised
-O’Donel to attack him, and to distract his attention a large fleet,
-with troops on board, which had originally sailed from Cadiz to
-succour Ballesteros at Malaga, now appeared off the Valencian coast.
-At the same time Bassecour and Villa Campa, being free to act in
-consequence of Palombini’s and Maupoint’s departure for Madrid, came
-down from their haunts in the mountains of Albaracyn upon the right
-flank and rear of the French positions. Villa Campa penetrated to
-Liria, and Bassecour to Cofrentes on the Xucar; but ere this attack
-could take place, Suchet, with his usual celerity, returned from
-Reus. At first he detached men against Villa Campa, but when he saw
-the fleet, fearing it was the Sicilian armament, he recalled them
-again, and sent for Paris’ brigade from Zaragoza, to act by Teruel
-against Bassecour and Villa Campa. Then he concentrated his own
-forces at Valencia, but a storm drove the fleet off the coast, and
-meanwhile O’Donel’s operations brought on the
-
-
-FIRST BATTLE OF CASTALLA.
-
-[Sidenote: See Plan 7.]
-
-Harispe’s posts were established at Biar, Castalla, and Onil on the
-right; at Ibi and Alcoy on the left. This line was not more than one
-march from Alicant. Colonel Mesclop, with a regiment of infantry
-and some cuirassiers held Ibi, and was supported by Harispe himself
-with a reserve at Alcoy. General Delort, with another regiment of
-infantry, was at Castalla, having some cuirassiers at Onil on his
-left, and a regiment of dragoons with three companies of foot at
-Biar on his right. In this exposed situation the French awaited
-O’Donel, who directed his principal force, consisting of six thousand
-infantry, seven hundred cavalry, and eight guns, against Delort;
-meanwhile Roche with three thousand men was to move through the
-mountains of Xixona, so as to fall upon Ibi simultaneously with the
-attack at Castalla. O’Donel hoped thus to cut the French line, and
-during these operations, Bassecour, with two thousand men, was to
-come down from Cofrentes to Villena, on the right flank of Delort.
-
-[Sidenote: Suchet’s official correspondence, MSS.]
-
-[Sidenote: Suchet’s Memoirs.]
-
-[Sidenote: Roche’s correspondence, MSS.]
-
-[Sidenote: General Delort’s official report]
-
-Roche, who marched in the night of the 19th, remained during the 20th
-in the mountains, but the next night he threaded a difficult pass,
-eight miles long, reached Ibi at day-break on the 21st, and sent
-notice of his arrival to O’Donel; and when that general appeared in
-front of Delort, the latter abandoned Castalla, which was situated
-in the same valley as Ibi, and about five miles distant from it.
-But he only retired skirmishing to a strong ridge behind that town,
-which also extended behind Ibi; this secured his communication with
-Mesclop, of whom he demanded succour, and at the same time he called
-in his own cavalry and infantry from Onil and Biar. Mesclop, leaving
-some infantry, two guns, and his cuirassiers, to defend Ibi and a
-small fort on the hill behind it, marched at once towards Delort, and
-thus Roche, finding only a few men before him, got possession of the
-town after a sharp skirmish, yet he could not take the fort.
-
-[Sidenote: See Appendix, No. 15.]
-
-At first O’Donel who had advanced beyond Castalla, only skirmished
-with and cannonaded the French in his front, for he had detached the
-Spanish cavalry to operate by the plains of Villena, to turn the
-enemy’s right and communicate with Bassecour. While expecting the
-effects of this movement he was astonished to see the French dragoons
-come trotting through the pass of Biar, on his left flank; they were
-followed by some companies of infantry, and only separated from him
-by a stream over which was a narrow bridge without parapets, and at
-the same moment the cuirassiers appeared on the other side coming
-from Onil. The Spanish cavalry had made no effort to interrupt this
-march from Biar, nor to follow the French through the defile, nor any
-effort whatever. In this difficulty O’Donel turned two guns against
-the bridge and supported them with a battalion of infantry, but the
-French dragoons observing this battalion to be unsteady, braved the
-fire of the guns, and riding furiously over the bridge seized the
-battery, and then dashed against and broke the infantry. Delort’s
-line advanced at the same moment, the cuirassiers charged into the
-town of Castalla, and the whole Spanish army fled outright. Several
-hundred sought refuge in an old castle and there surrendered, and of
-the others three thousand were killed, wounded, or taken, and yet the
-victors had scarcely fifteen hundred men engaged, and did not lose
-two hundred. O’Donel attributed his defeat to the disobedience and
-inactivity of St. Estevan, who commanded his cavalry, but the great
-fault was the placing that cavalry beyond the defile of Biar instead
-of keeping it in hand for the battle.
-
-This part of the action being over, Mesclop, who had not taken
-any share in it, was reinforced and returned to succour Ibi, to
-which place also Harispe was now approaching from Alcoy; but Roche
-favoured by the strength of the passes escaped, and reached Alicant
-with little hurt, while the remains of O’Donel’s divisions, pursued
-by the cavalry on the road of Jumilla, fled to the city of Murcia.
-Bassecour who had advanced to Almanza was then driven back to his
-mountain-haunts, where Villa Campa rejoined him. It was at this
-moment that Maitland’s armament disembarked and the remnants of the
-Spanish force rallied. The king, then flying from Madrid, immediately
-changed the direction of his march from the Morena to Valencia, and
-one more proof was given that it was England and not Spain which
-resisted the French; for Alicant would have fallen, if not as an
-immediate consequence of this defeat, yet surely when the king’s army
-had joined Suchet.
-
-That general, who had heard of the battle of Salamanca, the
-evacuation of Madrid and the approach of Joseph, and now saw a
-fresh army springing up in his front, hastened to concentrate his
-disposable force in the positions of San Felippe de Xativa and
-Moxente which he entrenched, as well as the road to Almanza with
-a view to secure his junction with the king. At the same time he
-established a new bridge and bridge-head at Alberique in addition
-to that at Alcira on the Xucar; and having called up Paris from
-Teruel and Maupoint from Cuenca resolved to abide a battle, which the
-slowness and vacillation of his adversaries gave him full time to
-prepare for.
-
-[Sidenote: August.]
-
-Maitland arrived the 7th, and though his force was not all landed
-before the 11th, the French were still scattered on various points,
-and a vigorous commander would have found the means to drive them
-over the Xucar, and perhaps from Valencia itself. However the British
-general had scarcely set his foot on shore when the usual Spanish
-vexations overwhelmed him. Three principal roads led towards the
-enemy; one on the left, passed through Yecla and Fuente La Higuera,
-and by it the remnant of O’Donel’s army was coming up from Murcia;
-another passed through Elda, Sax, Villena, and Fuente de la Higuera,
-and the third through Xixona, Alcoy, and Albayda. Now O’Donel, whose
-existence as a general was redeemed by the appearance of Maitland,
-instantly demanded from the latter a pledge, that he would draw
-nothing either by purchase or requisition, save wine and straw, from
-any of these lines, nor from the country between them. The English
-general assented and instantly sunk under the difficulties thus
-created. For his intention was to have attacked Harispe at Alcoy and
-Ibi on the 13th or 14th, but he was only able to get one march from
-Alicant as late as the 16th, he could not attack before the 18th, and
-it was on that day, that Suchet concentrated his army at Xativa. The
-delay had been a necessary consequence of the agreement with O’Donel.
-
-Maitland was without any habitude of command, his commissariat was
-utterly inefficient, and his field-artillery had been so shamefully
-ill-prepared in Sicily that it was nearly useless. He had hired mules
-at a great expense for the transport of his guns, and of provisions,
-from Alicant, but the owners of the mules soon declared they could
-not fulfil their contract unless they were fed by the British, and
-this O’Donel’s restrictions as to the roads prevented. Many of the
-muleteers also, after receiving their money, deserted with both mules
-and provisions; and on the first day’s march a convoy, with six days’
-supply, was attacked by an armed banditti called a guerilla, and the
-convoy was plundered or dispersed and lost.
-
-Maitland suffering severely from illness, was disgusted at these
-things, and fearing for the safety of his troops, would have retired
-at once, and perhaps have re-embarked, if Suchet had not gone back to
-Xativa; then however, he advanced to Elda, while Roche entered Alcoy;
-yet both apparently without an object, for there was no intention
-of fighting, and the next day Roche retired to Xixona and Maitland
-retreated to Alicant. To cover this retreat general Donkin pushed
-forward, with a detachment of Spanish and English cavalry, through
-Sax, Ibi, and Alcoy, and giving out that an advanced guard of five
-thousand British was close behind him, coasted all the French line,
-captured a convoy at Olleria, and then returned through Alcoy. Suchet
-kept close himself, in the camp of Xativa, but sent Harispe to meet
-the king who was now near Almanza, and on the 25th the junction of
-the two armies was effected; at the same time Maupoint, escaping
-Villa Campa’s assault, arrived from Cuenca with the remnant of his
-brigade.
-
-When the king’s troops arrived, Suchet pushed his outposts again
-to Villena and Alcoy, but apparently occupied in providing for
-Joseph’s army and court he neglected to press the allies, which he
-might have done to their serious detriment. Meanwhile O’Donel who
-had drawn off Frere’s division from Lorca came up to Yecla with five
-or six thousand men, and Maitland reinforced with some detachments
-from Sicily, commenced fortifying a camp outside Alicant; but his
-health was quite broken, and he earnestly desired to resign, being
-filled with anxiety at the near approach of Soult. That marshal had
-abandoned Andalusia, and his manner of doing so shall be set forth in
-the next chapter; for it was a great event, leading to great results,
-and worthy of deep consideration by those who desire to know upon
-what the fate of kingdoms may depend.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-OPERATIONS IN ANDALUSIA.
-
-
-[Sidenote: 1812. August.]
-
-[Sidenote: Appendix, No. 3.]
-
-Suchet found resources in Valencia to support the king’s court and
-army, without augmenting the pressure on the inhabitants, and a
-counter-stroke could have been made against the allies, if the French
-commanders had been of one mind and had looked well to the state of
-affairs; but Joseph exasperated by the previous opposition of the
-generals, and troubled by the distresses of the numerous families
-attached to his court, was only intent upon recovering Madrid as
-soon as he could collect troops enough to give Wellington battle.
-He had demanded from the French minister of war, money, stores,
-and a reinforcement of forty thousand men, and he had imperatively
-commanded Soult to abandon Andalusia; that clear-sighted commander,
-could not however understand why the king, who had given him no
-accurate details of Marmont’s misfortunes, or of his own operations,
-should yet order him to abandon at once, all the results, and all
-the interests, springing from three years’ possession of the south
-of Spain. He thought it a great question not to be treated lightly,
-and as his vast capacity enabled him to embrace the whole field of
-operations, he concluded that rumour had exaggerated the catastrophe
-at Salamanca and that the abandoning of Andalusia would be the ruin
-of the French cause.
-
-[Sidenote: French correspondence taken at Vittoria, MSS.]
-
-“To march on Madrid,” he said, “would probably produce another
-pitched battle, which should be carefully avoided, seeing that the
-whole frame-work of the French invasion was disjointed, and no
-resource would remain after a defeat. On the other hand, Andalusia,
-which had hitherto been such a burthen to the invasion, now offered
-means to remedy the present disasters, and to sacrifice that province
-with all its resources, for the sake of regaining the capital of
-Spain, appeared a folly. It was purchasing a town at the price of a
-kingdom. Madrid was nothing in the emperor’s policy, though it might
-be something for a king of Spain; yet Philip the Vth had thrice
-lost it and preserved his throne. Why then should Joseph set such a
-value upon that city? The battle of the Arapiles was merely a grand
-duel which might be fought again with a different result; but to
-abandon Andalusia with all its stores and establishments; to raise
-the blockade of Cadiz; to sacrifice the guns, the equipments, the
-hospitals and the magazines, and thus render null the labours of
-three years, would be to make the battle of the Arapiles a prodigious
-historical event, the effect of which would be felt all over Europe
-and even in the new world. And how was this flight from Andalusia to
-be safely effected? The army of the south had been able to hold in
-check sixty thousand enemies disposed on a circuit round it, but the
-moment it commenced its retreat towards Toledo those sixty thousand
-men would unite to follow, and Wellington himself would be found on
-the Tagus in its front. On that line then the army of the south could
-not march, and a retreat through Murcia would be long and difficult.
-But why retreat at all? Where,” exclaimed this able warrior, “where
-is the harm though the allies should possess the centre of Spain?”
-
-“Your majesty,” he continued, “should collect the army of the centre,
-the army of Aragon, and if possible, the army of Portugal, and you
-should march upon Andalusia, even though to do so should involve the
-abandonment of Valencia. If the army of Portugal comes with you, one
-hundred and twenty thousand men will be close to Portugal; if it
-cannot or will not come, let it remain, because while Burgos defends
-itself, that army can keep on the right of the Ebro and the emperor
-will take measures for its succour. Let Wellington then occupy Spain
-from Burgos to the Morena, it shall be my care to provide magazines,
-stores, and places of arms in Andalusia; and the moment eighty
-thousand French are assembled in that province the theatre of war is
-changed! The English general must fall back to save Lisbon, the army
-of Portugal may follow him to the Tagus, the line of communication
-with France will be established by the eastern coast, the final
-result of the campaign turns in our favour, and a decisive battle may
-be delivered without fear at the gates of Lisbon. March then with
-the army of the centre upon the Despenas Peros, unite all our forces
-in Andalusia, and all will be well! Abandon that province and you
-lose Spain! you will retire behind the Ebro and famine will drive
-you thence before the emperor can, from the distant Russia, provide
-a remedy; his affairs even in that country will suffer by the blow,
-and America dismayed by our misfortunes will perhaps make peace with
-England.”
-
-[Sidenote: Appendix No. 4.]
-
-Neither the king’s genius, nor his passions, would permit him to
-understand the grandeur and vigour of this conception. To change even
-simple lines of operation suddenly, is at all times a nice affair,
-but thus to change the whole theatre of operations and regain the
-initial movements after a defeat, belongs only to master spirits in
-war. Now the emperor had recommended a concentration of force, and
-Joseph would not understand this save as applied to the recovery of
-Madrid; he was uneasy for the frontiers of France; as if Wellington
-could possibly have invaded that country while a great army menaced
-Lisbon; in fine he could see nothing but his lost capital on one
-side, and a disobedient lieutenant on the other, and peremptorily
-repeated his orders. Then Soult, knowing that his plan could only
-be effected by union and rapidity, and dreading the responsibility
-of further delay, took immediate steps to abandon Andalusia; but
-mortified by this blighting of his fruitful genius, and stung with
-anger at such a termination to all his political and military
-labours, his feelings over-mastered his judgment. Instead of tracing
-the king’s rigid counteraction of his scheme to the narrowness of
-the monarch’s military genius, he judged it part of a design to
-secure his own fortune at the expense of his brother, an action quite
-foreign to Joseph’s honest and passionate nature. Wherefore making
-known this opinion to six generals, who were sworn to secrecy, unless
-interrogated by the Emperor, he wrote to the French minister of war
-expressing his doubts of the king’s loyalty towards the emperor, and
-founding them on the following facts.
-
-1º. That the extent of Marmont’s defeat had been made known to him
-only by the reports of the enemy, and the king, after remaining for
-twenty-three days, without sending any detailed information of the
-operations in the north of Spain, although the armies were actively
-engaged, had peremptorily ordered him to abandon Andalusia, saying it
-was the only resource remaining for the French. To this opinion Soult
-said he could not subscribe, yet being unable absolutely to disobey
-the monarch, he was going to make a movement which must finally lead
-to the loss of all the French conquests in Spain, seeing that it
-would then be impossible to remain permanently on the Tagus, or even
-in the Castiles.
-
-2º. This operation ruinous in itself was insisted upon at a time,
-when the newspapers of Cadiz affirmed, that Joseph’s ambassador at
-the court of Petersburgh, had joined the Prussian army in the field;
-that Joseph himself had made secret overtures to the government in
-the Isla de Leon; that Bernadotte, his brother-in-law, had made
-a treaty with England and had demanded of the Cortez a guard of
-Spaniards, a fact confirmed by information obtained through an
-officer sent with a flag of truce to the English admiral; finally
-that Moreau and Blucher were at Stockholm, and the aide-de-camp of
-the former was in London.
-
-Reflecting upon all these circumstances he feared that the object
-of the king’s false movements, might be to force the French army
-over the Ebro, in the view of making an arrangement for Spain,
-separate from France; fears, said the duke of Dalmatia, which may
-be chimerical, but it is better in such a crisis to be too fearful
-than too confident. This letter was sent by sea, and the vessel
-having touched at Valencia at the moment of Joseph’s arrival there,
-the despatch was opened, and it was then, in the first burst of his
-anger, that the king despatched Desprez on that mission to Moscow,
-the result of which has been already related.
-
-[Sidenote: Appendix, No. 5.]
-
-Soult’s proceedings though most offensive to the king and founded
-in error, because Joseph’s letters, containing the information
-required, were intercepted, not withheld, were prompted by zeal
-for his master’s service and cannot be justly condemned, yet
-Joseph’s indignation was natural and becoming. But the admiration
-of reflecting men must ever be excited by the greatness of mind,
-and the calm sagacity, with which Napoleon treated this thorny
-affair. Neither the complaints of his brother, nor the hints of his
-minister of war (for the duke of Feltre, a man of mean capacity
-and of an intriguing disposition, countenanced Joseph’s expressed
-suspicions that the duke of Dalmatia designed to make himself king
-of Andalusia) could disturb the temper or judgment of the Emperor;
-and it was then, struck with the vigour of the plan for concentrating
-the army in Andalusia, he called Soult the only military head in
-Spain. Nor was Wellington inattentive of that general’s movements,
-he knew his talents, and could foresee and appreciate the importance
-of the project he had proposed. Anxiously he watched his reluctant
-motions, and while apparently enjoying his own triumph amidst the
-feasts and rejoicings of Madrid, his eye was fixed on Seville; the
-balls and bull-fights of the capital cloaked both the skill and the
-apprehensions of the consummate general.
-
-Before the allies had crossed the Guadarama, Hill had been directed
-to hold his army in hand, close to Drouet, and ready to move into the
-valley of the Tagus, if that general should hasten to the succour
-of the king. But when Joseph’s retreat upon Valencia was known,
-Hill received orders to fight Drouet, and even to follow him into
-Andalusia; at the same time general Cooke was directed to prepare an
-attack, even though it should be an open assault on the French lines
-before Cadiz, while Ballesteros operated on the flank from Gibraltar.
-By these means Wellington hoped to keep Soult from sending any
-succour to the king, and even to force him out of Andalusia without
-the necessity of marching there himself; yet if these measures
-failed, he was resolved to take twenty thousand men from Madrid and
-uniting with Hill drive the French from that province.
-
-Previous to the sending of these instructions, Laval and Villatte had
-pursued Ballesteros to Malaga, which place, after a skirmish at Coin,
-he entered, and was in such danger of capture, that the maritime
-expedition already noticed was detached from Cadiz, by sea, to carry
-him off. However the news of the battle of Salamanca having arrested
-the French movements, the Spanish general regained San Roque, and the
-fleet went on to Valencia. Meanwhile Soult, hoping the king would
-transfer the seat of war to Andalusia had caused Drouet to shew a
-bold front against Hill, extending from the Serena to Monasterio, and
-to send scouting parties towards Merida; and large magazines were
-formed at Cordoba, a central point, equally suited for an advance by
-Estremadura, a march to La Mancha, or a retreat by Grenada. Wherefore
-Hill, who had not then received his orders to advance, remained on
-the defensive; nor would Wellington stir from Madrid, although his
-presence was urgently called for on the Duero, until he was satisfied
-that the duke of Dalmatia meant to abandon Andalusia. The king, as
-we have seen, finally forced this measure upon the marshal; but the
-execution required very extensive arrangements, for the quarters were
-distant, the convoys immense, the enemies numerous, the line of march
-wild, and the journey long. And it was most important to present the
-imposing appearance of a great and regular military movement and not
-the disgraceful scene of a confused flight.
-
-The distant minor posts, in the Condado de Niebla and other places,
-were first called in, and then the lines before the Isla were
-abandoned; for Soult, in obedience to the king’s first order,
-designed to move upon La Mancha, and it was only by accident, and
-indirectly, that he heard of Joseph’s retreat to Valencia. At
-the same time he discovered that Drouet, who had received direct
-orders from the king, was going to Toledo, and it was not without
-difficulty, and only through the medium of his brother, who commanded
-Drouet’s cavalry, that he could prevent that destructive isolated
-movement. Murcia then became the line of retreat but every thing was
-hurried, because the works before the Isla were already broken up
-in the view of retreating towards La Mancha, and the troops were in
-march for Seville although the safe assembling of the army at Grenada
-required another arrangement.
-
-On the 25th of August a thousand guns, stores in proportion, and
-all the immense works of Chiclana, St. Maria, and the Trocadero,
-were destroyed. Thus the long blockade of the Isla de Leon was
-broken up at the moment when the bombardment of Cadiz had become
-very serious, when the opposition to English influence was taking a
-dangerous direction, when the French intrigues were nearly ripe,
-the cortez becoming alienated from the cause of Ferdinand and the
-church; finally when the executive government was weaker than ever,
-because the count of Abispal, the only active person in the regency,
-had resigned, disgusted that his brother had been superseded by Elio
-and censured in the cortez for the defeat at Castalla. This siege
-or rather defence of Cadiz, for it was never, strictly speaking,
-besieged, was a curious episode in the war. Whether the Spaniards
-would or would not have effectually defended it without the aid of
-British troops is a matter of speculation; but it is certain that
-notwithstanding Graham’s glorious action at Barrosa, Cadiz was always
-a heavy burthen upon Lord Wellington; the forces, there employed,
-would have done better service under his immediate command, and many
-severe financial difficulties to say nothing of political crosses
-would have been spared.
-
-In the night of the 26th Soult quitting Seville, commenced his march
-by Ossuna and Antequera, towards Grenada; but now Wellington’s
-orders had set all the allied troops of Andalusia and Estremadura in
-motion. Hill advanced against Drouet; Ballesteros moved by the Ronda
-mountains to hang on the retiring enemy’s flanks; the expedition
-sent by sea to succour him, returned from Valencia; colonel Skerrit
-and Cruz Murgeon disembarked with four thousand English and Spanish
-troops, at Huelva, and marching upon St. Lucar Mayor, drove the
-enemy from thence, on the 24th. The 27th they fell upon the French
-rear-guard at Seville, and the suburb of Triana, the bridge, and the
-streets beyond, were soon carried, by the English guards and Downie’s
-legion. Two hundred prisoners, several guns and many stores were
-taken, but Downie himself was wounded and made prisoner, and treated
-very harshly, because the populace rising in aid of the allies had
-mutilated the French soldiers who fell into their hands. Scarcely
-was Seville taken, when seven thousand French infantry came up from
-Chiclana, but thinking all Hill’s troops were before them, instead of
-attacking Skerrit hastily followed their own army, leaving the allies
-masters of the city. But this attack though successful, was isolated
-and contrary to lord Wellington’s desire. A direct and vigorous
-assault upon the lines of Chiclana by the whole of the Anglo-Spanish
-garrison was his plan, and such an assault, when the French were
-abandoning their works there, would have been a far heavier blow to
-Soult.
-
-[Sidenote: September]
-
-That commander was now too strong to be meddled with. He issued eight
-days’ bread to his army, marched very leisurely, picked up on his
-route the garrisons and troops who came into him at Antequera, from
-the Ronda and from the coast; and at Grenada he halted eleven days
-to give Drouet time to join him, for the latter quitting Estremadura
-the 25th by the Cordova passes, was marching by Jaen to Huescar.
-Ballesteros had harassed the march, but the French general had,
-with an insignificant loss, united seventy-two guns and forty-five
-thousand soldiers under arms, of which six thousand were cavalry.
-He was however still in the midst of enemies. On his left flank
-was Hill; on his right flank was Ballesteros; Wellington himself
-might come down by the Despenas Perros; the Murcians were in his
-front, Skerrit and Cruz Murgeon behind him, and he was clogged with
-enormous convoys; his sick and maimed men alone amounted to nearly
-nine thousand; his Spanish soldiers were deserting daily, and it
-was necessary to provide for several hundreds of Spanish families
-who were attached to the French interests. To march upon the city
-of Murcia was the direct, and the best route for Valencia; but the
-yellow fever raged there and at Carthagena; moreover, Don S. Bracco,
-the English consul at Murcia, a resolute man, declared his resolution
-to inundate the country if the French advanced. Wherefore again
-issuing eight days’ bread Soult marched by the mountain ways leading
-from Huescar to Cehejin, and Calasparra, and then moving by Hellin,
-gained Almanza on the great road to Madrid, his flank being covered
-by a detachment from Suchet’s army which skirmished with Maitland’s
-advanced posts at San Vicente close to Alicant. At Hellin he met the
-advanced guard of the army of Aragon, and on the 3rd of October the
-military junction of all the French forces was effected.
-
-[Sidenote: October.]
-
-The task was thus completed, and in a manner worthy of so great
-a commander. For it must be recollected that besides the drawing
-together of the different divisions, the march itself was three
-hundred miles, great part through mountain roads, and the population
-was every where hostile. General Hill had menaced him with
-twenty-five thousand men, including Morillo and Penne Villemur’s
-forces; Ballesteros, reinforced from Cadiz, and by the deserters,
-had nearly twenty thousand; there were fourteen thousand soldiers
-still in the Isla; Skerrit and Cruz Murgeon had four thousand, and
-the Partidas were in all parts numerous: yet from the midst of these
-multitudes the duke of Dalmatia carried off his army his convoys and
-his sick without any disaster. In this manner Andalusia, which had
-once been saved by the indirect influence of a single march, made
-by Moore from Salamanca, was, such is the complexity of war, after
-three years’ subjection, recovered by the indirect effect of a single
-battle delivered by Wellington close to the same city.
-
-During these transactions Maitland’s proceedings had been anxiously
-watched by Wellington; for though the recovery of Andalusia was, both
-politically and militarily, a great gain, the result, he saw, must
-necessarily be hurtful to the ultimate success of his campaign by
-bringing together such powerful forces. He still thought that regular
-operations would not so effectually occupy Suchet, as a littoral
-warfare, yet he was contented that Maitland should try his own plan,
-and he advised that general to march by the coast, and have constant
-communication with the fleet, referring to his own campaign against
-Junot in 1808 as an example to be followed. But, the coast roads were
-difficult, the access for the fleet uncertain; and though the same
-obstacles, and the latter perhaps in a greater degree, had occurred
-in Portugal, the different constitution of the armies, and still
-more of the generals, was an insuperable bar to a like proceeding in
-Valencia.
-
-General Maitland only desired to quit his command, and the more so
-that the time appointed by lord William Bentinck for the return of
-the troops to Sicily was approaching. The moment was critical, but
-Wellington without hesitation forbade their departure, and even
-asked the ministers to place them under his own command. Meanwhile
-with the utmost gentleness and delicacy, he showed to Maitland,
-who was a man of high honour, courage, and feeling, although
-inexperienced in command, and now heavily oppressed with illness,
-that his situation was by no means dangerous;—that the entrenched
-camp of Alicant might be safely defended,—that he was comparatively
-better off than Wellington himself had been when in the lines of
-Torres Vedras, and that it was even desirable that the enemy should
-attack him on such strong ground, because the Spaniards when joined
-with English soldiers in a secure position would certainly fight. He
-also desired that Carthagena should be well looked to by general Ross
-lest Soult should turn aside to surprise it. Then taking advantage
-of Elio’s fear of Soult he drew him with the army that had been
-O’Donel’s towards Madrid and so got some controul over his operations.
-
-If the English general had been well furnished with money at this
-time, and if the yellow fever had not raged in Murcia, it is probable
-he would have followed Joseph rapidly, and rallying all the scattered
-Spanish forces, and the Sicilian armament on his own army, have
-endeavoured to crush the king and Suchet before Soult could arrive;
-or he might have formed a junction with Hill at Despenas Perros and
-so have fallen on Soult himself, during his march, although such an
-operation would have endangered his line of communication on the
-Duero. But these obstacles induced him to avoid operations in the
-south, which would have involved him in new and immense combinations,
-until he had secured his northern line of operations by the capture
-of Burgos, meaning then with his whole army united to attack the
-enemy in the south.
-
-However he could not stir from Madrid until he was certain that
-Soult would relinquish Andalusia, and this was not made clear before
-Cordoba was abandoned. Then Hill was ordered to advance on Zalamea de
-la Serena, where he commanded equally, the passes leading to Cordoba
-in front, those leading to La Mancha on the left, and those leading
-by Truxillo to the Tagus in the rear; so that he could at pleasure
-either join Wellington, follow Drouet towards Grenada, or interpose
-between Soult and Madrid, if he should turn towards the Despenas
-Perros: meanwhile Skerrit’s troops were marching to join him, and the
-rest of the Anglo-Portuguese garrison of Cadiz sailed to Lisbon, with
-intent to join Wellington by the regular line of operations.
-
-[Sidenote: August.]
-
-During these transactions the affairs in Old Castile had become
-greatly deranged, for where Wellington was not, the French warfare
-generally assumed a severe and menacing aspect. Castaños had,
-in person, conducted the siege of Astorga, after the battle of
-Salamanca, yet with so little vigour, that it appeared rather a
-blockade than a siege. The forts at Toro and Zamora had also been
-invested, the first by the Partidas, the second by Silveira’s
-militia, who with great spirit had passed their own frontier,
-although well aware that they could not be legally compelled to do
-so. Thus all the French garrisons abandoned by Clauzel’s retreat were
-endangered, and though the slow progress of the Spaniards before
-Astorga was infinitely disgraceful to their military prowess, final
-success seemed certain.
-
-General H. Clinton was at Cuellar, Santo Cildes occupied Valladolid,
-Anson’s cavalry was in the valley of the Esqueva, and the front
-looked fair enough. But in the rear the line of communication, as far
-as the frontier of Portugal, was in great disorder; the discipline
-of the army was deteriorating rapidly, and excesses were committed
-on all the routes. A detachment of Portuguese, not more than a
-thousand strong, either instigated by want or by their hatred of the
-Spaniards, had perpetrated such enormities on their march from Pinhel
-to Salamanca, that as an example, five were executed and many others
-severely punished by stripes, yet even this did not check the growing
-evil, the origin of which may be partly traced to the license at
-the storming of Ciudad Rodrigo and Badajos, but principally to the
-sufferings of the soldiers.
-
-All the hospitals in the rear were crowded, and Salamanca itself,
-in which there were six thousand sick and wounded, besides French
-prisoners, was the very abode of misery. The soldiers endured much
-during the first two or three days after the battle, and the inferior
-officers’ sufferings were still more heavy and protracted. They had
-no money, and many sold their horses and other property to sustain
-life; some actually died of want, and though Wellington, hearing of
-this, gave orders that they should be supplied from the purveyor’s
-stores in the same manner as the soldiers, the relief came late.
-It is a common, yet erroneous notion, that the English system of
-hospitals in the Peninsula was admirable, and that the French
-hospitals were neglected. Strenuous and unceasing exertions were
-made by lord Wellington and the chiefs of the medical staff to form
-good hospital establishments, but the want of money, and still more
-the want of previous institutions, foiled their utmost efforts. Now
-there was no point of warfare which more engaged Napoleon’s attention
-than the care of his sick and wounded; and he being monarch as well
-as general, furnished his hospitals with all things requisite, even
-with luxuries. Under his fostering care also, baron Larrey justly
-celebrated, were it for this alone, organized the establishment
-called the hospital “_Ambulance_;” that is to say, waggons of a
-peculiar construction, well horsed, served by men trained and
-incorporated as soldiers, and subject to a strict discipline.
-Rewarded for their courage and devotion like other soldiers they
-were always at hand, and whether in action or on a march, ready to
-pick up, to salve, and to carry off wounded men; and the astonishing
-rapidity with which the fallen French soldiers disappeared from a
-field of battle attested the excellence of the institution.
-
-But in the British army, the carrying off the wounded, depended,
-partly upon the casual assistance of a weak waggon train, very
-badly disciplined, furnishing only three waggons to a division, and
-not originally appropriated to that service; partly upon the spare
-commissariat animals, but principally upon the resources of the
-country, whether of bullock-carts, mules, or donkeys, and hence the
-most doleful scenes after a battle, or when an hospital was to be
-evacuated. The increasing numbers of the sick and wounded as the
-war enlarged, also pressed on the limited number of regular medical
-officers, and Wellington complained, that when he demanded more, the
-military medical board in London neglected his demands, and thwarted
-his arrangements. Shoals of hospital mates and students were indeed
-sent out, and they arrived for the most part ignorant alike of war,
-and their own profession; while a heterogeneous mass of purveyors
-and their subordinates, acting without any military organization or
-effectual superintendence, continually bade defiance to the exertions
-of those medical officers, and they were many, whose experience,
-zeal, and talents would, with a good institution to work upon, have
-rendered this branch of the service most distinguished. Nay, many
-even of the well-educated surgeons sent out were for some time of
-little use, for superior professional skill is of little value in
-comparison of experience in military arrangement; where one soldier
-dies from the want of a delicate operation, hundreds perish from
-the absence of military arrangement. War tries the strength of the
-military frame-work; it is in peace that the frame-work itself must
-be formed, otherwise barbarians would be the leading soldiers of the
-world; a perfect army can only be made by civil institutions, and
-those, rightly considered, would tend to confine the horrors of war
-to the field of battle, which would be the next best thing to the
-perfection of civilization that would prevent war altogether.
-
-[Sidenote: Clauzel’s Correspondence, MSS.]
-
-[Sidenote: Foy’s correspondence, MSS.]
-
-Such was the state of affairs on the allies’ line of communication,
-when, on the 14th of August, Clauzel suddenly came down the
-Pisuerga. Anson’s cavalry immediately recrossed the Duero at Tudela,
-Santo Cildes, following Wellington’s instructions, fell back to
-Torrelobaton, and on the 18th the French assembled at Valladolid to
-the number of twenty thousand infantry, two thousand cavalry, and
-fifty guns well provided with ammunition. Five thousand stragglers,
-who in the confusion of defeat had fled to Burgos and Vittoria, were
-also collected and in march to join. Clauzel’s design was to be at
-hand when Joseph, reinforced from the south, should drive Wellington
-from Madrid, for he thought the latter must then retire by Avila,
-and the Valle de Ambles, and he purposed to gain the mountains of
-Avila himself, and harass the English general’s flank. Meanwhile Foy
-proposed with two divisions of infantry and sixteen hundred cavalry,
-to succour the garrisons of Toro, Zamora, and Astorga, and Clauzel
-consented, though he appears to have been somewhat fearful of this
-dangerous experiment, and did not believe Astorga was so near its
-fall.
-
-[Sidenote: Foy’s correspondence, MSS.]
-
-[Sidenote: Sir H. Douglas’s papers, MSS.]
-
-Foy wished to march on the 15th by Placentia, yet he was not
-dispatched until the evening of the 17th, and then by the line of
-Toro, the garrison of which place he carried off in passing. The
-19th he sabred some of the Spanish rear-guard at Castro Gonzalo,
-on the Esla; the 20th, at three o’clock in the evening, he reached
-La Baneza, but was mortified to learn, that Castaños, by an artful
-negociation had, the day before, persuaded the garrison of Astorga,
-twelve hundred good troops, to surrender, although there was no
-breach, and the siege was actually being raised at the time. The
-Gallicians being safe in their mountains, the French general
-turned to the left, and marched upon Carvajales, hoping to enclose
-Silveira’s militia, between the Duero and the Esla, and sweep them
-off in his course; then relieving Zamora, he purposed to penetrate
-to Salamanca, and seize the trophies of the Arapiles. And this
-would infallibly have happened, but for the judicious activity of
-sir Howard Douglas, who, divining Foy’s object, sent Silveira with
-timeful notice into Portugal; yet so critical was the movement
-that Foy’s cavalry skirmished with the Portuguese rear-guard near
-Constantin at day-break on the 24th. The 25th the French entered
-Zamora, but Wellington was now in movement upon Arevalo, and Clauzel
-recalled Foy at the moment when his infantry were actually in march
-upon Salamanca to seize the trophies, and his cavalry was moving by
-Ledesma, to break up the line of communication with Ciudad Rodrigo.
-
-That Foy was thus able to disturb the line of communication was
-certainly Clinton’s error. Wellington left eighteen thousand men,
-exclusive of the troops besieging Astorga, to protect his flank and
-rear, and he had a right to think it enough, because he momentarily
-expected Astorga to fall, and the French army, a beaten one, was then
-in full retreat. It is true none of the French garrisons yielded
-before Clauzel returned, but Clinton alone had eight thousand good
-troops, and might with the aid of Santo Cildes and the partidas, have
-baffled the French; he might even have menaced Valladolid, after
-Foy’s departure, which would have certainly brought that general
-back. And if he dared not venture so much, he should, following
-his instructions, have regulated his movements along the left of
-the Duero, so as to be always in a condition to protect Salamanca;
-that is, he should have gone to Olmedo when Clauzel first occupied
-Valladolid, but he retired to Arevalo, which enabled Foy to advance.
-
-The mere escape of the garrisons, from Toro and Zamora, was by the
-English general thought no misfortune. It would have cost him a long
-march and two sieges in the hottest season to have reduced them,
-which, in the actual state of affairs, was more than they were
-worth; yet, to use his own words, “_it was not very encouraging to
-find, that the best Spanish army was unable to stand before the
-remains of Marmont’s beaten troops; that in more than two months,
-it had been unable even to breach Astorga, and that all important
-operations must still be performed by the British troops_.” The
-Spaniards, now in the fifth year of the war, were still in the state
-described by sir John Moore, “_without an army, without a government,
-without a general!_”
-
-While these events were passing in Castile Popham’s armament remained
-on the Biscay coast, and the partidas thus encouraged became so
-active, that with exception of Santona and Gueteria, all the
-littoral posts were abandoned by Caffarelli; Porlier, Renovalles,
-and Mendizabel, the nominal commanders of all the bands, immediately
-took possession of Castro, Santander, and even of Bilbao, and though
-general Rouget came from Vittoria to recover the last, he was after
-some sharp fighting obliged to retire again to Durango. Meanwhile
-Reille, deluded by a rumour that Wellington was marching through the
-centre of Spain upon Zaragoza, abandoned several important outposts,
-Aragon, hitherto so tranquil, became unquiet, and all the northern
-provinces were ripe for insurrection.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-
-[Sidenote: 1812. August.]
-
-While the various military combinations, described in the foregoing
-chapter, were thickening, Wellington, as we have seen, remained in
-Madrid, apparently inactive, but really watching the fitting moment
-to push his operations, and consolidate his success in the north,
-preparatory to the execution of his designs in the south. The result
-was involved in a mixed question, of time, and of combinations
-dependant upon his central position, and upon the activity of the
-partidas in cutting off all correspondence between the French armies.
-His mode of paralyzing Suchet’s and Caffarelli’s armies, by the
-Sicilian armament in the east and Popham’s armament in the north, has
-been already described, but his internal combinations, to oppose the
-united forces of Soult and the king, were still more important and
-extensive.
-
-When it was certain that Soult had actually abandoned Andalusia,
-Hill was directed upon Toledo, by the bridge of Almaraz, and colonel
-Sturgeon’s genius had rendered that stupendous ruin, although more
-lofty than Alcantara, passable for artillery. Elio also was induced
-to bring the army of Murcia to the same quarter, and Ballesteros was
-desired to take post on the mountain of Alcaraz, and look to the
-fortress of Chinchilla, which, situated at the confines of Murcia
-and La Mancha, and perched on a rugged isolated hill in a vast
-plain, was peculiarly strong both from construction and site, and it
-was the knot of all the great lines of communication. The partizan
-corps of Bassecour, Villa Campa, and the Empecinado, were desired
-to enter La Mancha, and thus, as Hill could bring up above twenty
-thousand men, and as the third, fourth, and light divisions, two
-brigades of cavalry, and Carlos D’España’s troops, were to remain
-near Madrid, whilst the rest of the army marched into Old Castile,
-above sixty thousand men, thirty thousand being excellent troops and
-well commanded, would have been assembled, with the fortified post of
-Chinchilla in front, before Soult could unite with the king.
-
-The British troops at Carthagena were directed, when Soult should
-have passed that city, to leave only small garrisons in the forts
-there, and join the army at Alicant, which with the reinforcements
-from Sicily, would then be sixteen thousand strong, seven thousand
-being British troops. While this force was at Alicant Wellington
-judged that the French could not bring more than fifty thousand
-against Madrid without risking the loss of Valencia itself. Not that
-he expected the heterogeneous mass he had collected could resist on
-a fair field the veteran and powerfully constituted army which would
-finally be opposed to them; but he calculated that ere the French
-generals could act seriously, the rivers would be full, and Hill
-could then hold his ground, sufficiently long to enable the army to
-come back from Burgos. Indeed he had little doubt of reducing that
-place, and being again on the Tagus in time to take the initial
-movements himself.
-
-Meanwhile the allies had several lines of operation.
-
-Ballasteros from the mountains of Alcaraz, could harass the flanks of
-the advancing French, and when they passed, could unite with Maitland
-to overpower Suchet.
-
-Hill could retire if pressed, by Madrid, or by Toledo, and could
-either gain the passes of the Guadarama or the valley of the Tagus.
-
-Elio, Villa Campa, Bassecour, and the Empecinado could act by Cuenca
-and Requeña against Suchet, or against Madrid if the French followed
-Hill obstinately; or they could join Ballesteros. And besides all
-these forces, there were ten or twelve thousand new Spanish levies in
-the Isla waiting for clothing and arms which under the recent treaty
-were to come from England.
-
-[Sidenote: May.]
-
-To lord Wellington, the English ministers had nominally confided the
-distribution of these succours, but following their usual vicious
-manner of doing business, they also gave Mr. Stuart a controul over
-it, without Wellington’s knowledge, and hence the stores, expected
-by the latter at Lisbon or Cadiz, were by Stuart unwittingly
-directed to Coruña, with which place the English general had no
-secure communication; moreover there were very few Spanish levies
-there, and no confidential person to superintend the delivery of
-them. Other political crosses, which shall be noticed in due time,
-he also met with, but it will suffice here to say that the want of
-money was an evil now become intolerable. The army was many months in
-arrears; those officers who went to the rear sick suffered the most
-cruel privations, and those who remained in Madrid, tempted by the
-pleasures of the capital, obtained some dollars at an exorbitant
-premium from a money-broker, and it was grievously suspected that his
-means resulted from the nefarious proceedings of an under commissary;
-but the soldiers, equally tempted, having no such resource, plundered
-the stores of the Retiro. In fine, discipline became relaxed
-throughout the army, and the troops kept in the field were gloomy,
-envying those who remained at Madrid.
-
-[Sidenote: September]
-
-That city exhibited a sad mixture of luxury and desolation. When it
-was first entered a violent, cruel, and unjust persecution of those
-who were called “_Afrancesados_,” was commenced, and continued, until
-the English general interfered, and as an example made no distinction
-in his invitations to the palace feasts. Truly it was not necessary
-to increase the sufferings of the miserable people, for though the
-markets were full of provisions, there was no money wherewith to
-buy; and though the houses were full of rich furniture, there were
-neither purchasers nor lenders; even noble families secretly sought
-charity that they might live. At night the groans, and stifled cries
-of famishing people were heard, and every morning emaciated dead
-bodies, cast into the streets, shewed why those cries had ceased.
-The calm resignation with which these terrible sufferings were borne
-was a distinctive mark of the national character; not many begged,
-none complained, there was no violence, no reproaches, very few
-thefts; the allies lost a few animals, nothing more, and these were
-generally thought to be taken by robbers from the country. But with
-this patient endurance of calamity the “_Madrileños_” discovered a
-deep and unaffected gratitude for kindness received at the hands of
-the British officers who contributed, not much for they had it not,
-but, enough of money to form soup charities by which hundreds were
-succoured. It was the third division, and I believe the forty-fifth
-regiment which set the example, and surely this is not the least of
-the many honourable distinctions those brave men have earned.
-
-Wellington desirous of obtaining shelter from the extreme heat for
-his troops, had early sent four divisions and the cavalry, to the
-Escurial and St. Ildefonso, from whence they could join Hill by the
-valley of the Tagus, or Clinton by Arevalo; but when he knew that the
-king’s retreat upon Valencia was decided, that Soult had abandoned
-Cordoba, and that Clinton was falling back before Clauzel, he ordered
-the first, fifth, and seventh divisions, Pack’s and Bradford’s
-Portuguese brigades, Ponsonby’s light horsemen, and the heavy German
-cavalry, to move rapidly upon Arevalo, and on the 1st of September
-quitted Madrid himself to take the command. Yet his army had been so
-diminished by sickness that only twenty-one thousand men, including
-three thousand cavalry, were assembled in that town, and he had great
-difficulty to feed the Portuguese soldiers, who were also very ill
-equipped.
-
-The regency instead of transmitting money and stores to supply
-their troops, endeavoured to throw off the burthen entirely by an
-ingenious device; for having always had a running account with the
-Spanish government, they now made a treaty, by which the Spaniards
-were to feed the Portuguese troops, and check off the expense on
-the national account which was then in favour of the Portuguese;
-that is, the soldiers were to starve under the sanction of this
-treaty, because the Spaniards could not feed their own men, and
-would not, if they could, have fed the Portuguese. Neither could
-the latter take provisions from the country, because Wellington
-demanded the resources of the valleys of the Duero and Pisuerga for
-the English soldiers, as a set-off against the money advanced by
-sir Henry Wellesley to the Spanish regency at Cadiz. Wherefore to
-force the Portuguese regency from this shameful expedient he stopped
-the payments of their subsidy from the chest of aids. Then the old
-discontents and disputes revived and acquired new force; the regency
-became more intractable than ever, and the whole military system of
-Portugal was like to fall to pieces.
-
-On the 4th the allies quitted Arevalo, the 6th they passed the Duero
-by the ford above Puente de Duero, the 7th they entered Valladolid,
-and meanwhile the Gallicians, who had returned to the Esla, when Foy
-retreated, were ordered to join the Anglo-Portuguese army. Clauzel
-abandoned Valladolid in the night of the 6th, and though closely
-followed by Ponsonby’s cavalry, crossed the Pisuerga and destroyed
-the bridge of Berecal on that river. The 8th the allies halted, for
-rest, and to await the arrival of Castaños; but seldom during this
-war did a Spanish general deviate into activity; and Wellington
-observed that in his whole intercourse with that people, from the
-beginning of the revolution to that moment, he had not met with an
-able Spaniard, while amongst the Portuguese he had found several. The
-Gallicians came not, and the French retreated slowly up the beautiful
-Pisuerga and Arlanzan valleys, which, in denial of the stories
-about French devastation, were carefully cultivated and filled to
-repletion with corn, wine, and oil.
-
-Nor were they deficient in military strength. Off the high road, on
-both sides, ditches and rivulets impeded the troops, while cross
-ridges continually furnished strong parallel positions flanked by
-the lofty hills on either side. In these valleys Clauzel baffled his
-great adversary in the most surprising manner. Each day he offered
-battle, but on ground which Wellington was unwilling to assail in
-front, partly because he momentarily expected the Gallicians up, but
-chiefly because of the declining state of his own army from sickness,
-which, combined with the hope of ulterior operations in the south,
-made him unwilling to lose men. By flank movements he dislodged the
-enemy, yet each day darkness fell ere they were completed, and the
-morning’s sun always saw Clauzel again in position. At Cigales and
-Dueñas, in the Pisuerga valley; at Magoz, Torquemada, Cordobilla,
-Revilla, Vallejera, and Pampliega in the valley of the Arlanzan, the
-French general thus offered battle, and finally covered Burgos on the
-16th, by taking the strong position of Cellada del Camino.
-
-But eleven thousand Spanish infantry, three hundred cavalry, and
-eight guns, had now joined the allies, and Wellington would have
-attacked frankly on the 17th, had not Clauzel, alike wary and
-skilful, observed the increased numbers and retired in the night
-to Frandovinez; his rear-guard was however next day pushed sharply
-back to the heights of Burgos, and in the following night he
-passed through that town leaving behind him large stores of grain.
-Caffarelli who had come down to place the castle of Burgos in a state
-of defence, now joined him, and the two generals retreated upon
-Briviesca, where they were immediately reinforced by that reserve
-which, with such an extraordinary foresight, the emperor had directed
-to be assembled and exercised on the Pyrennees, in anticipation of
-Marmont’s disaster. The allies entered Burgos amidst great confusion,
-for the garrison of the castle had set fire to some houses impeding
-the defence of the fortress, the conflagration spread widely, and
-the Partidas who were already gathered like wolves round a carcass,
-entered the town for mischief. Mr. Sydenham, an eye-witness, and not
-unused to scenes of war, thus describes their proceedings, “What with
-the flames and the plundering of the Guerillas, who are as bad as
-Tartars and Cossacks of the Kischack or Zagatay hordes, I was afraid
-Burgos would be entirely destroyed, but order was at length restored
-by the manful exertions of Don Miguel Alava.”
-
-The series of beautiful movements executed by Clauzel, merit every
-praise, but it may be questioned if the English general’s marches
-were in the true direction, or made in good time; for though
-Clinton’s retreat upon Arevalo influenced, it did not absolutely
-dictate the line of operations. Wellington had expected Clauzel’s
-advance to Valladolid; it was therefore no surprise, and on the
-26th of August, Foy was still at Zamora. At that period the English
-general might have had his army, Clinton’s troops excepted, at
-Segovia; and as the distance from thence to Valladolid, is rather
-less than from Valladolid to Zamora, a rapid march upon the former,
-Clinton advancing at the same time, might have separated Clauzel from
-Foy. Again, Wellington might have marched upon Burgos by Aranda de
-Duero and Lerma, that road being as short as by Valladolid; he might
-also have brought forward the third, or the light division, by the
-Somosierra, from Madrid, and directed Clinton and the Spaniards to
-close upon the French rear. He would thus have turned the valleys
-of the Pisuerga and the Arlanzan, and could from Aranda, or Lerma,
-have fallen upon Clauzel while in march. That general having Clinton
-and the Gallicians on his rear, and Wellington, reinforced by the
-divisions from Madrid, on his front or flank, would then have had to
-fight a decisive battle under every disadvantage. In fine the object
-was to crush Clauzel, and this should have been effected though
-Madrid had been entirely abandoned to secure success. It is however
-probable that want of money and means of transport decided the line
-of operations, for the route by the Somosierra was savage and barren,
-and the feeding of the troops even by Valladolid was from hand to
-mouth, or painfully supported by convoys from Portugal.
-
-
-SIEGE OF THE CASTLE OF BURGOS.
-
-[Sidenote: Colonel Jones’s Sieges, 2nd edit.]
-
-Caffarelli had placed eighteen hundred infantry, besides
-artillery-men, in this place, and general Dubreton the governor, was
-of such courage and skill that he surpassed even the hopes of his
-sanguine and warlike countryman. The castle and its works enclosed
-a rugged hill, between which and the river, the city of Burgos was
-situated. An old wall with a new parapet and flanks constructed
-by the French offered the first line of defence; the second line,
-which was within the other, was earthen, of the nature of a field
-retrenchment and well palisaded; the third line was similarly
-constructed and contained the two most elevated points of the hill,
-on one of which was an entrenched building called the White Church,
-and on the other the ancient keep of the castle; this last was the
-highest point, and was not only entrenched but surmounted with a
-heavy casemated work called the Napoleon battery. Thus there were
-five separate enclosures.
-
-[Sidenote: See Plan 4.]
-
-The Napoleon battery commanded every thing around it, save to the
-north, where at the distance of three hundred yards there was a
-second height scarcely less elevated than that of the fortress. It
-was called the Hill of San Michael, and was defended by a large
-horn-work with a hard sloping scarp twenty-five, and a counterscarp
-ten feet high. This outwork was unfinished and only closed by strong
-palisades, but it was under the fire of the Napoleon battery, was
-well flanked by the castle defences, and covered in front by slight
-entrenchments for the out picquets. The French had already mounted
-nine heavy guns, eleven field-pieces, and six mortars or howitzers
-in the fortress, and as the reserve artillery and stores of the army
-of Portugal were also deposited there, they could increase their
-armament.
-
-
-FIRST ASSAULT.
-
-The batteries so completely commanded all the bridges and fords
-over the Arlanzan that two days elapsed ere the allies could cross;
-but on the 19th the passage of the river being effected above the
-town, by the first division, major Somers Cocks, supported by Pack’s
-Portuguese, drove in the French outposts on the hill of San Michael.
-In the night, the same troops, reinforced with the forty-second
-regiment, stormed the horn-work. The conflict was murderous. For
-though the ladders were fairly placed by the bearers of them, the
-storming column, which, covered by a firing party, marched against
-the front, was beaten with great loss, and the attack would have
-failed if the gallant leader of the seventy-ninth had not meanwhile
-forced an entrance by the gorge. The garrison was thus actually
-cut off, but Cocks, though followed by the second battalion of the
-forty-second regiment, was not closely supported, and the French
-being still five hundred strong, broke through his men and escaped.
-This assault gave room for censure, the troops complained of each
-other, and the loss was above four hundred, while that of the enemy
-was less than one hundred and fifty.
-
-Wellington was now enabled to examine the defences of the castle. He
-found them feeble and incomplete, and yet his means were so scant
-that he had slender hopes of success, and relied more upon the
-enemy’s weakness than upon his own power. It was however said that
-water was scarce with the garrison and that their provision magazines
-could be burned, wherefore encouraged by this information he adopted
-the following plan of attack.
-
-Twelve thousand men composing the first and sixth divisions and the
-two Portuguese brigades, were to undertake the works; the rest of the
-troops, about twenty thousand, exclusive of the Partidas, were to
-form the covering army.
-
-The trenches were to be opened from the suburb of San Pedro, and a
-parallel formed in the direction of the hill of San Michael.
-
-[Sidenote: Jones’s Sieges.]
-
-A battery for five guns was to be established close to the right of
-the captured horn-work.
-
-A sap was to be pushed from the parallel as near the first wall as
-possible, without being seen into from the upper works, and from
-thence the engineer was to proceed by gallery and mine.
-
-When the first mine should be completed, the battery on the hill
-of San Michael was to open against the second line of defence, and
-the assault was to be given on the first line. If a lodgement was
-formed, the approaches were to be continued against the second line,
-and the battery on San Michael was to be turned against the third
-line, in front of the White Church, because the defences there were
-exceedingly weak. Meanwhile a trench for musketry was to be dug along
-the brow of San Michael, and a concealed battery was to be prepared
-within the horn-work itself, with a view to the final attack of the
-Napoleon battery.
-
-The head-quarters were fixed at Villa Toro, colonel Burgoyne
-conducted the operations of the engineers, colonel Robe and
-colonel Dickson those of the artillery, which consisted of three
-eighteen-pounders, and the five iron twenty-four-pound howitzers used
-at the siege of the Salamanca forts; and it was with regard to these
-slender means, rather than the defects of the fortress, that the line
-of attack was chosen.
-
-When the horn-work fell a lodgement had been immediately commenced
-in the interior, and it was continued vigorously, although under a
-destructive fire from the Napoleon battery, because the besiegers
-feared the enemy would at day-light endeavour to retake the work by
-the gorge; good cover was, however, obtained in the night, and the
-first battery was also begun.
-
-The 21st the garrison mounted several fresh field-guns, and at night
-kept up a heavy fire of grape, and shells, on the workmen who were
-digging the musketry trench in front of the first battery.
-
-The 22d the fire of the besieged was redoubled, but the besiegers
-worked with little loss, and their musketeers galled the enemy. In
-the night the first battery was armed with two eighteen-pounders and
-three howitzers, and the secret battery within the horn-work was
-commenced; but lord Wellington, deviating from his first plan, now
-resolved to try an escalade against the first line of defence. He
-selected a point half-way between the suburb of San Pedro and the
-horn-work, and at midnight four hundred men provided with ladders
-were secretly posted, in a hollow road, fifty yards from the wall,
-which was from twenty-three to twenty-five feet high but had no
-flanks; this was the main column, and a Portuguese battalion was also
-assembled in the town of Burgos to make a combined flank attack on
-that side.
-
-
-SECOND ASSAULT.
-
-[Sidenote: Lord Wellesley’s speech, House of Lords, 12th March 1813.]
-
-The storm was commenced by the Portuguese, but they were repelled
-by the fire of the common guard alone, and the principal escalading
-party which was composed of detachments from different regiments
-under major Lawrie 79th regiment, though acting with more courage,
-had as little success. The ladders were indeed placed, and the
-troops entered the ditch, yet all together, and confusedly; Lawrie
-was killed and the bravest soldiers who first mounted the ladders
-were bayonetted; combustible missiles were then thrown down in great
-abundance, and after a quarter of an hour’s resistance, the men gave
-way, leaving half their number behind. The wounded were brought off
-the next day under a truce. It is said that on the body of one of the
-officers killed the French found a complete plan of the siege, and it
-is certain that this disastrous attempt, which delayed the regular
-progress of the siege for two days, increased the enemy’s courage,
-and produced a bad effect upon the allied troops, some of whom were
-already dispirited by the attack on the horn-work.
-
-[Sidenote: See Plan 4.]
-
-The original plan being now resumed, the hollow way from whence the
-escaladers had advanced, and which at only fifty yards’ distance
-run along the front of defence, was converted into a parallel, and
-connected with the suburb of San Pedro. The trenches were made deep
-and narrow to secure them from the plunging shot of the castle, and
-musketeers were also planted to keep down the enemy’s fire; but
-heavy rains incommoded the troops, and though the allied marksmen
-got the mastery over those of the French immediately in their front,
-the latter, having a raised and palisaded work on their own right
-which in some measure flanked the approaches, killed so many of the
-besiegers that the latter were finally withdrawn.
-
-In the night a flying sap was commenced, from the right of the
-parallel, and was pushed within twenty yards of the enemy’s first
-line of defence; but the directing engineer was killed, and with him
-many men, for the French plied their musketry sharply, and rolled
-large shells down the steep side of the hill. The head of the sap
-was indeed so commanded as it approached the wall, that a six-feet
-trench, added to the height of the gabion above, scarcely protected
-the workmen, wherefore the gallery of the mine was opened, and
-worked as rapidly as the inexperience of the miners, who were merely
-volunteers from the line, would permit.
-
-The concealed battery within the horn-work of San Michael being now
-completed, two eighteen-pounders were removed from the first battery
-to arm it, and they were replaced by two iron howitzers, which opened
-upon the advanced palisade below, to drive the French marksmen from
-that point; but after firing one hundred and forty rounds without
-success this project was relinquished, and ammunition was so scarce
-that the soldiers were paid to collect the enemy’s bullets.
-
-This day also a zigzag was commenced in front of the first battery
-and down the face of San Michael, to obtain footing for a musketry
-trench to overlook the enemy’s defences below; and though the workmen
-were exposed to the whole fire of the castle, at the distance of two
-hundred yards, and were knocked down fast, the work went steadily on.
-
-On the 26th the gallery of the mine was advanced eighteen feet,
-and the soil was found favourable, but the men in passing the sap,
-were hit fast by the French marksmen, and an assistant engineer
-was killed. In the night the parallel was prolonged on the right
-within twenty yards of the enemy’s ramparts, with a view to a second
-gallery and mine, and musketeers were planted there to oppose the
-enemy’s marksmen and to protect the sap; at the same time the zigzag
-on the hill of San Michael was continued, and the musket trench there
-was completed under cover of gabions, and with little loss, although
-the whole fire of the castle was concentrated on the spot.
-
-The 27th the French were seen strengthening their second line, and
-they had already cut a step, along the edge of the counterscarp,
-for a covered way, and had palisaded the communication. Meanwhile
-the besiegers finished the musketry trench on the right of their
-parallel, and opened the gallery for the second mine; but the first
-mine went on slowly, the men in the sap were galled and disturbed,
-by stones, grenades, and small shells, which the French threw into
-the trenches by hand; and the artillery fire also knocked over the
-gabions of the musketry trench, on San Michael, so fast, that the
-troops were withdrawn during the day.
-
-In the night a trench of communication forming a second parallel
-behind the first was begun and nearly completed from the hill of San
-Michael towards the suburb of San Pedro, and the musketry trench on
-the hill was deepened.
-
-The 28th an attempt was made to perfect this new parallel of
-communication, but the French fire was heavy, and the shells, which
-passed over, came rolling down the hill again into the trench, so the
-work was deferred until night and was then perfected. The back roll
-of the shells continued indeed to gall the troops, but the whole of
-this trench, that in front of the horn-work above, and that on the
-right of the parallel below, were filled with men whose fire was
-incessant. Moreover the first mine was now completed and loaded
-with more than a thousand weight of powder, the gallery was strongly
-tamped for fifteen feet with bags of clay, and all being ready for
-the explosion Wellington ordered the
-
-
-THIRD ASSAULT.
-
-At midnight the hollow road, fifty yards from the mine, was lined
-with troops to fire on the defences, and three hundred men, composing
-the storming party, were assembled there, attended by others who
-carried tools and materials to secure the lodgement when the breach
-should be carried. The mine was then exploded, the wall fell, and an
-officer with twenty men rushed forward to the assault. The effect
-of the explosion was not so great as it ought to have been, yet it
-brought the wall down, the enemy was stupified, and the forlorn hope,
-consisting of a sergeant and four daring soldiers, gained the summit
-of the breach, and there stood until the French, recovering, drove
-them down pierced with bayonet wounds. Meanwhile the officer and the
-twenty men, who were to have been followed by a party of fifty, and
-these by the remainder of the stormers, missed the breach in the
-dark, and finding the wall unbroken, returned, and reported that
-there was no breach. The main body immediately regained the trenches,
-and before the sergeant and his men returned with streaming wounds to
-tell their tale, the enemy was reinforced; and such was the scarcity
-of ammunition that no artillery practice could be directed against
-the breach, during the night; hence the French were enabled to raise
-a parapet behind it and to place obstacles on the ascent which
-deterred the besiegers from renewing the assault at day-light.
-
-This failure arose from the darkness of the night, and the want of
-a conducting engineer, for out of four regular officers, of that
-branch, engaged in the siege, one had been killed, one badly wounded,
-and one was sick, wherefore the remaining one was necessarily
-reserved for the conducting of the works. The aspect of affairs
-was gloomy. Twelve days had elapsed since the siege commenced, one
-assault had succeeded, two had failed, twelve hundred men had been
-killed, or wounded, little progress had been made, and the troops
-generally shewed symptoms of despondency, especially the Portuguese,
-who seemed to be losing their ancient spirit. Discipline was relaxed,
-the soldiers wasted ammunition, and the work in the trenches was
-avoided or neglected both by officers and men; insubordination was
-gaining ground, and reproachful orders were issued, the guards only
-being noticed as presenting an honourable exception.
-
-[Sidenote: October.]
-
-In this state it was essential to make some change in the operations,
-and as the French marksmen, in the advanced palisadoed work below,
-were now become so expert that every thing which could be seen from
-thence was hit, the howitzer battery on San Michael was reinforced
-with a French eight-pounder, by the aid of which this mischievous
-post was at last demolished. At the same time the gallery of the
-second mine was pushed forward, and a new breaching battery for three
-guns was constructed behind it, so close to the enemy’s defences that
-the latter screened the work from the artillery fire of their upper
-fortress; but the parapet of the battery was only made musket-proof
-because the besieged had no guns on the lower line of this front.
-
-In the night the three eighteen-pounders were brought from the hill
-of San Michael without being discovered, and at day-light, though a
-very galling fire of muskets thinned the workmen, they persevered
-until nine o’clock when the battery was finished and armed. But at
-that moment the watchful Dubreton brought a howitzer down from the
-upper works, and with a low charge threw shells into the battery;
-then making a hole through a flank wall, he thrust out a light
-gun which sent its bullets whizzing through the thin parapet at
-every round, and at the same time his marksmen plied their shot
-so sharply that the allies were driven from their pieces without
-firing a shot. More French cannon were now brought from the upper
-works, the defences of the battery were quite demolished, two of the
-gun-carriages were disabled, a trunnion was knocked off one of the
-eighteen-pounders, and the muzzle of another was split. And it was
-in vain that the besiegers’ marksmen, aided by some officers who
-considered themselves good shots, endeavoured to quell the enemy’s
-fire, the French being on a height were too well covered and remained
-masters of the fight.
-
-In the night a second and more solid battery was formed at a point
-a little to the left of the ruined one, but at day-light the French
-observed it; and their fire plunging from above made the parapet fly
-off so rapidly, that the English general relinquished his intention
-and returned to his galleries and mines, and to his breaching
-battery on the hill of San Michael. The two guns still serviceable
-were therefore removed towards the upper battery to beat down a
-retrenchment formed by the French behind the old breach. It was
-intended to have placed them on this new position in the night of
-the 3d, but the weather was very wet and stormy, and the workmen,
-those of the guards only excepted, abandoned the trenches; hence at
-day-light the guns were still short of their destination and nothing
-more could be done until the following night.
-
-On the 4th, at nine o’clock in the morning, the two
-eighteen-pounders, and three iron howitzers, again opened from San
-Michael’s, and at four o’clock in the evening, the old breach being
-cleared of all incumbrances, and the second mine being strongly
-tamped for explosion, a double assault was ordered. The second
-battalion of the twenty-fourth British regiment, commanded by captain
-Hedderwick was selected for this operation, and was formed in the
-hollow way, having one advanced party, under Mr. Holmes, pushed
-forward as close to the new mine as it was safe to be, and a second
-party under Mr. Frazer in like manner pushed towards the old breach.
-
-
-FOURTH ASSAULT.
-
-At five o’clock the mine was exploded with a terrific effect, sending
-many of the French up into the air and breaking down one hundred
-feet of the wall, the next instant Holmes and his brave men went
-rushing through the smoke and crumbling ruins, and Frazer, as quick
-and brave as his brother officer, was already fighting with the
-defenders on the summit of the old breach. The supports followed
-closely, and in a few minutes both points were carried with a loss
-to the assailants of thirty-seven killed and two hundred wounded,
-seven of the latter being officers and amongst them the conducting
-engineer. During the night lodgements were formed, in advance of the
-old, and on the ruins of the new breach, yet very imperfectly, and
-under a heavy destructive fire from the upper defences. But this
-happy attack revived the spirits of the army, vessels with powder
-were coming coastwise from Coruña, a convoy was expected by land from
-Ciudad Rodrigo, and as a supply of ammunition sent by sir Home Popham
-had already reached the camp, from Santander, the howitzers continued
-to knock away the palisades in the ditch, and the battery on San
-Michael’s was directed to open a third breach at a point where the
-first French line of defence was joined to the second line.
-
-This promising state of affairs was of short duration.
-
-On the 5th, at five o’clock in the evening, while the working parties
-were extending the lodgements, three hundred French came swiftly
-down the hill, and sweeping away the labourers and guards from the
-trenches, killed or wounded a hundred and fifty men, got possession
-of the old breach, destroyed the works, and carried off all the
-tools. However in the night the allies repaired the damage and
-pushed saps from each flank to meet in the centre near the second
-French line, and to serve as a parallel to check future sallies.
-Meanwhile the howitzers on the San Michael continued their fire, yet
-ineffectually, against the palisades; the breaching battery in the
-horn-work also opened, but it was badly constructed, and the guns
-being unable to see the wall sufficiently low, soon ceased to speak,
-the embrasures were therefore masked. On the other hand the besieged
-were unable, from the steepness of the castle-hill, to depress their
-guns sufficiently to bear on the lodgement at the breaches in the
-first line, but their musquetry was destructive, and they rolled down
-large shells to retard the approaches towards the second line.
-
-On the 7th the besiegers had got so close to the wall below that
-the howitzers above could no longer play without danger to the
-workmen, wherefore two French field-pieces, taken in the horn-work,
-were substituted and did good service. The breaching battery on San
-Michael’s being altered, also renewed its fire, and at five o’clock
-had beaten down fifty feet from the parapet of the second line; but
-the enemy’s return was heavy, and another eighteen-pounder lost a
-trunnion. However in the night block-carriages with supports for the
-broken trunnions were provided, and the disabled guns were enabled to
-recommence their fire yet with low charges. But a constant rain had
-now filled the trenches, the communications were injured, the workmen
-were negligent, the approaches to the second line went on slowly, and
-again Dubreton came thundering down from the upper ground, driving
-the guards and workmen from the new parallel at the lodgements,
-levelling all the works, carrying off all the tools, and killing or
-wounding two hundred men. Colonel Cocks, promoted for his gallant
-conduct at the storming of San Michael, restored the fight, and
-repulsed the French, but he fell dead on the ground he had recovered.
-He was a young man of a modest demeanour, brave, thoughtful, and
-enterprising, and he lived and died a good soldier.
-
-After this severe check the approaches to the second line were
-abandoned, and the trenches were extended so as to embrace the whole
-of the fronts attacked; the battery on San Michael had meantime
-formed a practicable breach twenty-five feet wide, and the parallel,
-at the old breach of the first line, was prolonged by zigzags on
-the left towards this new breach, while a trench was opened to
-enable marksmen to fire upon the latter at thirty yards distance.
-Nevertheless another assault could not be risked because the great
-expenditure of powder had again exhausted the magazines, and without
-a new supply, the troops might have found themselves without
-ammunition in front of the French army which was now gathering head
-near Briviesca. Heated shot were however thrown at the White Church
-with a view to burn the magazines; and the miners were directed to
-drive a gallery, on the other side of the castle, against the church
-of San Roman, a building pushed out a little beyond the French
-external line of defence on the side of the city.
-
-[Sidenote: See Plan, No. 4.]
-
-On the 10th, when the besiegers’ ammunition was nearly all gone, a
-fresh supply arrived from Santander, but no effect had been produced
-upon the White Church, and Dubreton had strengthened his works to
-meet the assault; he had also isolated the new breach on one flank by
-a strong stockade extending at right angles from the second to the
-third line of defence. The fire from the Napoleon battery had obliged
-the besiegers again to withdraw their battering guns within the
-horn-work, and the attempt to burn the White Church was relinquished,
-but the gallery against San Roman was continued. In this state things
-remained for several days with little change, save that the French,
-maugre the musketry from the nearest zigzag trench, had scarped
-eight feet at the top of the new breach and formed a small trench at
-the back.
-
-On the 15th the battery in the horn-work was again armed, and the
-guns pointed to breach the wall of the Napoleon battery; they were
-however over-matched and silenced in three-quarters of an hour, and
-the embrasures were once more altered, that the guns might bear on
-the breach in the second line. Some slight works and counter-works
-were also made on different points, but the besiegers were
-principally occupied repairing the mischief done by the rain, and
-in pushing the gallery under San Roman, where the French were now
-distinctly heard talking in the church, wherefore the mine there was
-formed and loaded with nine hundred pounds of powder.
-
-On the 17th the battery of the horn-work being renewed, the fire of
-the eighteen-pounders cleared away the enemy’s temporary defences
-at the breach, the howitzers damaged the rampart on each side, and
-a small mine was sprung on the extreme right of the lower parallel,
-with a view to take possession of a cavalier or mound which the
-French had raised there, and from which they had killed many men
-in the trenches; it was successful, and a lodgement was effected,
-but the enemy soon returned in force and obliged the besiegers to
-abandon it again. However on the 18th the new breach was rendered
-practicable, and Wellington ordered it to be stormed. The explosion
-of the mine under San Roman was to be the signal; that church was
-also to be assaulted; and at the same time a third detachment was to
-escalade the works in front of the ancient breach and thus connect
-the attacks.
-
-
-FIFTH ASSAULT.
-
-At half-past four o’clock the springing of the mine at San Roman
-broke down a terrace in front of that building, yet with little
-injury to the church itself; the latter was, however, resolutely
-attacked by colonel Browne, at the head of some Spanish and
-Portuguese troops, and though the enemy sprung a countermine which
-brought the building down, the assailants lodged themselves in
-the ruins. Meanwhile two hundred of the foot-guards, with strong
-supports, poured through the old breach in the first line, and
-escaladed the second line, beyond which in the open ground between
-the second and third lines, they were encountered by the French, and
-a sharp musketry fight commenced. At the same time a like number of
-the German legion, under major Wurmb, similarly supported, stormed
-the new breach, on the left of the guards, so vigourously, that it
-was carried in a moment, and some men, mounting the hill above,
-actually gained the third line. Unhappily at neither of these
-assaults did the supports follow closely, and the Germans being
-cramped on their left by the enemy’s stockade, extended by their
-right towards the guards, and at that critical moment Dubreton, who
-held his reserves well in hand, came dashing like a torrent from
-the upper ground, and in an instant cleared the breaches. Wurmb and
-many other brave men fell, and then the French, gathering round the
-guards, who were still unsupported, forced them beyond the outer
-line. More than two hundred men and officers were killed or wounded
-in this combat, and the next night the enemy recovered San Roman by a
-sally.
-
-The siege was thus virtually terminated, for though the French were
-beaten out of St. Roman again, and a gallery was opened from that
-church against the second line; and though two twenty-four pounders,
-sent from Santander, by sir Home Popham, had passed Reynosa on their
-way to Burgos, these were mere demonstrations. It is now time to
-narrate the different contemporary events which obliged the English
-general, with a victorious army, to abandon the siege of a third-rate
-fortress, strong in nothing but the skill and bravery of the governor
-and his gallant soldiers.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-
-[Sidenote: 1812. October.]
-
-When king Joseph retreated to Valencia he earnestly demanded
-a reinforcement of forty thousand men, from France, and, more
-earnestly, money. Three millions of francs he obtained from Suchet,
-yet his distress was greater even than that of the allies, and
-Wellington at one time supposed that this alone would drive the
-French from the Peninsula. The Anglo-Portuguese soldiers had not
-received pay for six months, but the French armies of the south, of
-the centre, and of Portugal, were a whole year behind-hand; and the
-salaries of the ministers, and civil servants of the court, were two
-years in arrears. Suchet’s army, the only one which depended entirely
-on the country, was by that marshal’s excellent management regularly
-paid, and the effect on its discipline was conformable; his troops
-refrained from plunder themselves, and repressed some excesses of
-Joseph’s and Soult’s soldiers so vigorously, as to come to blows
-in defence of the inhabitants. And thus it will ever be, since
-paid soldiers only may be kept under discipline. Soldiers without
-money must become robbers. Napoleon knew the king’s necessity to be
-extreme, but the war with Russia had so absorbed the resources of
-France, that little money, and only twenty thousand men, principally
-conscripts, could be sent to Spain.
-
-[Sidenote: Letter from the duke of Feltre to king Joseph, 4th Oct.
-1812, MSS.]
-
-The army of Portugal, at the moment when the siege of the castle
-commenced, had been quartered between Vittoria and Burgos; that
-is to say, at Pancorbo and along the Ebro as far as Logroña, an
-advanced guard only remaining at Briviesca; on this line they were
-recruited and reorganized, and Massena was appointed with full powers
-to command in the northern provinces. A fine opportunity to revenge
-his own retreat from Torres Vedras, was thus furnished to the old
-warrior; but whether he doubted the issue of affairs, or was really
-tamed by age, he pleaded illness, and sent general Souham to the
-army of Portugal. Then arose contentions, for Marmont had designated
-Clauzel as the fittest to lead, Massena insisted that Souham was the
-abler general, and the king desired to appoint Drouet. Clauzel’s
-abilities were certainly not inferior to those of any French general,
-and to more perfect acquaintance with the theatre of war, he added
-a better knowledge of the enemy he had to contend with; he was also
-more known to his own soldiers, and had gained their confidence by
-his recent operations, no mean considerations in such a matter.
-However, Souham was appointed.
-
-[Sidenote: Official report of general Souham, MSS.]
-
-[Sidenote: Duke of Feltre’s correspondence, MSS.]
-
-Caffarelli anxious to succour the castle of Burgos, which belonged
-to his command, had united at Vittoria a thousand cavalry, sixteen
-guns, and eight thousand infantry, of which three thousand were of
-the young guard. The army of Portugal, reinforced from France with
-twelve thousand men, had thirty-five thousand present under arms,
-reorganized in six divisions, and by Clauzel’s care, its former
-excellent discipline had been restored. Thus forty-four thousand good
-troops were, in the beginning of October, ready to succour the castle
-of Burgos; but the generals, although anxious to effect that object,
-awaited, first the arrival of Souham, and then news from the king,
-with whose operations it was essential to combine their own. They had
-no direct tidings from him because the lines of correspondence were
-so circuitous, and so beset by the Partidas, that the most speedy as
-well as certain mode of communication, was through the minister of
-war at Paris; and that functionary found the information, best suited
-to his purpose, in the English newspapers. For the latter, while
-deceiving the British public by accounts of battles which were never
-fought, victories which were never gained, enthusiasm and vigour
-which never existed, did, with most accurate assiduity, enlighten the
-enemy upon the numbers, situation, movements, and reinforcements of
-the allies.
-
-[Sidenote: Souham’s official correspondence, MSS.]
-
-Souham arrived the 3rd of October with the last of the reinforcements
-from France, but he imagined that lord Wellington had sixty thousand
-troops around Burgos, exclusive of the Partidas, and that three
-divisions were marching from Madrid to his aid; whereas none were
-coming from that capital, and little more than thirty thousand were
-present under arms round Burgos, eleven thousand being Gallicians
-scarcely so good as the Partidas. Wellington’s real strength was
-in his Anglo-Portuguese, then not twenty thousand, for besides
-those killed or wounded at the siege, the sick had gone to the rear
-faster than the recovered men came up. Some unattached regiments and
-escorts were, indeed, about Segovia, and other points north of the
-Guadarama, and a reinforcement of five thousand men had been sent
-from England in September; but the former belonged to Hill’s army,
-and of the latter, the lifeguards and blues had gone to Lisbon. Hence
-a regiment of foot-guards, and some detachments for the line, in all
-about three thousand, were the only available force in the rear.
-
-During the first part of the siege, the English general seeing the
-French scattered along the Ebro, and only reinforced by conscripts,
-did not fear any interruption, and the less so, that sir Home Popham
-was again menacing the coast line. Even now, when the French were
-beginning to concentrate their troops, he cared little for them,
-and was resolved to give battle; for he thought that Popham and
-the guerillas would keep Caffarelli employed, and he felt himself
-a match for the army of Portugal. Nor were the Partidas inactive
-on any point, and their successes though small in themselves, were
-exceedingly harassing to the enemy.
-
-Mina having obtained two or three thousand stand of English arms
-had re-entered Aragon and domineered on the left bank of the Ebro,
-while Duran, with four thousand men, operated uncontrolled on the
-right bank. The Empecinado, Villacampa, and Bassecour descended from
-Cuenca, the first against Requeña, the others against Albacete.
-The Frayle interrupted the communications between Valencia and
-Tortoza. Saornil, Cuesta, Firmin, and others, were in La Mancha and
-Estremadura, Juan Palarea, called the Medico, was near Segovia, and
-though Marquinez had been murdered by one of his own men, his partida
-and that of Julian Sanchez acted as regular troops with Wellington’s
-army. Meanwhile sir Home Popham, in conjunction with Mendizabel,
-Porlier, and Renovales, who had gathered all the minor partidas under
-their banners, assailed Gueteria; but unsuccessfully; for on the 30th
-of September, the Spanish chiefs were driven away, and Popham lost
-some guns which had been landed. About the same time the Empecinado
-being defeated at Requeña, retired to Cuenca, yet he failed not from
-thence to infest the French quarters.
-
-Duran, when Soria was abandoned, fell upon Calatayud, but was
-defeated by Severoli, who withdrew the garrison. Then the Spanish
-chief attacked the castle of Almunia, which was only one march from
-Zaragoza, and when Severoli succoured this place also, and dismantled
-the castle, Duran attacked Borja between Tudela and Zaragoza, and
-took it before Severoli could come up. Thus Zaragoza was gradually
-deprived of its outposts, on the right of the Ebro; on the left, Mina
-hovered close to the gates, and his lieutenant, Chaplangara, meeting,
-near Ayerbe, with three hundred Italians, killed forty, and would
-have destroyed the whole but for the timely succour of some mounted
-gens-d’armes. At last Reille being undeceived as to Wellington’s
-march, restored the smaller posts which he had abandoned, and Suchet
-ordered the castle of Almunia to be refitted, but during these
-events, Bassecour and Villa Campa united to infest Joseph’s quarters
-about Albacete.
-
-Soult’s march from Andalusia and his junction with the king, has
-been described; but while he was yet at Grenada, Hill, leaving three
-Portuguese regiments of infantry and one of cavalry at Almendralejo
-and Truxillo, to protect his line of supply, had marched to cross
-the Tagus at Almaraz, and Arzobispo. He entered Toledo the 28th of
-September, and the same day Elio took a small French garrison left in
-Consuegra. Hill soon after occupied a line from Toledo to Aranjuez,
-where he was joined by the fourth division, Victor Alten’s cavalry,
-and the detachments quartered about Ildefonsos and Segovia. On the
-8th, hearing of Soult’s arrival at Hellin, he pushed his cavalry
-to Belmonte on the San Clemente road, and here in La Mancha as in
-Old Castile the stories of French devastation were belied by the
-abundance of provisions.
-
-[Sidenote: Appendix, No. 8, B.]
-
-Bassecour, Villa Campa, and the Empecinado now united on the road
-leading from Cuenca to Valencia, while the Medico and other chiefs
-gathered in the Toledo mountains. In this manner the allies extended
-from Toledo on the right, by Belmonte, Cuenca, and Calatayud to near
-Jacca on the left, and were in military communication with the coast;
-for Caffarelli’s disposable force was now concentrated to relieve
-Burgos, and Mina had free intercourse with Mendizabal and Renovales,
-and with Popham’s fleet. But the French line of correspondence
-between the armies in the eastern and northern provinces, was
-so interrupted that the English newspapers became their surest,
-quickest, and most accurate channels of intelligence.
-
-[Sidenote: Duke of Feltre’s official correspondence, MSS.]
-
-[Sidenote: General Souham’s official correspondence, MSS.]
-
-Souham, who over-rated the force of his adversary, and feared a
-defeat as being himself the only barrier left between Wellington
-and France, was at first so far from meditating an advance, that
-he expected and dreaded an attack from the allies; and as the want
-of provisions would not let him concentrate his army permanently
-near Monasterio, his dispositions were made to fight on the Ebro.
-The minister of war had even desired him to detach a division
-against the partidas. But when by the English newspapers, and other
-information sent from Paris, he learned that Soult was in march from
-Grenada,—that the king intended to move upon Madrid,—that no English
-troops had left that capital to join Wellington,—that the army of
-the latter was not very numerous, and that the castle of Burgos was
-sorely pressed, he called up Caffarelli’s troops from Vittoria,
-concentrated his own at Briviesca and resolved to raise the siege.
-
-On the 13th a skirmish took place on the stream beyond Monasterio,
-where captain Perse of the sixteenth dragoons was twice forced
-from the bridge and twice recovered it in the most gallant manner,
-maintaining his post until colonel F. Ponsonby, who commanded the
-reserves, arrived. Ponsonby and Perse were both wounded, and this
-demonstration was followed by various others until the evening of the
-18th, when the whole French army was united, and the advanced guard
-captured a picquet of the Brunswickers which contrary to orders had
-remained in St. Olalla. This sudden movement apparently prevented
-Wellington from occupying the position of Monasterio, his outposts
-fell back on the 19th to Quintanapala and Olmos, and on the ridges
-behind those places he drew up his army in order of battle. The right
-was at Ibeas on the Arlanzan; the centre at Riobena and Majarradas
-on the main road behind Olmos; the left was thrown back near Soto
-Palaccio, and rested on a small river.
-
-The 20th, Maucune, with two divisions of infantry and one of cavalry,
-drove the allies from Quintanapala, but Olmos was successfully
-defended by the Chasseurs Brittaniques, and Maucune, having no
-supports, was immediately outflanked on the right and forced back
-to Monasterio, by two divisions under sir Edward Paget. There were
-now in position, including Pack’s Portuguese, which blockaded
-the castle, about thirty-three thousand men under arms, namely,
-twenty-one thousand Anglo-Portuguese infantry and cavalry, eleven
-thousand Gallicians, and the horsemen of Marquinez and Julian
-Sanchez. Thus, there were four thousand troopers, but only two
-thousand six hundred of these were British and German, and the
-Spanish horsemen regular or irregular, could scarcely be counted
-in the line of battle. The number of guns and howitzers was only
-forty-two, including twelve Spanish pieces, extremely ill equipped
-and scant of ammunition.
-
-[Sidenote: Official state of the army given to Massena, MSS.]
-
-Lord Wellington had long felt the want of artillery and had sent
-a memoir upon the subject, to the British government, in the
-beginning of the year, yet his ordnance establishment had not been
-augmented, hence his difficulties during the siege; and in the field,
-instead of ninety British and Portuguese cannon, which was the just
-complement for his army, he had now only fifty serviceable pieces,
-of which twenty-four were with general Hill; and all were British,
-for the Portuguese artillery had from the abuses and the poverty
-of their government entirely melted away. Now the French had, as I
-have before stated, forty-four thousand men, of which nearly five
-thousand were cavalry, and they had more than sixty guns, a matter
-of no small importance; for besides the actual power of artillery
-in an action, soldiers are excited when the noise is greatest on
-their side. Wellington stood, therefore, at disadvantage in numbers,
-composition, and real strength. In his rear was the castle, and the
-river Arlanzan, the fords and bridges of which were commanded by the
-guns of the fortress; his generals of division, Paget excepted, were
-not of any marked ability, his troops were somewhat desponding, and
-deteriorated in discipline. His situation was therefore dangerous,
-and critical; a victory could scarcely be expected, and a defeat
-would have been destructive; he should not have provoked a battle,
-nor would he have done so had he known that Caffarelli’s troops were
-united to Souham’s.
-
-[Sidenote: Appendix, No. 8. A.]
-
-On the other hand, Souham should by all means have forced on an
-action, because his ground was strong, his retreat open, his
-army powerful and compact, his soldiers full of confidence, his
-lieutenants Clauzel, Maucune, and Foy, men of distinguished talents,
-able to second, and able to succeed him in the chief command. The
-chances of victory and the profit to be derived were great, the
-chances of defeat, and the dangers to be incurred comparatively
-small. And it was thus indeed that he judged the matter himself, for
-Maucune’s advance was intended to be the prelude to a great battle,
-and the English general, as we have seen, was willing to stand the
-trial. But generals are not absolute masters of events, and as the
-extraneous influence which restrained both sides, on this occasion,
-came from afar, it was fitting to show how, in war, movements,
-distant, and apparently unconnected with those immediately under a
-general’s eye, will break his measures, and make him appear undecided
-or foolish when in truth he is both wise and firm.
-
-While Wellington was still engaged with the siege, the cortez made
-him commander of all the Spanish armies. He had before refused this
-responsible situation, but the circumstances were now changed, for
-the Spaniards, having lost nearly all their cavalry and guns in the
-course of the war, could not safely act, except in connexion with the
-Anglo-Portuguese forces, and it was absolutely necessary that one
-head should direct. The English general therefore demanded leave of
-his own government to accept the offer, although he observed, that
-the Spanish troops were not at all improved in their discipline,
-their equipments, or their military spirit; but he thought that
-conjoined with the British they might behave well, and so escape any
-more of those terrible disasters which had heretofore overwhelmed
-the country and nearly brought the war to a conclusion. He was
-willing to save the dignity of the Spanish government, by leaving it
-a certain body of men wherewith to operate after its own plans; but
-that he might exercise his own power efficiently, and to the profit
-of the troops under himself, he desired that the English government
-would vigorously insist upon the strict application of the subsidy
-to the payment of the Spanish soldiers acting with the British army,
-otherwise the care of the Spanish troops, he said, would only cramp
-his own operations.
-
-In his reply to the Cortez, his acceptance of the offer was rendered
-dependent upon the assent of his own government; and he was careful
-to guard himself from a danger, not unlikely to arise, namely,
-that the Cortez, when he should finally accept the offer, would in
-virtue of that acceptance assume the right of directing the whole
-operations of the war. The intermediate want of power to move the
-Spanish armies, he judged of little consequence, because hitherto his
-suggestions having been cheerfully attended to by the Spanish chiefs,
-he had no reason to expect any change in that particular, but there
-he was grievously mistaken.
-
-Previous to this offer the Spanish government had, at his desire,
-directed Ballesteros to cross the Morena, and place himself at
-Alcaraz and in support of the Chinchilla fort, where joined by Cruz
-Murgeon, by Elio, and by the Partidas, he would have had a corps of
-thirty thousand men, would have been supported by Hill’s army, and,
-having the mountains behind him for a retreat, could have safely
-menaced the enemy’s flank, and delayed the march against Madrid or at
-least have obliged the king to leave a strong corps of observation
-to watch him. But Ballesteros, swelling with arrogant folly, never
-moved from Grenada, and when he found that Wellington was created
-generalissimo, he published a manifesto appealing to the Spanish
-pride against the degradation of serving under a foreigner; he thus
-sacrificed to his own spleen the welfare of his country, and with
-a result he little expected; for while he judged himself a man to
-sway the destinies of Spain, he suddenly found himself a criminal
-and nothing more. The Cortez caused him to be arrested in the midst
-of his soldiers, who, indifferent to his fate, suffered him to be
-sent a prisoner to Ceuta. The count of Abisbal was then declared
-captain-general of Andalusia, and the duke del Parque was appointed
-to command Ballesteros’ army, which general Verues immediately led by
-Jaen towards La Mancha, but Soult was then on the Tormes.
-
-[Sidenote: Appendix, No. 6. A.]
-
-That marshal united with the king on the 3d of October. His troops
-required rest, his numerous sick were to be sent to the Valencian
-hospitals, and his first interview with Joseph was of a warm nature,
-for each had his griefs and passions to declare. Finally the monarch
-yielded to the superior mental power of his opponent and resolved to
-profit from his great military capacity, yet reluctantly and more
-from prudence than liking; for the duke of Feltre, minister of war at
-Paris, although secretly an enemy of Soult, and either believing, or
-pretending to believe in the foolish charges of disorderly ambition
-made against that commander, opposed any decided exercise of the
-king’s authority until the emperor’s will was known: yet this would
-not have restrained the king if the marshals Jourdan and Suchet had
-not each declined accepting the duke of Dalmatia’s command when
-Joseph offered it to them.
-
-[Sidenote: Joseph’s Correspondence, MSS.]
-
-Soult’s first operation was to reduce Chinchilla, a well-constructed
-fort, which, being in the midst of his quarters, commanded the great
-roads so as to oblige his army to move under its fire or avoid it by
-circuitous routes. A vigorous defence was expected, but on the 6th it
-fell, after a few hours’ attack; for a thunder-storm suddenly arising
-in a clear sky had discharged itself upon the fort, and killed the
-governor and many other persons, whereupon the garrison, influenced,
-it is said, by a superstitious fear, surrendered. This was the first
-bitter fruit of Ballesteros’ disobedience, for neither could Soult
-have taken Chinchilla, nor scattered his troops, as he did, at
-Albacete, Almanza, Yecla, and Hellin, if thirty thousand Spaniards
-had been posted between Alcaraz and Chinchilla, and supported by
-thirty thousand Anglo-Portuguese at Toledo under Hill. These extended
-quarters were however essential for the feeding of the French
-general’s numbers, and now, covered by the fort of Chinchilla, his
-troops were well lodged, his great convoys of sick and maimed men,
-his Spanish families, and other impediments, safely and leisurely
-sent to Valencia, while his cavalry scouring the country of La Mancha
-in advance, obliged Bassecour and Villa Campa to fall back upon
-Cuenca.
-
-[Sidenote: Appendix, No. 8. A.]
-
-The detail of the operations which followed, belongs to another
-place. It will suffice to say here, that the king, being at the
-head of more than seventy thousand men, was enabled without risking
-Valencia to advance towards the Tagus, having previously sent
-Souham a specific order to combine his movements in co-operation
-but strictly to avoid fighting. General Hill also finding himself
-threatened by such powerful forces, and reduced by Ballesteros’
-defection to a simple defence of the Tagus, at a moment when that
-river was becoming fordable in all places, gave notice of his
-situation to lord Wellington. Joseph’s letter was dispatched on the
-1st, and six others followed in succession day by day, yet the last
-carried by colonel Lucotte, an officer of the royal staff, first
-reached Souham; the advantages derived from the allies’ central
-position, and from the Partidas, were here made manifest; for Hill’s
-letter, though only dispatched the 17th, reached Wellington at the
-same moment that Joseph’s reached Souham. The latter general was thus
-forced to relinquish his design of fighting on the 20th; nevertheless
-having but four days’ provisions left, he designed when those should
-be consumed, to attack notwithstanding the king’s prohibition,
-if Wellington should still confront him. But the English general
-considering that his own army, already in a very critical situation,
-would be quite isolated if the king should, as was most probable,
-force the allies from the Tagus, now resolved, though with a bitter
-pang, to raise the siege and retreat so far as would enable him to
-secure his junction with Hill.
-
-While the armies were in presence some fighting had taken place
-at Burgos, Dubreton had again obtained possession of the ruins of
-the church of San Roman and was driven away next morning; and now
-in pursuance of Wellington’s determination to retreat, mines of
-destruction were formed in the horn-work by the besiegers, and the
-guns and stores were removed from the batteries to the parc at Villa
-Toro. But the greatest part of the draught animals had been sent to
-Reynosa, to meet the powder and artillery coming from Santander,
-and hence, the eighteen-pounders could not be carried off, nor,
-from some error, were the mines of destruction exploded. The rest
-of the stores and the howitzers were put in march by the road of
-Villaton and Frandovinez for Celada del Camino. Thus the siege was
-raised, after five assaults, several sallies and thirty-three days of
-investment, during which the besiegers lost more than two thousand
-men and the besieged six hundred in killed or wounded; the latter had
-also suffered severely, from continual labour, want of water, and bad
-weather, for the fortress was too small to afford shelter for the
-garrison and the greater part bivouacked between the lines of defence.
-
-
-RETREAT FROM BURGOS.
-
-[Sidenote: See Plan 5.]
-
-This operation was commenced on the night of the 21st by a measure
-of great nicety and boldness, for the road, divaricating at Gamonal,
-led by Villatoro to the bridge of Villaton on the one hand, and the
-bridge of Burgos on the other, and Wellington chose the latter, which
-was the shortest, though it passed the Arlanzan river close under the
-guns of the castle. The army quitted the position after dark without
-being observed, and having the artillery-wheels muffled with straw,
-defiled over the bridge of Burgos with such silence and celerity,
-that Dubreton, watchful and suspicious as he was, knew nothing
-of their march until the Partidas, failing in nerve, commenced
-galloping; then he poured a destructive fire down, but soon lost the
-range. By this delicate operation the infantry gained Cellada del
-Camino and Hormillas that night, but the light cavalry halted at
-Estepar and the bridge of Villa Baniel. Souham, who did not discover
-the retreat until late in the evening of the 22d, was therefore fain
-to follow, and by a forced march, to overtake the allies, whereas,
-if Wellington to avoid the fire of the castle had gone by Villaton,
-and Frandovinez, the French might have forestalled him at Cellada del
-Camino.
-
-The 23d the infantry renewing their march crossed the Pisuerga, at
-Cordovillas, and Torquemada, a little above and below its junction
-with the Arlanzan; but while the main body made this long march,
-the French having passed Burgos in the night of the 22d, vigorously
-attacked the allies’ rear-guard. This was composed of the cavalry
-and some horse artillery, commanded by Norman Ramsay and Major
-Downman; of two battalions of Germans under Colin Halket; and of the
-Partidas of Marquinez and Sanchez, the latter being on the left of
-the Arlanzan and the whole under the command of sir Stapleton Cotton.
-The piquets of light cavalry were vigorously driven from the bridge
-of Baniel as early as seven o’clock in the morning; but they rallied
-upon their reserves and gained the Hormaza stream which was disputed
-for some time, and a charge made by captain Perse of the sixteenth
-dragoons, was of distinguished bravery. However the French cavalry
-finally forced the passage and the British retiring behind Cellada
-Camino took post in a large plain. On their left was a range of hills
-the summit of which was occupied by the Partida of Marquinez, and on
-their right was the Arlanzan, beyond which Julian Sanchez was posted.
-Across the middle of the plain run a marshy rivulet cutting the main
-road, and only passable by a little bridge near a house called the
-Venta de Pozo, and half-way between this stream and Cellada there
-was a broad ditch with a second bridge in front of a small village.
-Cotton immediately retired over the marshy stream, leaving Anson’s
-horsemen and Halket’s infantry as a rear-guard beyond the ditch; and
-Anson to cover his own passage of that obstacle left the eleventh
-dragoons and the guns at Cellada Camino, which was situated on a
-gentle eminence.
-
-
-COMBAT OF VENTA DE POZO.
-
-When the French approached Cellada, major Money of the eleventh, who
-was in advance, galloping out from the left of the village at the
-head of two squadrons, overturned their leading horsemen, and the
-artillery plied them briskly with shot, but the main body advancing
-at a trot along the road soon outflanked the British, and obliged
-Money’s squadrons to rejoin the rest of the regiment while the guns
-went on beyond the bridge of Venta de Pozo. Meanwhile the French
-general Curto with a brigade of hussars ascended the hills on the
-left, and being followed by Boyer’s dragoons, put Marquinez’ Partida
-to flight; but a deep ravine run along the foot of these hills, next
-the plain, it could only be passed at certain places, and towards
-the first of these the Partidas galloped, closely chased by the
-hussars, at the moment when the leading French squadrons on the plain
-were forming in front of Cellada to attack the eleventh regiment.
-The latter charged and drove the first line upon the second, but
-then both lines coming forward together, the British were pushed
-precipitately to the ditch, and got over by the bridge with some
-difficulty, though with little loss, being covered by the fire of
-Halket’s infantry which was in the little village behind the bridge.
-
-The left flank of this new line was already turned by the hussars
-on the hills, wherefore Anson fell back covered by the sixteenth
-dragoons, and in good order, with design to cross the second bridge
-at Venta de Pozo; during this movement Marquinez’ Partida came
-pouring down from the hills in full flight, closely pursued by the
-French hussars, who mixed with the fugitives, and the whole mass
-fell upon the flank of the sixteenth dragoons; and at the same
-moment, these last were also charged by the enemy’s dragoons, who
-had followed them over the ditch. The commander of the Partida was
-wounded, colonel Pelly with another officer, and thirty men of the
-sixteenth, fell into the enemy’s hands, and all were driven in
-confusion upon the reserves. But while the French were reforming
-their scattered squadrons after this charge, Anson got his people
-over the bridge of Venta de Pozo and drew up beyond the rivulet and
-to the left of the road, on which Halket’s battalions and the guns
-had already taken post, and the heavy German cavalry, an imposing
-mass, stood in line on the right, and farther in the rear than the
-artillery.
-
-Hitherto the action had been sustained by the cavalry of the army of
-Portugal, but now Caffarelli’s horsemen consisting of the lancers of
-Berg, the fifteenth dragoons and some squadrons of “_gens-d’armes_,”
-all fresh men, came down in line to the rivulet, and finding it
-impassable, with a quick and daring decision wheeled to their right,
-and despite of the heavy pounding of the artillery, trotted over the
-bridge, and again formed line, in opposition to the German dragoons,
-having the stream in their rear. The position was dangerous but
-they were full of mettle, and though the Germans, who had let too
-many come over, charged with a rough shock and broke the right, the
-French left had the advantage and the others rallied; then a close
-and furious sword contest had place, but the “_gens-d’armes_” fought
-so fiercely, that the Germans, maugre their size and courage, lost
-ground and finally gave way in disorder. The French followed on the
-spur with shrill and eager cries, and Anson’s brigade which was thus
-outflanked and threatened on both sides, fell back also, but not
-happily, for Boyer’s dragoons having continued their march by the
-hills to the village of Balbaces there crossed the ravine and came
-thundering in on the left. Then the British ranks were broken, the
-regiments got intermixed, and all went to the rear in confusion;
-finally however the Germans, having extricated themselves from their
-pursuers turned and formed a fresh line on the left of the road, and
-the others rallied upon them.
-
-The “_gens-d’armes_” and lancers, who had suffered severely from the
-artillery, as well as in the sword-fight, now halted, but Boyer’s
-dragoons forming ten squadrons, again came to the charge, and with
-the more confidence that the allies’ ranks appeared still confused
-and wavering. When within a hundred yards, the German officers
-rode gallantly out to fight, and their men followed a short way,
-but the enemy was too powerful, disorder and tumult again ensued,
-the swiftness of the English horses alone prevented a terrible
-catastrophe, and though some favourable ground enabled the line to
-reform once more, it was only to be again broken. However Wellington,
-who was present, had placed Halket’s infantry and the guns in a
-position to cover the cavalry, and they remained tranquil until the
-enemy, in full pursuit after the last charge, came galloping down and
-lent their left flank to the infantry; then the power of this arm was
-made manifest; a tempest of bullets emptied the French saddles by
-scores, and their hitherto victorious horsemen after three fruitless
-attempts to charge, each weaker than the other, reined up and drew
-off to the hills, the British cavalry covered by the infantry made
-good their retreat to Quintana la Puente near the Pisuerga, and the
-bivouacs of the enemy were established at Villadrigo. The loss in
-this combat was very considerable on both sides, the French suffered
-most, but they took a colonel and seventy other prisoners, and they
-had before the fight, also captured a small commissariat store near
-Burgos.
-
-While the rear-guard was thus engaged, drunkenness and
-insubordination, the usual concomitants of an English retreat, were
-exhibited at Torquemada, where the well-stored wine-vaults became
-the prey of the soldiery: it is said, that twelve thousand men
-were to be seen at one time in a state of helpless inebriety. This
-commencement was bad, and the English general, who had now retreated
-some fifty miles, seeing the enemy so hot and menacing in pursuit,
-judged it fitting to check his course; for though the arrangements
-were surprisingly well combined, the means of transport were so
-scanty and the weather so bad, that the convoys of sick and wounded
-were still on the wrong side of the Duero. Wherefore, having with a
-short march crossed the Carion river on the 24th at its confluence
-with the Pisuerga, he turned and halted behind it.
-
-Here he was joined by a regiment of the guards, and by detachments
-coming from Coruña, and his position extending from Villa Muriel
-to Dueñas below the meeting of the waters, was strong. The troops
-occupied a range of hills, lofty, yet descending with an easy sweep
-to the Carion; that river covered the front, and the Pisuerga did the
-same by the right wing. A detachment had been left to destroy the
-bridge of Baños on the Pisuerga; colonel Campbell with a battalion
-of the royals was sent to aid the Spaniards in destroying the
-bridges at Palencia; and in Wellington’s immediate front some houses
-and convents beyond the rivers, furnished good posts to cover the
-destruction of the bridges of Muriel and San Isidro on the Carion,
-and that of Dueñas on the Pisuerga.
-
-Souham excited by his success on the 23d followed from Villadrigo
-early on the 24th, and having cannonaded the rear-guard at Torquemada
-passed the Pisuerga. He immediately directed Foy’s division upon
-Palencia, and ordered Maucune with the advanced guard to pursue the
-allies to the bridges of Baños, Isidro, and Muriel; but he halted
-himself at Magoz, and, if fame does not lie, because the number of
-French drunkards at Torquemada were even more numerous than those of
-the British army.
-
-
-COMBAT ON THE CARION.
-
-Before the enemy appeared, the summits of the hills were crowned by
-the allies, all the bridges were mined and that of San Isidro was
-strongly protected by a convent which was filled with troops. The
-left of the position was equally strong, yet general Oswald, who had
-just arrived from England and taken the command of the fifth division
-on the instant, overlooked the advantages to be derived from the dry
-bed of a canal with high banks, which, on his side, run parallel
-with the Carion, and he had not occupied the village of Muriel in
-sufficient strength. In this state of affairs Foy reached Palencia,
-where, according to some French writers, a treacherous attempt was
-made under cover of a parley, to kill him; he however drove the
-allies with some loss from the town and in such haste that all the
-bridges were abandoned in a perfect condition, and the French cavalry
-crossing the river and spreading abroad gathered up both baggage and
-prisoners.
-
-This untoward event obliged Wellington to throw back his left,
-composed of the fifth division and the Spaniards, at Muriel, thus
-offering two fronts, the one facing Palencia, the other the Carion.
-Oswald’s error then became manifest; for Maucune having dispersed
-the eighth caçadores who were defending a ford between Muriel and
-San Isidro, fell with a strong body of infantry and guns upon the
-allies at Muriel, and this at the moment when the mine having been
-exploded, the party covering the bridge were passing the broken
-arch by means of ladders. The play of the mine which was effectual,
-checked the advance of the French for an instant, but suddenly
-a horseman darting out at full speed from the column, rode down
-under a flight of bullets, to the bridge, calling out that he was a
-deserter; he reached the edge of the chasm made by the explosion,
-and then violently checking his foaming horse, held up his hands,
-exclaiming that he was a lost man, and with hurried accents asked if
-there was no ford near. The good-natured soldiers pointed to one a
-little way off and the gallant fellow having looked earnestly for a
-few moments as if to fix the exact point, wheeled his horse round,
-kissed his hand in derision, and bending over his saddle-bow dashed
-back to his own comrades, amidst showers of shot, and shouts of
-laughter from both sides. The next moment Maucune’s column covered
-by a concentrated fire of guns passed the river at the ford thus
-discovered, made some prisoners in the village, and lined the dry bed
-of the canal.
-
-Lord Wellington who came up at this instant immediately turned some
-guns upon the enemy and desired that the village and canal might be
-retaken; Oswald thought that they could not be held, yet Wellington,
-whose retreat was endangered by the presence of the enemy on that
-side of the river was peremptory; he ordered one brigade under
-general Barnes to attack the main body, while another brigade under
-general Pringle, cleared the canal, and he strengthened the left with
-the Spanish troops and Brunswickers. A very sharp fire of artillery
-and musquetry ensued, and the allies suffered some loss, especially
-by cannon-shot which from the other side of the river plumped into
-the reserves. The Spaniards, unequal to any regular movement, got
-into confusion, and were falling back, when their fiery countryman
-Miguel Alava, running to their head, with exhortation and example,
-for though wounded he would not retire, urged them forward to the
-fight; finally the enemy was driven over the river, the village was
-re-occupied in force, and the canal was lined by the allied troops.
-During these events at Villa Muriel, other troops attempted without
-success to seize the bridge of San Isidro, and the mine was exploded;
-but they were more fortunate at the bridge of Baños on the Pisuerga,
-for the mine there failed, and the French cavalry galloping over,
-made both the working and covering party prisoners.
-
-The strength of the position was now sapped, for Souham could
-assemble his army on the allies’ left, by Palencia, and force them to
-an action with their back upon the Pisuerga, or he could pass that
-river on his own left, and forestall them on the Duero at Tudela. If
-Wellington pushed his army over the Pisuerga by the bridge of Duenas,
-Souham, having the initial movement, might be first on the ground,
-and could attack the heads of the allied columns while Foy’s division
-came down on the rear. If Wellington, by a rapid movement along the
-right bank of the Pisuerga, endeavoured to cross at Cabezon, which
-was the next bridge in his rear, and so gain the Duero, Souham by
-moving along the left bank, might fall upon him while in march to
-the Duero, and hampered between that river the Pisuerga and the
-Esquevilla. An action under such circumstances would have been
-formidable, and the English general once cut off from the Duero must
-have retired through Valladolid and Simancas to Tordesillas, or Toro,
-giving up his communications with Hill. In this critical state of
-affairs Wellington made no delay. He kept good watch upon the left
-of the Pisuerga, and knowing that the ground there was rugged, and
-the roads narrow and bad, while on the right bank they were good and
-wide, sent his baggage in the night to Valladolid, and withdrawing
-the troops before day-break on the 26th, made a clean march of
-sixteen miles to Cabezon, where he passed to the left of the Pisuerga
-and barricaded and mined the bridge. Then sending a detachment to
-hold the bridge of Tudela on the Duero behind him, he caused the
-seventh division, under lord Dalhousie, to secure the bridges of
-Valladolid, Simancas, and Tordesillas. His retreat behind the Duero,
-which river was now in full water, being thus assured, he again
-halted, partly because the ground was favourable, partly to give the
-commissary-general Kennedy time for some indispensible arrangements.
-
-This functionary, who had gone to England sick in the latter end of
-1811, and had returned to the army only the day before the siege of
-Burgos was raised, in passing from Lisbon by Badajoz to Madrid, and
-thence to Burgos, discovered that the inexperience of the gentleman
-who conducted the department during his absence had been productive
-of some serious errors. The magazines established between Lisbon and
-Badajos, and from thence by Almaraz to the valley of the Tagus, for
-the supply of the army in Madrid, had not been removed again when
-the retreat commenced, and Soult would have found them full, if
-his march had been made rapidly on that side; on the other hand the
-magazines on the line of operations, between Lisbon and Salamanca,
-were nearly empty. Kennedy had therefore the double task on hand to
-remove the magazines from the south side of the Tagus, and to bring
-up stores upon the line of the present retreat; and his dispositions
-were not yet completed when Wellington desired him to take measures
-for the removal of the sick and wounded, and every other incumbrance,
-from Salamanca, promising to hold his actual position on the Pisuerga
-until the operation was effected. Now there was sufficient means of
-transport for the occasion, but the negligence of many medical and
-escorting officers, conducting the convoys of sick to the rear, and
-the consequent bad conduct of the soldiers, for where the officers
-are careless the soldiers will be licentious, produced the worst
-effects. Such outrages were perpetrated on the inhabitants along the
-whole line of march that terror was every where predominant, and the
-ill-used drivers and muleteers deserted, some with, some without
-their cattle, by hundreds. Hence Kennedy’s operation in some measure
-failed, the greatest distress was incurred, and the commissariat
-lost nearly the whole of the animals and carriages employed; the
-villages were abandoned, and the under-commissaries were bewildered,
-or paralyzed, by the terrible disorder thus spread along the line of
-communication.
-
-Souham having repaired the bridges on the Carion, resumed the pursuit
-on the 26th, by the right of the Pisuerga, being deterred probably
-from moving to the left bank, by the rugged nature of the ground, and
-by the king’s orders not to risk a serious action. In the morning
-of the 27th his whole army was collected in front of Cabezon, but he
-contented himself with a cannonade and a display of his force; the
-former cost the allies colonel Robe of the artillery, a practised
-officer and a worthy man; the latter enabled the English general,
-for the first time, to discover the numbers he had to contend with,
-and they convinced him that he could hold neither the Pisuerga
-nor the Duero permanently. However his object being to gain time,
-he held his position, and when the French, leaving a division in
-front of Cabezon, extended their right, by Cigales and Valladolid,
-to Simancas, he caused the bridges at the two latter places to be
-destroyed in succession.
-
-Congratulating himself that he had not fought in front of Burgos with
-so powerful an army, Wellington now resolved to retire behind the
-Duero and finally, if pressed, behind the Tormes. But as the troops
-on the Tagus would then be exposed to a flank attack, similar to
-that which the siege of Burgos had been raised to avoid on his own
-part; and as this would be more certain if any ill fortune befell
-the troops on the Duero, he ordered Hill to relinquish the defence
-of the Tagus at once and retreat, giving him a discretion as to the
-line, but desiring him, if possible, to come by the Guadarama passes;
-for he designed, if all went well, to unite on the Adaja river in a
-central position, intending to keep Souham in check with a part of
-his army, and with the remainder to fall upon Soult.
-
-[Sidenote: See plan 5.]
-
-On the 28th Souham, still extending his right, with a view to
-dislodge the allies by turning their left, endeavoured to force
-the bridges at Valladolid and Simancas on the Pisuerga, and that
-of Tordesillas on the Duero. The first was easily defended by the
-main body of the seventh division, but Halket, an able officer,
-finding the French strong and eager at the second, destroyed it, and
-detached the regiment of Brunswick Oels to ruin that of Tordesillas.
-It was done in time, and a tower behind the ruins was occupied by
-a detachment, while the remainder of the Brunswickers took post
-in a pine-wood at some distance. The French arrived and seemed
-for some time at a loss, but very soon sixty French officers and
-non-commissioned officers, headed by captain Guingret, a daring man,
-formed a small raft to hold their arms and clothes, and then plunged
-into the water, holding their swords with their teeth, and swimming
-and pushing their raft before them. Under protection of a cannonade,
-they thus crossed this great river, though it was in full and strong
-water, and the weather very cold, and having reached the other side,
-naked as they were, stormed the tower. The Brunswick regiment then
-abandoned its position, and these gallant soldiers remained masters
-of the bridge.
-
-Wellington having heard of the attack at Simancas, and having seen
-the whole French army in march to its right along the hill beyond
-the Pisuerga on the evening of the 28th, destroyed the bridges at
-Valladolid and Cabeçon, and crossed the Duero at Tudela and Puente de
-Duero on the 29th, but scarcely had he effected this operation when
-intelligence of Guingret’s splendid action at Tordesillas reached
-him. With the instant decision of a great captain he marched by his
-left, and having reached the heights between Rueda and Tordesillas
-on the 30th, fronted the enemy and forbad further progress on that
-point; the bridge was indeed already repaired by the French, but
-Souham’s main body had not yet arrived, and Wellington’s menacing
-position was too significant to be misunderstood. The bridges of Toro
-and Zamora were now destroyed by detachments, and though the French,
-spreading along the river bank, commenced repairing the former, the
-junction with Hill’s army was insured; and the English general,
-judging that the bridge of Toro could not be restored for several
-days, even hoped to maintain the line of the Duero permanently,
-because he expected that Hill, of whose operations it is now time to
-speak, would be on the Adaja by the 3d of November.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-FRENCH PASSAGE OF THE TAGUS—RETREAT FROM MADRID.
-
-
-[Sidenote: 1812. October.]
-
-[Sidenote: See Plan 6.]
-
-King Joseph’s first intention was to unite a great part of Suchet’s
-forces as well as Soult’s with his own, and Soult, probably
-influenced by a false report that Ballesteros had actually reached La
-Mancha, urged this measure. Suchet resisted, observing that Valencia
-must be defended against the increasing power of the Anglo-Sicilian
-and Spanish armies at Alicant, and the more so that, until the French
-army could cross the Tagus and open a new line of communication with
-Zaragoza, Valencia would be the only base for the king’s operations.
-Joseph then resolved to incorporate a portion of the army of the
-south with the army of the centre, giving the command to Drouet, who
-was to move by the road of Cuenca and Tarancon towards the Tagus; but
-this arrangement, which seems to have been dictated by a desire to
-advance Drouet’s authority, was displeasing to Soult. He urged that
-his army, so powerfully constituted, physically and morally, as to
-be the best in the Peninsula, owed its excellence to its peculiar
-organization and it would be dangerous to break that up. Nor was
-there any good reason for this change; for if Joseph only wished to
-have a strong body of troops on the Cuenca road, the army of the
-centre could be reinforced with one or two divisions, and the whole
-could unite again on the Tagus without injury to the army of the
-south. It would however be better, he said, to incorporate the army
-of the centre with the army of the south and march altogether by the
-road of San Clemente, leaving only a few troops on the Cuenca road,
-who might be reinforced by Suchet. But if the king’s plan arose from
-a desire to march in person with a large body he could do so with
-greater dignity by joining the army of the south, which was to act on
-the main line of operations. Joseph’s reply was a peremptory order to
-obey or retire to France, and Drouet marched to Cuenca.
-
-[Sidenote: Imperial muster-rolls, MSS.]
-
-[Sidenote: Joseph’s correspondence, MSS.]
-
-[Sidenote: Official papers from the Bureau de la Guerre, MSS.]
-
-Soult’s army furnished thirty-five thousand infantry, six thousand
-excellent cavalry under arms with seventy-two guns, making with the
-artillery-men a total of forty-six thousand veteran combatants.
-The army of the centre including the king’s guards furnished about
-twelve thousand, of which two thousand were good cavalry with twelve
-guns. Thus fifty-eight thousand fighting men, eight thousand being
-cavalry, with eighty-four pieces of artillery, were put in motion
-to drive Hill from the Tagus. Joseph’s project was to pass that
-river, and operate against Wellington’s rear, if he should continue
-the siege of Burgos; but if he concentrated on the Tagus, Souham
-was in like manner to operate on his rear by Aranda de Duero, and
-the Somosierra, sending detachments towards Guadalaxara to be met
-by other detachments, coming from the king through Sacedon. Finally
-if Wellington, as indeed happened, should abandon both Burgos and
-Madrid, the united French forces were to drive him into Portugal.
-The conveying of Soult’s convoys of sick men to Valencia and other
-difficulties, retarded the commencement of operations to the
-king’s great discontent, and meanwhile he became very uneasy for
-his supplies, because the people of La Mancha, still remembering
-Montbrun’s devastations, were flying with their beasts and grain, and
-from frequent repetition, were become exceedingly expert in evading
-the researches of the foragers. Such however is the advantage of
-discipline and order, that while La Mancha was thus desolated from
-fear, confidence and tranquillity reigned in Valencia.
-
-However on the 18th of October Joseph marched from Requeña upon
-Cuenca, where he found Drouet with a division of Soult’s infantry
-and some cavalry. He then proceeded to Tarancon, which was the only
-artillery road, on that side, leading to the Tagus, and during this
-time Soult marched by San Clemente upon Ocaña and Aranjuez. General
-Hill immediately sent that notice to Lord Wellington which caused
-the retreat, from Burgos, but he was in no fear of the enemy, for
-he had withdrawn all his outposts and united his whole force behind
-the Tagus. His right was at Toledo, his left at Fuente Dueñas, and
-there were Spanish and Portuguese troops in the valley of the Tagus
-extending as far as Talavera. The Tagus was however fordable, from
-its junction with the Jarama near Aranjuez, upwards; and moreover,
-this part of the line, weak from its extent, could not easily be
-supported, and the troops guarding it, would have been too distant
-from the point of action if the French should operate against Toledo.
-Hill therefore drew his left behind the Tajuna which is a branch
-of the Jarama, and running nearly parallel to the Tagus. His right
-occupied very strong ground from Añover to Toledo, he destroyed the
-bridges at Aranjuez, and securing that below the confluence of the
-Jarama and Henares, called the Puente Larga, threw one of boats over
-the former river a little above Bayona. The light division and Elio’s
-troops forming the extreme left were directed to march upon Arganda,
-and the head-quarters were fixed at Cienpozuelos.
-
-The bulk of the troops were thus held in hand, ready to move to any
-menaced point, and as Skerrit’s brigade had just arrived from Cadiz,
-there was, including the Spanish regulars, forty thousand men in
-line, and a multitude of partidas were hovering about. The lateral
-communications were easy and the scouts passing over the bridge of
-Toledo covered all the country beyond the Tagus. In this state of
-affairs the bridges at each end of the line furnished the means of
-sallying upon the flanks of any force attacking the front; the French
-must have made several marches to force the right, and on the left
-the Jarama with its marshy banks, and its many confluents, offered
-several positions, to interpose between the enemy and Madrid.
-
-[Sidenote: Soult’s official correspondence with the king, MSS.]
-
-Drouet passed the Tagus the 29th at the abandoned fords of Fuente
-Dueñas and Villa Maurique, and the king, with his guards, repaired to
-Zarza de la Cruz. Meanwhile Soult whose divisions were coming fast
-up to Ocaña, restored the bridge of Aranjuez, and passed the Tagus
-also with his advanced guard. On the 30th he attacked general Cole
-who commanded at the Puente Larga with several regiments and some
-guns, but though the mines failed and the French attempted to carry
-the bridge with the bayonet they were vigorously repulsed by the
-forty-seventh under Colonel Skerrit. After a heavy cannonade and a
-sharp musketry which cost the allies sixty men, Soult relinquished
-the attempt and awaited the arrival of his main body. Had the Puente
-Larga been forced, the fourth division which was at Añover would have
-been cut off from Madrid, but the weather being thick and rainy,
-Soult could not discover what supporting force was on the high land
-of Valdemoro behind the bridge and was afraid to push forward too
-fast.
-
-The king discontented with this cautious mode of proceeding now
-designed to operate by Toledo, but during the night the Puente
-Larga was abandoned, and Soult, being still in doubt of Hill’s real
-object, advised Joseph to unite the army of the centre at Arganda and
-Chinchon, throwing bridges for retreat at Villa Maurique and Fuente
-Dueñas as a precaution in case a battle should take place. Hill’s
-movement was however a decided retreat, which would have commenced
-twenty-four hours sooner but for the failure of the mines and the
-combat at the Puente Larga. Wellington’s orders had reached him at
-the moment when Soult first appeared on the Tagus, and the affair was
-so sudden, that the light division, which had just come from Alcala
-to Arganda to close the left of the position, was obliged, without
-halting, to return again in the night, the total journey being nearly
-forty miles.
-
-Wellington, foreseeing that it might be difficult for Hill to obey
-his instructions, had given him a discretionary power to retire
-either by the valley of the Tagus, or by the Guadarama; and a
-position taken up in the former, on the flank of the enemy, would
-have prevented the king from passing the Guadarama, and at the
-same time have covered Lisbon; whereas a retreat by the Guadarama
-exposed Lisbon. Hill, thinking the valley of the Tagus, in that
-advanced season, would not support the French army, and knowing
-Wellington to be pressed by superior forces in the north, chose the
-Guadarama. Wherefore, burning his pontoons, and causing La China
-and the stores remaining there to be destroyed in the night of the
-30th, he retreated by different roads, and united his army on the
-31st of October near Majadahonda. Meanwhile the magazines along the
-line of communication to Badajos were, as I have already noticed, in
-danger if the enemy had detached troops to seize them, neither were
-the removal and destruction of the stores in Madrid effected without
-disorders of a singular nature.
-
-The municipality had demanded all the provision remaining there as
-if they wanted them for the enemy, and when this was refused, they
-excited a mob to attack the magazines; some firing even took place,
-and the assistance of the fourth division was required to restore
-order; a portion of wheat was finally given to the poorest of the
-people, and Madrid was abandoned. It was affecting to see the earnest
-and true friendship of the population. Men and women, and children,
-crowded around the troops bewailing their departure. They moved with
-them in one vast mass, for more than two miles, and left their houses
-empty at the very instant when the French cavalry scouts were at the
-gates on the other side. This emotion was distinct from political
-feeling, because there was a very strong French party in Madrid; and
-amongst the causes of wailing the return of the plundering and cruel
-partidas, unchecked by the presence of the British, was very loudly
-proclaimed. The “Madrileños” have been stigmatized as a savage
-and faithless people, the British army found them patient, gentle,
-generous, and loyal; nor is this fact to be disputed, because of the
-riot which occurred in the destruction of the magazines, for the
-provisions had been obtained by requisition from the country around
-Madrid, under an agreement with the Spanish government to pay at the
-end of the war; and it was natural for the people, excited as they
-were by the authorities, to endeavour to get their own flour back,
-rather than have it destroyed when they were starving.
-
-With the Anglo-Portuguese troops marched Penne Villemur, Morillo, and
-Carlos D’España, and it was Wellington’s wish that Elio, Bassecour,
-and Villa Campa should now throw themselves into the valley of the
-Tagus, and crossing the bridge of Arzobispo, join Ballesteros’s army,
-now under Virues. A great body of men, including the Portuguese
-regiments left by Hill in Estremadura, would thus have been placed on
-the flank of any French army marching upon Lisbon, and if the enemy
-neglected this line, the Spaniards could operate against Madrid or
-against Suchet at pleasure. Elio, however, being cut off from Hill by
-the French advance, remained at the bridge of Auñion, near Sacedon,
-and was there joined by Villa Campa and the Empecinado.
-
-Soult now brought up his army as quickly as possible to Valdemoro,
-and his information, as to Hill’s real force, was becoming more
-distinct; but there was also a rumour that Wellington was close at
-hand with three British divisions, and the French general’s movements
-were consequently cautious, lest he should find himself suddenly
-engaged in battle before his whole force was collected, for his rear
-was still at Ocaña, and the army of the centre had not yet passed
-the Tajuña. This disposition of his troops was probably intentional
-to prevent the king from fighting, for Soult did not think this a
-fitting time for a great battle unless upon great advantage. In the
-disjointed state of their affairs, a defeat would have been more
-injurious to the French than a victory would have been beneficial;
-the former would have lost Spain, the latter would not have gained
-Portugal.
-
-[Sidenote: November.]
-
-On the 1st of November, the bulk of Soult’s army being assembled at
-Getafé, he sent scouting parties in all directions to feel for the
-allies, and to ascertain the direction of their march; the next day
-the army of the centre and that of the south were reunited not far
-from Madrid, but Hill was then in full retreat for the Guadarama
-covered by a powerful rear-guard under general Cole.
-
-The 3d Soult pursued the allies, and the king entering Madrid, placed
-a garrison in the Retiro for the protection of his court and of the
-Spanish families attached to his cause; this was a sensible relief,
-for hitherto in one great convoy they had impeded the movements of
-the army of the centre. On the 4th Joseph rejoined Soult at the
-Guadarama with his guards, which always moved as a separate body; but
-he had left Palombini beyond the Tagus near Tarancon to scour the
-roads on the side of Cuenca, and some dragoons being sent towards
-Huete were surprised by the partidas, and lost forty men, whereupon
-Palombini rejoined the army.
-
-[Sidenote: See Plans 3 and 5.]
-
-General Hill was moving upon Arevalo, slowly followed by the French,
-when fresh orders from Wellington, founded on new combinations,
-changed the direction of his march. Souham had repaired the bridge
-of Toro on the 4th, several days sooner than the English general
-had expected, and thus when he was keenly watching for the arrival
-of Hill on the Adaja, that he might suddenly join him and attack
-Soult, his designs were again baffled; for he dared not make such a
-movement lest Souham, possessing both Toro and Tordesillas, should
-fall upon his rear; neither could he bring up Hill to the Duero
-and attack Souham, because he had no means to pass that river, and
-meanwhile Soult moving by Fontiveros would reach the Tormes. Seeing
-then that his combinations had failed, and his central position no
-longer available, either for offence or defence, he directed Hill to
-gain Alba de Tormes at once by the road of Fontiveros, and on the 6th
-he fell back himself, from his position in front of Tordesillas, by
-Naval del Rey and Pituega to the heights of San Christoval.
-
-Joseph, thinking to prevent Hill’s junction with Wellington, had
-gained Arevalo by the Segovia road on the 5th and 6th; the 8th
-Souham’s scouts were met with at Medina del Campo, and for the first
-time, since he had quitted Valencia, the king obtained news of the
-army of Portugal. One hundred thousand combatants, of which above
-twelve thousand were cavalry, with a hundred and thirty pieces of
-artillery, were thus assembled on those plains over which, three
-months before, Marmont had marched with so much confidence to his own
-destruction. Soult then expelled from Andalusia by Marmont’s defeat,
-was now, after having made half the circuit of the Peninsula, come
-to drive into Portugal, that very army whose victory had driven him
-from the south; and thus, as Wellington had foreseen and foretold,
-the acquisition of Andalusia, politically important and useful to
-the cause, proved injurious to himself at the moment, insomuch as the
-French had concentrated a mighty power, from which it required both
-skill and fortune to escape. Meanwhile the Spanish armies let loose
-by this union of all the French troops, kept aloof, or coming to aid,
-were found a burthen, rather than a help.
-
-[Sidenote: Joseph’s correspondence, MSS.]
-
-On the 7th Hill’s main body passed the Tormes, at Alba, and the
-bridge there was mined; the light division and Long’s cavalry
-remained on the right bank during the night but the next day the
-former also crossed the river. Wellington himself was in the position
-of San Christoval, and it is curious, that the king, even at this
-late period, was doubtful if Ballesteros’s troops had or had not
-joined the allied army at Avila. Wellington also was still uncertain
-of the real numbers of the enemy, but he was desirous to maintain the
-line of the Tormes permanently, and to give his troops repose. He had
-made a retreat of two hundred miles; Hill had made one of the same
-distance besides his march from Estremadura; Skerrit’s people had
-come from Cadiz, and the whole army required rest, for the soldiers,
-especially those who besieged Burgos, had been in the field, with
-scarcely an interval of repose, since January; they were bare-footed,
-and their equipments were spoiled, the cavalry were becoming weak,
-their horses were out of condition, and the discipline of all was
-failing.
-
-The excesses committed on the retreat from Burgos have already been
-touched upon, and during the first day’s march from the Tagus to
-Madrid, some of general Hill’s men had not behaved better. Five
-hundred of the rear-guard under Cole, chiefly of one regiment,
-finding the inhabitants had fled according to their custom whichever
-side was approaching, broke open the houses, plundered and got drunk.
-A multitude were left in the cellars of Valdemoro, and two hundred
-and fifty fell into the hands of the enemy. The rest of the retreat
-being unmolested, was made with more regularity, but the excesses
-still committed by some of the soldiers were glaring and furnished
-proof that the moral conduct of a general cannot be fairly judged
-by following in the wake of a retreating army. On this occasion
-there was no want of provisions, no hardships to exasperate the men,
-and yet I the author of this history, counted on the first day’s
-march from Madrid, seventeen bodies of murdered peasants; by whom
-killed, or for what, whether by English, or Germans, by Spaniards, or
-Portuguese, whether in dispute, in robbery, or in wanton villainy,
-I know not, but their bodies were in the ditches, and a shallow
-observer might thence have drawn the most foul and false conclusions
-against the English general and nation.
-
-Another notable thing was the discontent of the veteran troops with
-the arrangements of the staff officers. For the assembling of the
-sick men, at the place and time prescribed to form the convoys, was
-punctually attended to by the regimental officers; not so by the
-others, nor by the commissaries who had charge to provide the means
-of transport; hence delay and great suffering to the sick and the
-wearing out of the healthy men’s strength by waiting with their packs
-on for the negligent. And when the light division was left on the
-right bank of the Tormes to cover the passage at Alba, a prudent
-order that all baggage or other impediments, should pass rapidly
-over the narrow bridge at that place without halting at all on the
-enemy’s side, was, by those charged with the execution, so rigorously
-interpreted, as to deprive the light division of their ration
-bullocks and flour mules, at the very moment of distribution; and
-the tired soldiers, thus absurdly denied their food, had the farther
-mortification to see a string of commissariat carts deliberately
-passing their post many hours afterwards. All regimental officers
-know that the anger and discontent thus created is one of the surest
-means of ruining the discipline of an army, and it is in these
-particulars that the value of a good and experienced staff is found.
-
-Lord Wellington’s position extended from Christoval to Aldea Lengua
-on the right bank of the Tormes, and on the left of that river, to
-the bridge of Alba, where the castle which was on the right bank was
-garrisoned by Howard’s brigade of the second division. Hamilton’s
-Portuguese were on the left bank as a reserve for Howard; the
-remainder of the second division watched the fords of Huerta and
-Enciña, and behind them in second line the third and fourth divisions
-occupied the heights of Calvariza de Ariba. The light division and
-the Spanish infantry entered Salamanca, the cavalry were disposed
-beyond the Tormes, covering all the front, and thus posted, the
-English general desired to bring affairs to the decision of a battle.
-For the heights of Christoval were strong and compact, the position
-of the Arapiles on the other side of the Tormes was glorious as well
-as strong, and the bridge of Salamanca, and the fords furnished the
-power of concentrating on either side of that river by a shorter line
-than the enemy could move upon.
-
-But while Wellington prepared for a battle, he also looked to a
-retreat. His sick were sent to the rear, small convoys of provisions
-were ordered up from Ciudad Rodrigo to certain halting places between
-that place and Salamanca; the overplus of ammunition in the latter
-town was destroyed daily by small explosions, and large stores of
-clothing, of arms and accoutrements, were delivered to the Spanish
-troops, who were thus completely furnished; one hour after the
-English general had the mortification to see them selling their
-equipments even under his own windows. Indeed Salamanca presented
-an extraordinary scene, and the Spaniards, civil and military,
-began to evince hatred of the British. Daily did they attempt or
-perpetrate murder, and one act of peculiar atrocity merits notice. A
-horse, led by an English soldier, being frightened, backed against
-a Spanish officer commanding at a gate, he caused the soldier to
-be dragged into his guard-house and there bayonetted him in cold
-blood, and no redress could be had for this or other crimes, save
-by counter-violence, which was not long withheld. A Spanish officer
-while wantonly stabbing at a rifleman was shot dead by the latter;
-and a British volunteer slew a Spanish officer at the head of his own
-regiment in a sword-fight, the troops of both nations looking on, but
-here there was nothing dishonourable on either side.
-
-The civil authorities, not less savage, were more insolent than
-the military, treating every English person with an intolerable
-arrogance. Even the prince of Orange was like to have lost his
-life; for upon remonstrating about quarters with the sitting junta,
-they ordered one of their guards to kill him; and he would have
-been killed had not Mr. Steele of the forty-third, a bold athletic
-person, felled the man before he could stab; yet both the prince and
-his defender were obliged to fly instantly to avoid the soldier’s
-comrades. The exasperation caused by these things was leading to
-serious mischief when the enemy’s movements gave another direction to
-the soldiers’ passions.
-
-On the 9th Long’s cavalry had been driven in upon Alba, and on the
-10th Soult opened a concentrated fire of eighteen guns against that
-place. The castle, which crowned a bare and rocky knoll, had been
-hastily entrenched, and furnished scarcely any shelter from this
-tempest; for two hours the garrison could only reply with musketry,
-but finally it was aided by the fire of four pieces from the left
-bank of the river, and the post was defended until dark, with such
-vigour that the enemy dared not venture on an assault. During the
-night general Hamilton reinforced the garrison, repaired the damaged
-walls, and formed barricades, but the next morning after a short
-cannonade, and some musketry firing the enemy withdrew. This combat
-cost the allies above a hundred men.
-
-On the 11th the king coming up from Medina del Campo reorganized his
-army. That is, he united the army of the centre with the army of the
-south, placing the whole under Soult, and he removed Souham from the
-command of the army of Portugal to make way for Drouet. Caffarelli
-had before this returned to Burgos, with his divisions and guns, and
-as Souham, besides his losses and stragglers, had placed garrisons in
-Toro, Tordesillas, Zamora, and Valladolid; and as the king also, had
-left a garrison in the Retiro, scarcely ninety thousand combatants
-of all arms were assembled on the Tormes; but twelve thousand were
-cavalry, nearly all were veteran troops, and they had at least one
-hundred and twenty pieces of artillery. Such a mighty power could
-not remain idle, for the country was exhausted of provisions, the
-soldiers were already wanting bread, and the king, eager enough
-for battle, for he was of a brave spirit and had something of his
-brother’s greatness of soul, sought counsel how to deliver it with
-most advantage.
-
-[Sidenote: Appendix, No. 9.]
-
-Jourdan with a martial fire unquenched by age, was for bringing
-affairs to a crisis by the boldest and shortest mode. He had observed
-that Wellington’s position was composed of three parts, namely, the
-right at Alba; the centre at Calvariza Ariba; the left, separated
-from the centre by the Tormes, at San Christoval; the whole distance
-being about fifteen miles. Now the Tormes was still fordable in many
-places above Salamanca, and hence he proposed to assemble the French
-army in the night, pass the river at day-break, by the fords between
-Villa Gonzalo and Huerta, and so make a concentrated attack upon
-Calvariza de Ariba, which would force Wellington to a decisive battle.
-
-[Sidenote: French Official correspondence, MSS.]
-
-Soult opposed this project, he objected to attacking Wellington in a
-position which he was so well acquainted with, which he might have
-fortified, and where the army must fight its way, even from the
-fords, to gain room for an order of battle. He proposed instead, to
-move by the left to certain fords, three in number, between Exéme and
-Galisancho, some seven or eight miles above Alba de Tormes. They were
-easy in themselves, he said, and well suited from the conformation of
-the banks, for forcing a passage if it should be disputed; and by
-making a slight circuit the troops in march could not be seen by the
-enemy. Passing there, the French army would gain two marches upon the
-allies, would be placed upon their flank and rear, and could fight
-on ground chosen by its own generals, instead of delivering battle
-on ground chosen by the enemy; or it could force on an action in a
-new position whence the allies could with difficulty retire in the
-event of disaster. Wellington must then fight to disadvantage, or
-retire hastily, sacrificing part of his army to save the rest; and
-the effect, whether militarily or politically, would be the same as
-if he was beaten by a front attack. Jourdan replied, that this was
-prudent, and might be successful if Wellington accepted battle, but
-that general could not thereby be forced to fight, which was the
-great object; he would have time to retreat before the French could
-reach the line of his communications with Ciudad Rodrigo, and it was
-even supposed by some generals that he would retreat to Almeida at
-once by San Felices and Barba de Puerco.
-
-[Sidenote: Letter to the king, MS.]
-
-Neither Soult nor Jourdan knew the position of the Arapiles in
-detail, and the former, though he urged his own plan, offered
-to yield if the king was so inclined. Jourdan’s proposition was
-supported by all the generals of the army of Portugal, except
-Clausel who leaned to Soult’s opinion; but as that marshal commanded
-two-thirds of the army, while Jourdan had no ostensible command, the
-question was finally decided agreeably to his counsel. Nor is it easy
-to determine which was right, for though Jourdan’s reasons were very
-strong, and the result did not bear out Soult’s views, we shall find
-the failure was only in the execution. Nevertheless it would seem
-so great an army and so confident, for the French soldiers eagerly
-demanded a battle, should have grappled in the shortest way; a just
-and rapid development of Jourdan’s plan would probably have cut off
-Hamilton’s Portuguese and the brigade in the castle of Alba, from
-Calvariza Ariba.
-
-[Sidenote: Letter to lord Liverpool, MS.]
-
-On the other hand, Wellington, who was so well acquainted with his
-ground, desired a battle on either side of the Tormes; his hope was
-indeed to prevent the passage of that river until the rains rendered
-it unfordable, and thus force the French to retire from want of
-provisions, or engage him on the position of Christoval; yet he also
-courted a fight on the Arapiles, those rocky monuments of his former
-victory. He had sixty-eight thousand combatants under arms, fifty-two
-thousand of which, including four thousand British cavalry, were
-Anglo-Portuguese, and he had nearly seventy guns. This force he had
-so disposed, that besides Hamilton’s Portuguese, three divisions
-guarded the fords, which were moreover defended by entrenchments,
-and the whole army might have been united in good time upon the
-strong ridges of Calvariza Ariba, and on the two Arapiles, where the
-superiority of fifteen thousand men would scarcely have availed the
-French. A defeat would only have sent the allies to Portugal, whereas
-a victory would have taken them once more to Madrid. To draw in
-Hamilton’s Portuguese, and the troops from Alba, in time, would have
-been the vital point; but as the French, if they did not surprise the
-allies, must have fought their way up from the river, this danger
-might have proved less than could have been supposed at first view.
-In fine the general was Wellington and he knew his ground.
-
-
-FRENCH PASSAGE OF THE TORMES. RETREAT TO CIUDAD RODRIGO.
-
-Soult’s plan being adopted, the troops in the distant quarters were
-brought up; the army of Portugal was directed to make frequent
-demonstrations against Christoval, Aldea Lengua, and the fords
-between Huerta and Alba; the road over the hills to the Galisancho
-fords was repaired, and two trestle-bridges were constructed for the
-passage of the artillery. The design was to push over the united
-armies of the centre and the south, by these fords; and if this
-operation should oblige the allies to withdraw from Alba de Tormes,
-the army of Portugal was to pass by the bridge at that place and by
-the fords, and assail Wellington’s rear; but if the allies maintained
-Alba, Drouet was to follow Soult at Galisancho.
-
-At day-break on the 14th the bridges were thrown, the cavalry and
-infantry passed by the fords, the allies’ outposts were driven back,
-and Soult took a position at Mozarbes, having the road from Alba to
-Tamames, under his left flank. Meanwhile Wellington remained too
-confidently in Salamanca, and when the first report informed him
-that the enemy were over the Tormes, made the caustic observation,
-that he would not recommend it to some of them. Soon, however, the
-concurrent testimony of many reports convinced him of his mistake,
-he galloped to the Arapiles, and having ascertained the direction of
-Soult’s march drew off the second division, the cavalry, and some
-guns to attack the head of the French column. The fourth division and
-Hamilton’s Portuguese remained at Alba, to protect this movement; the
-third division secured the Arapiles rocks until the troops from San
-Christoval should arrive; and Wellington was still so confident to
-drive the French back over the Tormes, that the bulk of the troops
-did not quit San Christoval that day. Nevertheless when he reached
-Mozarbes, he found the French, already assembled there, too strong to
-be seriously meddled with. However under cover of a cannonade, which
-kept off their cavalry, he examined their position, which extended
-from Mozarbes to the heights of Nuestra Señora de Utiero, and it was
-so good that the evil was without remedy; wherefore drawing off the
-troops from Alba, and destroying the bridge, he left three hundred
-Spaniards in the castle, with orders, if the army retired the next
-day, to abandon the place and save themselves as they best could.
-
-During the night and the following morning the allied army was
-united in the position of the Arapiles, and Wellington still hoped
-the French would give battle there; yet he placed the first division
-at Aldea Tejada, on the Junguen stream, to secure that passage in
-case Soult should finally oblige him to choose between Salamanca and
-Ciudad Rodrigo. Meantime the army of Portugal finding the bridge
-of Alba broken, and the castle occupied, crossed the Tormes at
-Galisancho, and moved up to the ridge of Señora de Utiera; Soult,
-who had commenced fortifying Mozarbes, extended his left at the same
-time to the height of Señora de la Buena, near the Ciudad Rodrigo
-road, yet slowly because the ground was heavy, deep, and the many
-sources of the Junguen and the Valmusa streams were fast filling from
-the rain and impeded his march. This evolution was nearly the same
-as that practised by the duke of Ragusa at the battle of Salamanca;
-but it was made on a wider circle, by a second range of heights
-enclosing as it were those by which the duke of Ragusa moved on that
-day, and consequently, beyond the reach of such a sudden attack and
-catastrophe. The result in each case was remarkable. Marmont closing
-with a short quick turn, a falcon striking at an eagle, received a
-buffet that broke his pinions, and spoiled his flight. Soult, a wary
-kite, sailing slowly and with a wide wheel to seize a helpless prey,
-lost it altogether.
-
-About two o’clock lord Wellington, feeling himself too weak to
-attack, and seeing the French cavalry pointing to the Ciudad Rodrigo
-road, judged the king’s design was to establish a fortified head
-of cantonments at Mozarbes, and then operate against the allies’
-communication with Ciudad Rodrigo; wherefore suddenly casting his
-army into three columns, he crossed the Junguen, and then covering
-his left flank with his cavalry and guns, defiled, in order of
-battle, before the enemy at little more than cannon-shot. With a
-wonderful boldness and facility, and good fortune also, for there was
-a thick fog and a heavy rain which rendered the bye-ways and fields,
-by which the enemy moved, nearly impassable, while the allies had the
-use of the high roads, he carried his whole army in one mass quite
-round the French left: thus he gained the Valmusa river, where he
-halted for the night, in the rear of those who had been threatening
-him in front, only a few hours before. This exploit was certainly
-surprising, but it was not creditable to the generalship on either
-side; for first it may be asked why the English commander, having
-somewhat carelessly suffered Soult to pass the Tormes and turn his
-position, waited so long on the Arapiles as to render this dangerous
-movement necessary, a movement which a combination of bad roads, bad
-weather, and want of vigour on the other side, rendered possible and
-no more.
-
-It has been said, that the only drawback to the duke of Dalmatia’s
-genius, is his want of promptness to strike at the decisive moment.
-It is certainly a great thing to fight a great battle; and against
-such a general as Wellington, and such troops as the British, a man
-may well be excused, if he thinks twice, ere he puts his life and
-fame, and the lives and fame of thousands of his countrymen, the weal
-or woe of nations, upon the hazard of an event, which may be decided
-by the existence of a ditch five feet wide, or the single blunder
-of a single fool, or the confusion of a coward, or by any other
-circumstance however trivial. To make such a throw for such a stake
-is no light matter. It is no mean consideration, that the praise or
-the hatred of nations, universal glory or universal, perhaps eternal
-contempt, waits on an action, the object of which may be more safely
-gained by other means, for in war there is infinite variety. But in
-this case it is impossible not to perceive, that the French general
-vacillated after the passage of the river, purposely perhaps to avoid
-an action, since, as I have before shown, he thought it unwise, in
-the disjointed state of the French affairs and without any fixed
-base or reserves in case of defeat, to fight a decisive battle. Nor
-do I blame this prudence, for though it be certain that he who would
-be great in war must be daring, to set all upon one throw belongs
-only to an irresponsible chief, not to a lieutenant whose task is
-but a portion of the general plan; neither is it wise, in monarch
-or general, to fight when all may be lost by defeat, unless all may
-be won by victory. However, the king, more unfettered than Soult,
-desired a battle, and with an army so good and numerous, the latter’s
-prudence seems misplaced; he should have grappled with his enemy,
-and, once engaged at any point, Wellington could not have continued
-his retreat, especially with the Spaniards, who were incapable of
-dexterous movements.
-
-On the 16th the allies retired by the three roads which lead across
-the Matilla stream, through Tamames, San Munos, and Martin del Rio,
-to Ciudad Rodrigo; the light division and the cavalry closed the
-rear, and the country was a forest, penetrable in all directions.
-The army bivouacked in the evening behind the Matilla stream; but
-though this march was not more than twelve miles, the stragglers
-were numerous, for the soldiers meeting with vast herds of swine,
-quitted their colours by hundreds to shoot them, and such a rolling
-musketry echoed through the forest, that Wellington at first thought
-the enemy was upon him. It was in vain that the staff officers rode
-about to stop this disgraceful practice, which had indeed commenced
-the evening before; it was in vain that Wellington himself caused
-two offenders to be hanged, the hungry soldiers still broke from the
-columns, the property of whole districts was swept away in a few
-hours, and the army was in some degree placed at the mercy of the
-enemy. The latter however were contented to glean the stragglers, of
-whom they captured two thousand, and did not press the rear until
-evening near Matilla where their lancers fell on, but were soon
-checked by the light companies of the twenty-eighth, and afterwards
-charged by the fourteenth dragoons.
-
-The 17th presented a different yet a not less curious scene. During
-the night the cavalry immediately in front of the light division,
-had, for some unknown reason, filed off by the flanks to the rear
-without giving any intimation to the infantry, who, trusting to the
-horsemen, had thrown out their picquets at a very short distance in
-front. At day-break, while the soldiers were rolling their blankets
-and putting on their accoutrements, some strange horsemen were seen
-in the rear of the bivouac and were at first taken for Spaniards, but
-very soon their cautious movements and vivacity of gestures, shewed
-them to be French; the troops stood to arms, and in good time, for
-five hundred yards in front, the wood opened on to a large plain
-on which, in place of the British cavalry, eight thousand French
-horsemen were discovered advancing in one solid mass, yet carelessly
-and without suspecting the vicinity of the British. The division was
-immediately formed in columns, a squadron of the fourteenth dragoons
-and one of the German hussars came hastily up from the rear, Julian
-Sanchez’ cavalry appeared in small parties on the right flank, and
-every precaution was taken to secure the retreat. This checked the
-enemy, but as the infantry fell back, the French though fearing to
-approach their heavy masses in the wood, sent many squadrons to the
-right and left, some of which rode on the flanks near enough to bandy
-wit, in the Spanish tongue, with the British soldiers, who marched
-without firing. Very soon however the signs of mischief became
-visible, the road was strewed with baggage, and the bât-men came
-running in for protection, some wounded, some without arms, and all
-breathless as just escaped from a surprise. The thickness of the
-forest had enabled the French horsemen to pass along unperceived on
-the flanks of the line of march, and, as opportunity offered, they
-galloped from side to side, sweeping away the baggage and sabring the
-conductors and guards; they had even menaced one of the columns but
-were checked by the fire of the artillery. In one of these charges
-general Paget was carried off, as it were from the midst of his own
-men, and it might have been Wellington’s fortune, for he also was
-continually riding between the columns and without an escort. However
-the main body of the army soon passed the Huebra river and took post
-behind it, the right at Tamames, the left near Boadilla, the centre
-at San Munoz, Buena Barba, and Gallego de Huebra.
-
-When the light division arrived at the edge of the table-land, which
-overhangs the fords at the last-named place, the French cavalry
-suddenly thickened, and the sharp whistle of musket-bullets with the
-splintering of branches on the left showed that their infantry were
-also up. Soult in the hope of forestalling the allies at Tamames,
-had pushed his columns towards that place, by a road leading from
-Salamanca through Vecinos, but finding Hill’s troops in his front
-turned short to his right in hopes to cut off the rear-guard, which
-led to the
-
-
-COMBAT OF THE HUEBRA.
-
-The English and German cavalry, warned by the musketry, crossed the
-fords in time, and the light division should have followed without
-delay; because the forest ended on the edge of the table-land, and
-the descent from thence to the river, about eight hundred yards,
-was open and smooth, and the fords of the Huebra were deep. Instead
-of taking the troops down quickly, an order, more respectful to the
-enemy’s cavalry than to his infantry, was given to form squares.
-The officers looked at each other in amazement but at that moment
-Wellington fortunately appeared, and under his directions the
-battalions instantly glided off to the fords, leaving four companies
-of the forty-third and one of the riflemen to cover the passage.
-These companies, spreading as skirmishers, were immediately assailed
-in front and on both flanks, and with such a fire that it was evident
-a large force was before them; moreover a driving rain and mist
-prevented them from seeing their adversaries, and being pressed
-closer each moment, they gathered by degrees at the edge of the
-wood, where they maintained their ground for a quarter of an hour,
-then seeing the division was beyond the river, they swiftly cleared
-the open slope of the hill, and passed the fords under a very sharp
-musketry. Only twenty-seven soldiers fell, for the tempest, beating
-in the Frenchmen’s faces, baffled their aim, and Ross’s guns, playing
-from the low ground with grape, checked the pursuit, but the deep
-bellowing of thirty pieces of heavy French artillery showed how
-critically timed was the passage.
-
-The banks of the Huebra were steep and broken, but the enemy spread
-his infantry to the right and left along the edge of the forest,
-making demonstrations on every side, and there were several fords
-to be guarded; the fifty-second and the Portuguese defended those
-below, Ross’s guns supported by the riflemen and the forty-third
-defended those above, and behind the right of the light division,
-on higher ground was the seventh division. The second division,
-Hamilton’s Portuguese, and a brigade of cavalry, were in front of
-Tamames, and thus the bulk of the army was massed on the right,
-hugging the Pena de Francia, and covering the roads leading to
-Ciudad, as well as those leading to the passes of the Gata hills.
-
-In this situation one brisk attempt made to force the fords guarded
-by the fifty-second, was vigorously repulsed by that regiment, but
-the skirmishing, and the cannonade, which never slackened, continued
-until dark; and heavily the French artillery played upon the light
-and seventh divisions. The former, forced to keep near the fords,
-and in column, lest a sudden rush of cavalry should carry off the
-guns on the flat ground, were plunged into at every round, yet
-suffered little loss, because the clayey soil, saturated with rain,
-swallowed the shot and smothered the shells; but it was a matter of
-astonishment to see the seventh division kept on open and harder
-ground by its commander, and in one huge mass tempting the havoc of
-this fire for hours, when a hundred yards in its rear the rise of the
-hill, and the thick forest, would have entirely covered it without in
-any manner weakening the position.
-
-On the 18th the army was to have drawn off before day-light, and the
-English general was anxious about the result, because the position
-of the Huebra, though good for defence, was difficult to remove from
-at this season; the roads were hollow and narrow, and led up a steep
-bank to a table-land, which was open, flat, marshy, and scored with
-water gullies; and from the overflowing of one of the streams the
-principal road was impassable a mile in rear of the position; hence
-to bring the columns off in time, without jostling, and if possible
-without being attacked, required a nice management. All the baggage
-and stores had marched in the night, with orders not to halt until
-they reached the high lands near Ciudad Rodrigo, but if the preceding
-days had produced some strange occurrences, the 18th was not less
-fertile in them.
-
-[Sidenote: Vol. I.]
-
-In a former part of this work it has been observed, that even the
-confirmed reputation of lord Wellington could not protect him from
-the vanity and presumption of subordinate officers. The allusion
-fixes here. Knowing that the most direct road was impassable, he
-had directed the divisions by another road, longer, and apparently
-more difficult; this seemed such an extraordinary proceeding to
-some general officers, that, after consulting together, they deemed
-their commander unfit to conduct the army, and led their troops
-by what appeared to them the fittest line of retreat! Meanwhile
-Wellington, who had, before day-light, placed himself at an important
-point on his own road, waited impatiently for the arrival of the
-leading division until dawn, and then suspecting something of what
-had happened, galloped to the other road and found the would-be
-commanders, stopped by that flood which his arrangements had been
-made to avoid. The insubordination, and the danger to the whole
-army, were alike glaring, yet the practical rebuke was so severe
-and well timed, the humiliation so complete, and so deeply felt,
-that, with one proud sarcastic observation, indicating contempt more
-than anger, he led back the troops and drew off all his forces
-safely. However some confusion and great danger still attended the
-operation, for even on this road one water-gully was so deep that
-the light division, which covered the rear, could only pass it man
-by man over a felled tree, and it was fortunate that Soult unable to
-feed his troops a day longer, stopped on the Huebra with his main
-body and only sent some cavalry to Tamames. Thus the allies retired
-unmolested, but whether from necessity, or from negligence in the
-subordinates, the means of transport were too scanty for the removal
-of the wounded men, most of whom were hurt by cannon-shot; many were
-left behind, and as the enemy never passed the Huebra at this point,
-those miserable creatures perished by a horrible and lingering death.
-
-The marshy plains, over which the army was now marching, exhausted
-the strength of the wearied soldiers, thousands straggled, the
-depredations on the herds of swine were repeated, and the temper of
-the army, generally, prognosticated the greatest misfortunes if the
-retreat should be continued. This was however the last day of trial,
-for towards evening the weather cleared up, the hills near Ciudad
-Rodrigo afforded dry bivouacs and fuel, the distribution of good
-rations restored the strength and spirits of the men, and the next
-day Ciudad Rodrigo and the neighbouring villages were occupied in
-tranquillity. The cavalry was then sent out to the forest, and being
-aided by Julian Sanchez’ Partidas, brought in from a thousand to
-fifteen hundred stragglers who must otherwise have perished. During
-these events Joseph occupied Salamanca, but colonel Miranda, the
-Spanish officer left at Alba de Tormes, held that place until the
-27th and then carried off his garrison in the night.
-
-[Sidenote: See Appendix, No. 9.]
-
-Thus ended the retreat from Burgos. The French gathered a good
-spoil of baggage; what the loss of the allies, in men, was, cannot
-be exactly determined, because no Spanish returns were ever seen.
-An approximation may however be easily made. According to the
-muster-rolls, the Anglo-Portuguese under Wellington, had about one
-thousand men killed, wounded, and missing between the 21st and 29th
-of October, which was the period of their crossing the Duero, but
-this only refers to loss in action; Hill’s loss between the Tagus
-and the Tormes was, including stragglers, about four hundred, and
-the defence of the castle of Alba de Tormes cost one hundred. Now if
-the Spanish regulars, and Partidas, marching with the two armies, be
-reckoned to have lost a thousand, which considering their want of
-discipline is not exaggerated, the whole loss, previous to the French
-passage of the Tormes, will amount perhaps to three thousand men. But
-the loss between the Tormes and the Agueda was certainly greater,
-for nearly three hundred were killed and wounded at the Huebra,
-many stragglers died in the woods, and we have marshal Jourdan’s
-testimony, that the prisoners, Spanish Portuguese and English,
-brought into Salamanca up to the 20th November, were three thousand
-five hundred and twenty. The whole loss of the double retreat cannot
-therefore be set down at less than nine thousand including the cost
-of men in the siege of Burgos.
-
-I have been the more precise on this point, because some French
-writers have spoken of ten thousand being taken between the Tormes
-and the Agueda, and general Souham estimated the previous loss,
-including the siege of Burgos, at seven thousand. But the king in his
-despatches called the whole loss twelve thousand, including therein
-the garrison of Chinchilla, and he observed that if the generals of
-cavalry, Soult and Tilley, had followed the allies vigorously from
-Salamanca, the loss would have been much greater. Certainly the
-army was so little pressed that none would have supposed the French
-horsemen were numerous. On the other hand English authors have most
-unaccountably reduced the British loss to as many hundreds.
-
-Although the French halted on the Huebra, the English general kept
-his troops together behind the Agueda, because Soult retired with
-the troops under his immediate command to Los Santos on the Upper
-Tormes, thus pointing towards the pass of Baños, and it was rumoured
-he designed to march that way, with a view to invade Portugal by the
-valley of the Tagus. Wellington disbelieved this rumour, but he could
-not disregard it, because nearly all his channels of intelligence
-had been suddenly dried up by a tyrannical and foolish decree of
-the Cortez, which obliged every man to justify himself for having
-remained in a district occupied by the enemy, and hence to avoid
-persecution, those who used to transmit information, fled from their
-homes. Hill’s division was therefore moved to the right as far as
-Robledo, to cover the pass of Perales, the rest of the troops were
-ready to follow, and Penne Villemur, leading the fifth Spanish army
-over the Gata mountains occupied Coria.
-
-[Sidenote: December.]
-
-Joseph, after hesitating whether he should leave the army of the
-south, or the army of Portugal in Castile, finally ordered the
-head-quarters of the latter to be fixed at Valladolid, and of the
-former at Toledo; the one to maintain the country between the Tormes
-and the Esla, the other to occupy La Mancha with its left, the valley
-of the Tagus, as far as the Tietar, with its centre, and Avila with
-its right. The army of the centre went to Segovia, where the king
-joined it with his guards, and when these movements, which took
-place in December, were known, Wellington placed his army also in
-winter-quarters.
-
-The fifth Spanish army crossing the Tagus at Alcantara entered
-Estremadura.
-
-Hill’s division occupied Coria, and Placentia, and held the town of
-Bejar by a detachment.
-
-Two divisions were quartered on a second line behind Hill about
-Castelo Branco, and in the Upper Beira.
-
-The light division remained on the Agueda, and the rest of the
-infantry were distributed along the Duero from Lamego downwards.
-
-The Portuguese cavalry were placed in Moncorvo, and the British
-cavalry, with the exception of Victor Alten’s brigade which was
-attached to the light division, occupied the valley of the Mondego.
-
-Carlos D’España’s troops garrisoned Ciudad Rodrigo, and the
-Gallicians marched through the Tras os Montes to their own country.
-
-In these quarters the Anglo-Portuguese were easily fed, because
-the improved navigation of the Tagus, the Douro, and the Mondego,
-furnished water carriage close to all their cantonments; moreover
-the army could be quickly collected on either frontier, for the
-front line of communication from Estremadura passed by the bridge of
-Alcantara to Coria, and from thence through the pass of Perales to
-the Agueda. The second line run by Penamacor and Guinaldo, and both
-were direct; but the post of Bejar, although necessary to secure
-Hill’s quarters from a surprise, was itself exposed.
-
-The French also had double and direct communications across the
-Gredos mountains. On their first line they restored a Roman road
-leading from Horcajada, on the Upper Tormes, by the Puerto de Pico
-to Monbeltran, and from thence to Talavera. To ease their second
-line they finished a road, begun the year before by Marmont, leading
-from Avila, by the convent of Guisando and Escalona to Toledo. But
-these communications though direct, were in winter so difficult, that
-general Laval crossing the mountains from Avila was forced to harness
-forty horses to a carriage; moreover Wellington having the interior
-and shorter lines, was in a more menacing position for offence, and a
-more easy position for defence; wherefore, though he had ordered all
-boats to be destroyed at Almaraz, Arzobispo, and other points where
-the great roads came down to the Tagus, the French, as anxious to
-prevent him from passing that river, as he was to prevent them, sent
-parties to destroy what had been overlooked. Each feared that the
-other would move, and yet neither wished to continue the campagin,
-Wellington, because his troops wanted rest, more than one-third being
-in the hospitals! the French because they could not feed their men
-and had to refix their general base of operations, broken up and
-deranged as it was by the Guerillas.
-
-The English general was however most at his ease. He knew that the
-best French officers thought it useless to continue the contest
-in Spain, unless the British army was first mastered, Soult’s
-intercepted letters showed him how that general desired to fix the
-war in Portugal, and there was now a most powerful force on the
-frontier of that kingdom. But on the other hand Badajos, Ciudad
-Rodrigo, and Almeida blocked the principal entrances, and though the
-two former were very ill provided by the Spaniards, they were in
-little danger because the last campaign had deprived the French of
-all their ordnance, arsenals, and magazines, in Andalusia, Almaraz,
-Madrid, Salamanca, and Valladolid; and it was nearly impossible for
-them to make any impression upon Portugal, until new establishments
-were formed. Wherefore Wellington did not fear to spread his troops
-in good and tranquil quarters, to receive reinforcements, restore
-their equipments, and recover their health and strength.
-
-This advantage was not reciprocal. The secondary warfare which the
-French sustained, and which it is now time again to notice, would
-have been sufficient to establish the military reputation of any
-nation before Napoleon’s exploits had raised the standard of military
-glory. For when disembarrassed of their most formidable enemy, they
-were still obliged to chase the Partidas, to form sieges, to recover
-and restore the posts they had lost by concentrating their armies, to
-send moveable columns by long winter marches over a vast extent of
-country for food, fighting for what they got, and living hard because
-the magazines filled from the fertile districts were of necessity
-reserved for the field operations against Wellington. Certainly
-it was a great and terrible war they had in hand, and good and
-formidable soldiers they were to sustain it so long and so manfully
-amidst the many errors of their generals.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-CONTINUATION OF THE PARTIZAN WARFARE.
-
-
-[Sidenote: 1812.]
-
-In the north, while Souham was gathering in front of Wellington, some
-of Mendizabel’s bands blockaded Santona by land, and Popham, after
-his failure at Gueteria blockaded it by sea. It was not very well
-provisioned, but Napoleon, always watchful, had sent an especial
-governor, general Lameth, and a chosen engineer, general D’Abadie,
-from Paris to complete the works. By their activity a hundred and
-twenty pieces of cannon were soon mounted, and they had including the
-crew of a corvette a garrison of eighteen hundred men. Lameth who was
-obliged to fight his way into the place in September, also formed
-an armed flotilla, with which, when the English squadron was driven
-off the port by gales of wind, he made frequent captures. Meanwhile
-Mendizabel surprised the garrison of Briviesca, Longa captured a
-large convoy with its escort, near Burgos, and all the bands had
-visibly increased in numbers and boldness.
-
-When Caffarelli returned from the Duero, Reille took the command
-of the army of Portugal, Drouet assumed that of the army of the
-centre, and Souham being thus cast off returned to France. The army
-of Portugal was then widely spread over the country. Avila was
-occupied, Sarrut took possession of Leon, the bands of Marquinez and
-Salazar were beaten, and Foy marching to seize Astorga, surprised and
-captured ninety men employed to dismantle that fortress; but above
-twenty breaches had already been opened and the place ceased to be of
-any importance. Meanwhile Caffarelli troubled by the care of a number
-of convoys, one of which under general Frimont, although strongly
-escorted, and having two pieces of cannon, fell into Longa’s hands
-the 30th of November, was unable to commence active operations until
-the 29th of December. Then his detachments chased the bands from
-Bilbao, while he marched himself to succour and provision Santona
-and Gueteria, and to re-establish his other posts along the coasts;
-but while he was near Santona the Spaniards attacked St. Domingo in
-Navarre, and invested Logroña.
-
-Sir Home Popham had suddenly quitted the Bay of Biscay with his
-squadron, leaving a few vessels to continue the littoral warfare,
-which enabled Caffarelli to succour Santona; important events
-followed but the account of them must be deferred as belonging
-to the transactions of 1813. Meanwhile tracing the mere chain of
-Guerilla operations from Biscay to the other parts, we find Abbé, who
-commanded in Pampeluna, Severoli who guarded the right of the Ebro,
-and Paris who had returned from Valencia to Zaragoza, continually and
-at times successfully attacked in the latter end of 1812; for after
-Chaplangarra’s exploit near Jacca, Mina intercepted all communication
-with France, and on the 22d of November surprised and drove back to
-Zaragoza with loss a very large convoy. Then he besieged the castle
-of Huesca, and when a considerable force, coming from Zaragoza,
-forced him to desist, he reappeared at Barbastro. Finally in a
-severe action fought on the heights of Señora del Poya, towards the
-end of December, his troops were dispersed by Colonel Colbert, yet
-the French lost seventy men, and in a few weeks Mina took the field
-again, with forces more numerous than he had ever before commanded.
-
-About this time Villa Campa, who had entrenched himself near Segorbé
-to harass Suchet’s rear, was driven from thence by general Panetier,
-but being afterwards joined by Gayan, they invested the castle of
-Daroca with three thousand men. Severoli marching from Zaragoza
-succoured the place, yet Villa Campa reassembled his whole force
-near Carineña behind Severoli who was forced to fight his way home
-to Zaragoza. The Spaniards reappeared at Almunia, and on the 22nd
-of December, another battle was fought, when Villa Campa being
-defeated with considerable slaughter retired to New Castile, and
-there soon repaired his losses. Meanwhile, in the centre of Spain,
-Elio, Bassecour, and Empecinado, having waited until the great French
-armies passed in pursuit of Hill came down upon Madrid. Wellington,
-when at Salamanca, expected that this movement would call off some
-troops from the Tormes, but the only effect was to cause the garrison
-left by Joseph to follow the great army, which it rejoined, between
-the Duero and the Tormes, with a great encumbrance of civil servants
-and families. The Partidas then entered the city and committed great
-excesses, treating the people as enemies.
-
-Soult and Joseph had been earnest with Suchet to send a strong
-division by Cuenca as a protection for Madrid, and that marshal did
-move in person with a considerable body of troops as far as Requeña
-on the 28th of November, but being in fear for his line towards
-Alicant soon returned to Valencia in a state of indecision, leaving
-only one brigade at Requeña. He had been reinforced by three thousand
-fresh men from Catalonia, yet he would not undertake any operation
-until he knew something of the king’s progress, and at Requeña he
-had gained no intelligence even of the passage of the Tagus. The
-Spaniards being thus uncontrolled gathered in all directions.
-
-The duke del Parque advanced with Ballesteros’ army to Villa Nueva de
-los Infantes, on the La Mancha side of the Sierra Morena, his cavalry
-entered the plains and some new levies from Grenada, came to Alcaraz
-on his right. Elio and Bassecour, leaving Madrid to the Partidas,
-marched to Albacete, without hindrance from Suchet, and re-opened
-the communication with Alicant; hence exclusive of the Sicilian
-army, nearly thirty thousand regular Spanish troops were said to be
-assembled on the borders of Murcia, and six thousand new levies came
-to Cordoba as a reserve. However on the 3d of December, Joseph at the
-head of his guards and the army of the centre, drove all the Partidas
-from the capital, and re-occupied Guadalaxara and the neighbouring
-posts; Soult entered Toledo and his cavalry advanced towards Del
-Parque, who immediately recrossed the Morena, and then the French
-horsemen swept La Mancha to gather contributions and to fill the
-magazines at Toledo.
-
-By these operations, Del Parque, now joined by the Grenadan troops
-from Alcaraz, was separated from Elio, and Suchet was relieved from
-a danger which he had dreaded too much, and by his own inaction
-contributed to increase. It is true he had all the sick men
-belonging to the king’s and to Soult’s army on his hands, but he
-had also many effective men of those armies; and though the yellow
-fever had shewn itself in some of his hospitals, and though he was
-also very uneasy for the security of his base in Aragon, where the
-Partida warfare was reviving, yet, with a disposable force of fifteen
-thousand infantry, and a fine division of cavalry, he should not
-have permitted Elio to pass his flank in the manner he did. He was
-afraid of the Sicilian army which had indeed a great influence on
-all the preceding operations, for it is certain that Suchet would
-otherwise have detached troops to Madrid by the Cuenca road, and
-then Soult would probably have sought a battle between the Tagus and
-the Guadarama mountains; but this influence arose entirely from the
-position of the Alicant army, not from its operations, which were
-feeble and vacillating.
-
-Maitland had resigned in the beginning of October, and his successor
-Mackenzie immediately pushed out some troops to the front, and
-there was a slight descent upon Xabea by the navy, but the general
-remained without plan or object, the only signs of vitality being a
-fruitless demonstration against the castle of Denia, where general
-Donkin disembarked on the 4th of October with a detachment of the
-eighty-first regiment. The walls had been represented as weak, but
-they were found to be high and strong, and the garrison had been
-unexpectedly doubled that morning, hence no attack took place, and
-in the evening a second reinforcement arrived, whereupon the British
-re-embarked. However the water was so full of pointed rocks that it
-was only by great exertions lieutenant Penruddocke of the Fame could
-pull in the boats, and the soldiers wading and fighting, got on
-board with little loss indeed but in confusion.
-
-[Sidenote: Suchet’s official correspondence, MS.]
-
-Soon after this, general William Clinton came from Sicily to take the
-command, and Wellington who was then before Burgos, thinking Suchet
-would weaken his army to help the king, recommended an attempt upon
-the city of Valencia either by a coast attack or by a land operation,
-warning Clinton however to avoid an action in a cavalry country.
-This was not very difficult, because the land was generally rocky
-and mountainous, but Clinton would not stir without first having
-possession of the citadel of Alicant, and thus all things fell into
-disorder and weakness. For the jealous Spanish governor would not
-suffer the British to hold even a gate of the town, nay, he sent Elio
-a large convoy of clothing and other stores with an escort of only
-twenty men, that he might retain two of that general’s battalions
-to resist the attempt which he believed or pretended to believe
-Clinton would make on the citadel. Meanwhile that general, leaving
-Whittingham and Roche at Alcoy and Xixona, drew in his other troops
-from the posts previously occupied in front by Mackenzie; he feared
-Suchet’s cavalry, but the marshal, estimating the allied armies at
-more than fifty thousand men, would undertake no serious enterprize
-while ignorant of the king’s progress against lord Wellington. He
-however diligently strengthened his camp at St. Felipe de Xativa,
-threw another bridge over the Xucar, entrenched the passes in his
-front, covered Denia with a detachment, obliged Whittingham to
-abandon Alcoy, dismantled the extensive walls of Valencia, and
-fortified a citadel there.
-
-[Sidenote: General Donkin’s correspondence, MS.]
-
-It was in this state of affairs that Elio came down to Albacete,
-and priding himself upon the dexterity with which he had avoided the
-French armies, proposed to Clinton a combined attack upon Suchet.
-Elio greatly exaggerated his own numbers, and giving out that Del
-Parque’s force was under his command, pretended that he could bring
-forty thousand men into the field, four thousand being cavalry.
-But the two Spanish armies if united would scarcely have produced
-twenty thousand really effective infantry; moreover Del Parque, a
-sickly unwieldy person, was extremely incapable, his soldiers were
-discontented and mutinous, and he had no intention of moving beyond
-Alcaraz.
-
-[Sidenote: Official correspondence of the duke of Feltre, MS.]
-
-With such allies it was undoubtedly difficult for the English general
-to co-operate, yet it would seem, something considerable might have
-been effected while Suchet was at Requeña, even before Elio arrived,
-and more surely after that general had reached Albacete. Clinton
-had then twelve thousand men, of which five thousand were British:
-there was a fleet to aid his operations, and the Spanish infantry
-under Elio were certainly ten thousand. Nothing was done, and it
-was because nothing was attempted, that Napoleon, who watched this
-quarter closely, assured Suchet, that however difficult his position
-was from the extent of country he had to keep in tranquillity, the
-enemy in his front was not really formidable. Events justified this
-observation. The French works were soon completed and the British
-army fell into such disrepute, that the Spaniards with sarcastic
-malice affirmed it was to be put under Elio to make it useful.
-
-[Sidenote: General Donkin’s correspondence, MSS.]
-
-[Sidenote: Appendix, No. 17.]
-
-Meanwhile Roche’s and Whittingham’s division continued to excite
-the utmost jealousy in the other Spanish troops, who asked, very
-reasonably, what they did to merit such advantages? England paid and
-clothed them and the Spaniards were bound to feed them; they did not
-do so, and Canga Arguelles, the intendant of the province, asserted
-that he had twice provided magazines for them in Alicant, which were
-twice plundered by the governor; and yet it is certain that the other
-Spanish troops were far worse off than these divisions. But on every
-side intrigues, discontent, vacillation, and weakness were visible,
-and again it was shewn that if England was the stay of the Peninsula,
-it was Wellington alone who supported the war.
-
-On the 22d of November the obstinacy of the governor being at last
-overcome he gave up the citadel of Alicant to the British, yet no
-offensive operations followed, though Suchet on the 26th drove
-Roche’s troops out of Alcoy with loss, and defeated the Spanish
-cavalry at Yecla. However on the 2d of December, general Campbell
-arriving from Sicily, with four thousand men, principally British,
-assumed the command, making the fourth general-in-chief in the same
-number of months. His presence, the strong reinforcement he brought,
-and the intelligence that lord William Bentinck was to follow
-with another reinforcement, again raised the public expectation,
-and Elio immediately proposed that the British should occupy the
-enemy on the Lower Xucar, while the Spaniards crossing that river
-attacked Requeña. However general Campbell after making some feeble
-demonstrations declared he would await lord William Bentinck’s
-arrival. Then the Spanish general, who had hitherto abstained from
-any disputes with the British, became extremely discontented, and
-dispersed his army for subsistence. On the other hand the English
-general complained that Elio had abandoned him.
-
-[Sidenote: Appendix, No. 17, 18.]
-
-Suchet expecting Campbell to advance had withdrawn his outposts to
-concentrate at Xativa, but when he found him as inactive as his
-predecessors and saw the Spanish troops scattered, he surprised one
-Spanish post at Onteniente, another in Ibi, and re-occupied all his
-former offensive positions in front of Alicant. Soult’s detachments
-were now also felt in La Mancha, wherefore Elio retired into Murcia,
-and Del Parque, as we have seen, went over the Morena. Thus the storm
-which had menaced the French disappeared entirely, for Campbell,
-following his instructions, refused rations to Whittingham’s corps
-and desired it to separate for the sake of subsistence; and as the
-rest of the Spanish troops were actually starving, no danger was to
-be apprehended from them: nay, Habert marched up to Alicant, killed
-and wounded some men almost under the walls, and the Anglo-Italian
-soldiers deserted to him by whole companies when opportunity offered.
-
-[Sidenote: Suchet, official correspondence with the king, MSS.]
-
-Suchet did as he pleased towards his front but he was unquiet for
-his rear, for besides the operations of Villa Campa, Gayan, Duran
-and Mina in Aragon, the Frayle and other partida chiefs continually
-vexed his communications with Tortoza. Fifty men had been surprised
-and destroyed near Segorbe the 22d of November, by Villa Campa; and
-general Panetier, who was sent against that chief, though he took
-and destroyed his entrenched camp was unable to bring him to action
-or to prevent him from going to Aragon, and attacking Daroca as I
-have before shown. Meanwhile the Frayle surprised and destroyed
-an ordnance convoy, took several guns and four hundred horses, and
-killed in cold blood after the action above a hundred artillery-men
-and officers. A moveable column being immediately despatched against
-him, destroyed his dépôts and many of his men, but the Frayle himself
-escaped and soon reappeared upon the communications. The loss of this
-convoy was the first disgrace of the kind which had befallen the army
-of Aragon, and to use Suchet’s expression a battle would have cost
-him less.
-
-[Sidenote: Captain Codrington’s papers, MS.]
-
-Nor were the Spaniards quite inactive in Catalonia, although the
-departure of general Maitland had so dispirited them that the regular
-warfare was upon the point of ceasing altogether. The active army
-was indeed stated to be twenty thousand strong, and the tercios of
-reserve forty-five thousand; yet a column of nine hundred French
-controuled the sea-line and cut off all supplies landed for the
-interior. Lacy who remained about Vich with seven thousand men
-affirmed that he could not feed his army on the coast, but captain
-Codrington says that nineteen feluccas laden with flour had in two
-nights only, landed their cargoes between Mattaro and Barcelona for
-the supply of the latter city, and that these and many other ventures
-of the same kind might have been captured without difficulty; that
-Claros and Milans continued corruptly to connive at the passage of
-French convoys; that the rich merchants of Mattaro and Arens invited
-the enemy to protect their contraband convoys going to France, and
-yet accused him publicly of interrupting their lawful trade when in
-fact he was only disturbing a treasonable commerce, carried on so
-openly that he was forced to declare a blockade of the whole coast.
-A plot to deliver up the Medas islands was also discovered, and when
-Lacy was pressed to call out the Somatenes, a favorite project with
-the English naval officers, he objected that he could scarcely feed
-and provide ammunition for the regular troops. He also observed
-that the general efforts of that nature hitherto made, and under
-more favourable circumstances, had produced only a waste of life,
-of treasure, of provisions, of ammunition and of arms, and now the
-French possessed all the strong places.
-
-At this time so bitter were the party dissensions that sir Edward
-Pellew anticipated the ruin of the principality from that cause
-alone. Lacy, Sarzfield, Eroles and captain Codrington, continued
-their old disputes, and Sarzfield who was then in Aragon had also
-quarrelled with Mina; Lacy made a formal requisition to have
-Codrington recalled, the junta of Catalonia made a like demand to
-the regency respecting Lacy, and meanwhile such was the misery of
-the soldiers that the officers of one regiment actually begged at
-the doors of private houses to obtain old clothing for their men,
-and even this poor succour was denied. A few feeble isolated efforts
-by some of the partizan generals, were the only signs of war when
-Wellington’s victory at Salamanca again raised the spirit of the
-province. Then also for the first time the new constitution adopted
-by the cortez was proclaimed in Catalonia, the junta of that province
-was suppressed, Eroles the people’s favorite obtained greater powers,
-and was even flattered with the hope of becoming captain-general, for
-the regency had agreed at last to recal Lacy. In fine the aspect of
-affairs changed and many thousand English muskets and other weapons
-were by sir Edward Pellew, given to the partizans as well as to the
-regular troops which enabled them to receive cartridges from the
-ships instead of the loose powder formerly demanded on account of the
-difference in the bore of the Spanish muskets. The effect of these
-happy coincidences was soon displayed. Eroles who had raised a new
-division of three thousand men, contrived in concert with Codrington,
-a combined movement in September against Taragona. Marching in the
-night of the 27th from Reus to the mouth of the Francoli he was met
-by the boats of the squadron and having repulsed a sally from the
-fortress, drove some Catalans in the French service, from the ruins
-of the Olivo, while the boats swept the mole, taking five vessels.
-After this affair Eroles encamped on the hill separating Lerida,
-Taragona, and Tortoza, meaning to intercept the communication between
-those places and to keep up an intercourse with the fleet, now the
-more necessary because Lacy had lost this advantage eastward of
-Barcelona. While thus posted he heard that a French detachment had
-come from Lerida to Arbeça, wherefore making a forced march over the
-mountains he surprised and destroyed the greatest part on the 2d of
-October, and then returned to his former quarters.
-
-[Sidenote: October.]
-
-Meanwhile Lacy embarked scaling-ladders and battering guns on board
-the English ships, and made a pompous movement against Mattaro with
-his whole force, yet at the moment of execution changed his plan and
-attempted to surprise Hostalrich, but he let this design be known,
-and as the enemy prepared to succour the place, he returned to Vich
-without doing any thing. During these operations Manso defeated two
-hundred French near Molino del Rey, gained some advantages over one
-Pelligri, a French miguelette partizan, and captured some French
-boats at Mattaro after Lacy’s departure. However Sarzfield’s mission
-to raise an army in Aragon had failed, and Decaen desiring to check
-the reviving spirit of the Catalans, made a combined movement against
-Vich in the latter end of October. Lacy immediately drew Eroles,
-Manso, and Milans towards that point, and thus the fertile country
-about Reus was again resigned to the French, the intercourse with
-the fleet totally lost, and the garrison of Taragona, which had
-been greatly straitened by the previous operations of Eroles, was
-relieved. Yet the defence of Vich was not secured, for on the 3d
-of November one division of the French forced the main body of the
-Spaniards, under Lacy and Milans, at the passes of Puig Gracioso and
-Congosto, and though the other divisions were less successful against
-Eroles and Manso, at St. Filieu de Codenas, Decaen reached Vich the
-4th. The Catalans, who had lost altogether above five hundred men,
-then separated; Lacy went to the hills near Momblanch, Milans and
-Rovira towards Olot, and Manso to Montserrat.
-
-Eroles returned to Reus, and was like to have surprised the Col de
-Balaguer, for he sent a detachment under colonel Villamil, dressed in
-Italian uniforms which had been taken by Rovira in Figueras, and his
-men were actually admitted within the palisade of the fort before the
-garrison perceived the deceit. A lieutenant with sixteen men placed
-outside were taken, and this loss was magnified so much to Eroles
-that he ordered Villamil to make a more regular attack. To aid him
-Codrington brought up the Blake, and landed some marines, yet no
-impression was made on the garrison, and the allies retired on the
-17th at the approach of two thousand men sent from Tortoza. Eroles
-and Manso then vainly united near Manresa to oppose Decaen, who,
-coming down from Vich, forced his way to Reus, seized a vast quantity
-of corn, supplied Taragona, and then marched to Barcelona.
-
-[Sidenote: November.]
-
-[Sidenote: Captain Codrington’s correspondence, MSS.]
-
-These operations indisputably proved that there was no real power of
-resistance in the Catalan army, but as an absurd notion prevailed
-that Soult, Suchet, and Joseph were coming with their armies in one
-body, to France, through Catalonia, Lacy endeavoured to cover his
-inactivity by pretending a design to raise a large force in Aragon,
-with which to watch this retreat, and to act as a flanking corps to
-lord Wellington, who was believed to be then approaching Zaragoza.
-Such rumours served to amuse the Catalans for a short time, but the
-sense of their real weakness soon returned. In December Bertoletti,
-the governor of Taragona, marched upon Reus, and defeated some
-hundred men who had reassembled there; and at the same time a French
-convoy for Barcelona, escorted by three thousand men, passed safely
-in the face of six thousand Catalan soldiers, who were desirous to
-attack but were prevented by Lacy.
-
-The anger of the people and of the troops also, on this occasion was
-loudly expressed, Lacy was openly accused of treachery, and was soon
-after recalled. However, Eroles who had come to Cape Salou to obtain
-succour from the squadron for his suffering soldiers, acknowledged
-that the resources of Catalonia were worn out, the spirit of the
-people broken by Lacy’s misconduct, and the army, reduced to less
-than seven thousand men, naked and famishing. Affairs were so bad,
-that expecting to be made captain-general he was reluctant to accept
-that office, and the regular warfare was in fact extinguished, for
-Sarzfield was now acting as a partizan on the Ebro. Nevertheless the
-French were greatly dismayed at the disasters in Russia; their force
-was weakened by the drafts made to fill up the ranks of Napoleon’s
-new army; and the war of the partidas continued, especially along the
-banks of the Ebro, where Sarzfield, at the head of Eroles’ ancient
-division, which he had carried with him out of Catalonia, acted in
-concert with Mina, Duran, Villa Campa, the Frayle, Pendencia, and
-other chiefs, who were busy upon Suchet’s communication between
-Tortoza and Valencia.
-
-Aragon being now unquiet, and Navarre and Biscay in a state of
-insurrection, the French forces in the interior of Spain were
-absolutely invested. Their front was opposed by regular armies, their
-flanks annoyed by the British squadrons, and their rear, from the
-Bay of Biscay to the Mediterranean, plagued and stung by this chain
-of partidas and insurrections. And England was the cause of all
-this. England was the real deliverer of the Peninsula. It was her
-succours thrown into Biscay that had excited the new insurrection
-in the northern provinces, and enabled Mina and the other chiefs to
-enter Aragon, while Wellington drew the great masses of the French
-towards Portugal. It was that insurrection, so forced on, which,
-notwithstanding the cessation of the regular warfare in Catalonia,
-gave life and activity to the partidas of the south. It was the army
-from Sicily which, though badly commanded, by occupying the attention
-of Suchet in front, obliged him to keep his forces together instead
-of hunting down the bands on his communications. In fine, it was the
-troops of England who had shocked the enemy’s front of battle, the
-fleets of England which had menaced his flanks with disembarkations,
-the money and stores of England which had supported the partidas.
-Every part of the Peninsula was pervaded by her influence, or her
-warriors, and a trembling sense of insecurity was communicated to the
-French wherever their armies were not united in masses.
-
-Such then were the various military events of the year 1812, and
-the English general taking a view of the whole, judged that however
-anxious the French might be to invade Portugal, they would be content
-during the winter to gather provisions and wait for reinforcements
-from France wherewith to strike a decisive blow at his army. But
-those reinforcements never came. Napoleon, unconquered of man, had
-been vanquished by the elements. The fires and the snows of Moscow
-combined, had shattered his strength, and in confessed madness,
-nations and rulers rejoiced, that an enterprize, at once the
-grandest, the most provident, the most beneficial, ever attempted by
-a warrior-statesman, had been foiled: they rejoiced that Napoleon
-had failed to re-establish unhappy Poland as a barrier against the
-most formidable and brutal, the most swinish tyranny, that has ever
-menaced and disgraced European civilization.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-GENERAL OBSERVATIONS.
-
-
-[Sidenote: 1812.]
-
-Lord Wellington exasperated by the conduct of the army and by the
-many crossings he had experienced during the campaign, had no sooner
-taken his winter-quarters, than he gave vent to his indignation in
-a circular letter, addressed to the superior officers, which, being
-ill-received by the army at the time, has been frequently referred
-to since with angry denunciations of its injustice. In substance
-it declared, “that discipline had deteriorated during the campaign
-_in a greater degree than he had ever witnessed or ever read of in
-any army_, and this without any disaster, any unusual privation or
-hardship save that of inclement weather; that the officers had, from
-the first, lost all command over their men, and hence excesses,
-outrages of all kinds, and inexcusable losses had occurred; that no
-army had ever made shorter marches in retreat, or had longer rests;
-no army had ever been so little pressed by a pursuing enemy, and that
-the true cause of this unhappy state of affairs was to be found in
-the habitual neglect of duty by the regimental officers.”
-
-These severe reproaches were generally deserved, and only partially
-unjust; yet the statements, on which they were founded, were in some
-particulars unintentionally inaccurate, especially as regarded the
-retreat from Salamanca. The marches, though short as to distance,
-after quitting the Tormes, were long as to time, and it is the
-time an English soldier bears his burthen, for like the ancient
-Roman he carries the load of an ass, that crushes his strength. Some
-regiments had come from Cadiz without halting, and as long garrison
-duty had weakened their bodies, both their constitutions and their
-inexperience were too heavily taxed. The line of march from Salamanca
-was through a flooded, and flat, clayey country, not much easier to
-the allies than the marshes of the Arnus were to Hannibal’s army;
-and mounted officers, as that great general well knew when he placed
-the Carthaginian cavalry to keep up the Gallic rear, never judge
-correctly of a foot-soldier’s exertions; they measure his strength
-by their horses’ powers. On this occasion the troops, stepping
-ankle-deep in clay, mid-leg in water, lost their shoes, and with
-strained sinews heavily made their way, and withal they had but two
-rations in five days.
-
-Wellington thought otherwise, for he knew not that the commissariat
-stores, which he had ordered up, did not arrive regularly because
-of the extreme fatigue of the animals who carried them; and those
-that did arrive were not available for the troops, because, as the
-rear of an army, and especially a retreating army, is at once the
-birth-place and the recipient of false reports, the subordinate
-commissaries and conductors of the temporary dépôts, alarmed with
-rumours that the enemy’s cavalry had forestalled the allies on the
-march, carried off or destroyed the field-stores: hence the soldiers
-were actually feeding on acorns when their commander supposed them
-to be in the receipt of good rations. The destruction of the swine
-may be therefore, in some measure, palliated; but there is neither
-palliation nor excuse to be offered for the excesses and outrages
-committed on the inhabitants, nor for many officers’ habitual
-inattention to their duty, of which the general justly complained.
-Certainly the most intolerable disorders had marked the retreat,
-and great part of the sufferings of the army arose from these and
-previous disorders, for it is too common with soldiers, first to
-break up the arrangements of their general by want of discipline, and
-then to complain of the misery which those arrangements were designed
-to obviate. Nevertheless Wellington’s circular was not strictly
-just, because it excepted none from blame, though in conversation he
-admitted the reproach did not apply to the light division nor to the
-guards.
-
-With respect to the former the proof of its discipline was easy
-though Wellington had not said so much in its favour; for how
-could those troops be upbraided, who held together so closely
-with their colours, that, exclusive of those killed in action,
-they did not leave thirty men behind. Never did the extraordinary
-vigour and excellence of their discipline merit praise more than
-in this retreat. But it seems to be a drawback to the greatness
-of lord Wellington’s character, that while capable of repressing
-insubordination, either by firmness or dexterity as the case may
-require, capable also of magnanimously disregarding, or dangerously
-resenting injuries, his praises and his censures are bestowed
-indiscriminately, or so directed as to acquire partizans and personal
-friends rather than the attachment of the multitude. He did not make
-the hard-working military crowd feel that their honest unobtrusive
-exertions were appreciated. In this he differs not from many other
-great generals and statesmen, but he thereby fails to influence
-masses, and his genius falls short of that sublime flight by which
-Hannibal in ancient, and Napoleon in modern times, commanded the
-admiration of the world. Nevertheless it is only by a comparison
-with such great men that he can be measured, nor will any slight
-examination of his exploits suffice to convey a true notion of his
-intellectual power and resources. Let this campaign be taken as an
-example.
-
-It must be evident that it in no manner bears out the character of
-an easy and triumphant march, which English writers have given to
-it. Nothing happened according to the original plan. The general’s
-operations were one continual struggle to overcome obstacles,
-occasioned by the enemy’s numbers, the insubordination of his own
-troops, the slowness, incapacity, and unfaithful conduct of the
-Spanish commanders, the want of money, and the active folly of the
-different governments he served. For first his design was to menace
-the French in Spain so as to bring their forces upon him from other
-parts, and then to retire into Portugal, again to issue forth when
-want should cause them to disperse. He was not without hopes indeed
-to strike a decisive blow, yet he was content, if the occasion came
-not, to wear out the French by continual marching, and he trusted
-that the frequent opportunities thus given to the Spaniards would
-finally urge them to a general effort. But he found his enemy, from
-the first, too powerful for him, even without drawing succour from
-distant parts, and he would have fallen back at once, were it not for
-Marmont’s rashness. Nor would the victory of the Arapiles itself have
-produced any proportionate effect but for the errors of the king, and
-his rejection of Soult’s advice. Those errors caused the evacuation
-of Andalusia, yet it was only to concentrate an overwhelming force
-with which the French finally drove the victors back to Portugal.
-
-Again, Wellington designed to finish his campaign in the southern
-provinces, and circumstances obliged him to remain in the northern
-provinces. He would have taken Burgos and he could not; he would
-have rested longer on the Carrion, and his flanks were turned by the
-bridges of Palencia and Baños; he would have rested behind the Douro,
-to profit of his central position, but the bridge at Tordesillas
-was ravished from him, and the sudden reparation of that at Toro,
-obliged him to retire. He would have united with Hill on the Adaja,
-and he could only unite with him behind the Tormes; and on this last
-river also he desired either to take his winter quarters, or to have
-delivered a great battle with a view to regain Madrid, and he could
-do neither. Finally he endeavoured to make an orderly and an easy
-retreat to Ciudad Rodrigo, and his army was like to have dissolved
-altogether. And yet in all these varying circumstances, his sagacity
-as to the general course of the war, his promptness in taking
-advantage of particular opportunities, was conspicuous. These are the
-distinguishing characteristics of real genius.
-
-Passing over as already sufficiently illustrated that master-stroke,
-the battle of Salamanca, the reader would do well to mark, how this
-great commander did, after that event, separate the king’s army from
-Marmont’s, forcing the one to retreat upon Burgos, and driving the
-other from Madrid; how he thus broke up the French combinations, so
-that many weeks were of necessity required to reunite a power capable
-of disturbing him in the field; how he posted Clinton’s division and
-the Gallicians, to repress any light excursion by the beaten army of
-Portugal; how, foreseeing Soult’s plan to establish a new base of
-operations in Andalusia, he was prepared, by a sudden descent from
-Madrid, to drive Soult himself from that province; how promptly,
-when the siege of Burgos failed, and his combinations were ruined by
-the fault of others, how promptly I say, he commenced his retreat,
-sacrificing all his high-wrought expectation of triumph in a campaign
-which he burned to finish, and otherwise would have finished, even
-with more splendour than it had commenced.
-
-If Burgos, a mean fortress of the lowest order, had fallen early, the
-world would have seen a noble stroke. For the Gallicians, aided by a
-weak division of Wellington’s army, and by the British reinforcements
-making up from Coruña, would, covered by Burgos, have sufficed to
-keep the army of Portugal in check, while Popham’s armament would
-have fomented a general insurrection of the northern provinces.
-Meanwhile Wellington, gathering forty-five thousand Anglo-Portuguese,
-and fifteen thousand Spaniards, on the Tagus, would have marched
-towards Murcia; Ballesteros’ army, and the sixteen thousand men
-composing the Alicant army, would there have joined him, and with a
-hundred thousand soldiers he would have delivered such a battle to
-the united French armies, if indeed they could have united, as would
-have shaken all Europe with its martial clangor. To exchange this
-glorious vision, for the cold desolate reality of a dangerous winter
-retreat was, for Wellington, but a momentary mental struggle, and it
-was simultaneous with that daring conception, the passage of the
-bridge of Burgos under the fire of the castle.
-
-Let him be traced now in retreat. Pursued by a superior army and
-seeing his cavalry defeated, he turned as a savage lion at the
-Carrion, nor would he have removed so quickly from that lair, if the
-bridges at Palencia and Baños had been destroyed according to his
-order. Neither is his cool self-possession to be overlooked; for
-when both his flanks were thus exposed, instead of falling back in
-a hurried manner to the Duero, he judged exactly the value of the
-rugged ground on the left bank of the Pisuerga, in opposition to the
-double advantage obtained by the enemy at Palencia and Baños; nor did
-the difficulty which Souham and Caffarelli, independent commanders
-and neither of them accustomed to move large armies, would find in
-suddenly changing their line of operations escape him. His march
-to Cabeçon and his position on the left of the Pisuerga was not a
-retreat, it was the shift of a practised captain.
-
-When forced to withdraw Hill from the Tagus, he, on the instant,
-formed a new combination to fight that great battle on the Adaja
-which he had intended to deliver near the Guadalaviar; and though
-the splendid exploit of captain Guingret, at Tordesillas, baffled
-this intent, he, in return, baffled Souham by that ready stroke of
-generalship, the posting of his whole army in front of Rueda, thus
-forbidding a passage by the restored bridge. Finally, if he could
-not maintain the line of the Duero, nor that of the Tormes, it was
-because rivers can never be permanently defended against superior
-forces, and yet he did not quit the last without a splendid tactical
-illustration. I mean that surprising movement from the Arapiles to
-the Valmusa, a movement made not in confusion and half flight, but in
-close order of battle, his columns ready for action, his artillery
-and cavalry skirmishing, passing the Junguen without disorder, filing
-along the front of and winding into the rear of a most powerful
-French army, the largest ever collected in one mass in the Peninsula,
-an army having twice as many guns as the allies, and twelve thousand
-able horsemen to boot. And all these great and skilful actions were
-executed by lord Wellington with an army composed of different
-nations; soldiers, fierce indeed, and valiant, terrible in battle,
-but characterised by himself, as more deficient in good discipline
-than any army of which he had ever read!
-
-Men engaged only in civil affairs and especially book-men are apt
-to undervalue military genius, talking as if simple bravery were
-the highest qualification of a general; and they have another
-mode of appeasing an inward sense of inferiority, namely, to
-attribute the successes of a great captain, to the prudence of
-some discreet adviser, who in secret rules the general, amends his
-errors, and leaves him all the glory. Thus Napoleon had Berthier,
-Wellington has sir George Murray! but in this, the most skilful,
-if not the most glorious of Wellington’s campaigns, sir George
-Murray was not present, and the staff of the army was governed by
-three young lieutenant-colonels, namely, lord Fitzroy Somerset,
-Waters, and Delancey; for though sir Willoughby Gordon joined the
-army as quarter-master-general after the battle of Salamanca, he
-was inexperienced, and some bodily suffering impeded his personal
-exertions.
-
-Such then were the principal points of skill displayed by Wellington;
-yet so vast and intricate an art is war, that the apophthegm of
-Turenne will always be found applicable: “_he who has made no
-mistakes in war, has seldom made war_.” Some military writers,
-amongst them the celebrated Jomini, blame the English general, that
-with a conquering army, and an insurgent nation at his beck, he
-should in three months after his victory have attempted nothing more
-than the unsuccessful siege of Burgos. This censure is not entirely
-unfounded; the king certainly escaped very easily from Madrid; yet
-there are many points to be argued ere the question can be decided.
-The want of money, a want progressively increasing, had become almost
-intolerable. Wellington’s army was partly fed from Ciudad Rodrigo,
-partly from the valley of the Pisuerga, Hill’s troops were fed from
-Lisbon; the Portuguese in their own country, and the Spaniards every
-where, lived as the French did, by requisition; but the British
-professed to avoid that mode of subsistence, and they made it a
-national boast to all Europe that they did so; the movements of the
-army were therefore always subservient to this principle, and must
-be judged accordingly, because want of money was with them want of
-motion.
-
-Now four modes of operation were open to Wellington.
-
-1º. _After the victory of Salamanca to follow the king to Valencia,
-unite with the Alicant army, and, having thus separated Soult from
-Joseph and Suchet, to act according to events._
-
-To have thus moved at once, without money, into Valencia, or Murcia,
-new countries where he had no assured connexions, and which were
-scarcely able to feed the French armies, would have exposed him to
-great difficulties; and he must have made extensive arrangements with
-the fleet ere he could have acted vigorously, if, as was probable,
-the French concentrated all their forces behind the Guadalaviar.
-Meanwhile the distance between the main allied army and those troops
-necessarily left in the north, being considered, the latter must
-have been strengthened at the expense of those in the south, unless
-the army of Portugal joined the king, and then Wellington would have
-been quite over-matched in Valencia; that is, if Soult also joined
-the king, and if not he would have placed the English general between
-two fires. If a force was not left in the north the army of Portugal
-would have had open field, either to march to the king’s assistance
-by Zaragoza, or to have relieved Astorga, seized Salamanca, recovered
-the prisoners and the trophies of the Arapiles, and destroyed all
-the great lines of magazines and dépôts even to the Tagus. Moreover,
-the yellow fever raged in Murcia, and this would have compelled the
-English general to depend upon the contracted base of operations
-offered by Alicant, because the advance of Clauzel would have
-rendered it impossible to keep it on the Tagus. Time, therefore,
-was required to arrange the means of operating in this manner, and
-meanwhile the army was not unwisely turned another way.
-
-2º. _To march directly against Soult in Andalusia._
-
-This project Wellington was prepared to execute, when the king’s
-orders rendered it unnecessary, but if Joseph had adopted Soult’s
-plan a grand field for the display of military art would have
-been opened. The king going by the Despenas Peros, and having the
-advantage of time in the march, could have joined Soult, with the
-army of the centre, before the English general could have joined
-Hill. The sixty thousand combatants thus united could have kept
-the field until Suchet had also joined; but they could scarcely
-have maintained the blockade of Cadiz also, and hence the error of
-Wellington seems to have been, that he did not make an effort to
-overtake the king, either upon or beyond the Tagus; for the army of
-the centre would certainly have joined Soult by the Despenas Peros,
-if Maitland had not that moment landed at Alicant.
-
-3º. _To follow the army of Portugal after the victory of Salamanca._
-
-The reasons for moving upon Madrid instead of adopting this line of
-operations having been already shewn in former observations, need
-not be here repeated, yet it may be added that the destruction of
-the great arsenal and dépôt of the Retiro was no small object with
-reference to the safety of Portugal.
-
-4º. _The plan which was actually followed._
-
-The English general’s stay in the capital was unavoidable, seeing
-that to observe the development of the French operations in the
-south was of such importance. It only remains therefore to trace
-him after he quitted Madrid. Now the choice of his line of march by
-Valladolid certainly appears common-place, and deficient in vigour,
-but it was probably decided by the want of money, and of means of
-transport; to which may be added the desire to bring the Gallicians
-forward, which he could only attain by putting himself in actual
-military communication with them, and covering their advance. Yet
-this will not excuse the feeble pursuit of Clauzel’s retreating army
-up the valley of the Pisuerga. The Spaniards would not the less
-have come up if that general had been defeated, nor would the want
-of their assistance have been much felt in the action. Considerable
-loss would, no doubt, have been suffered by the Anglo-Portuguese,
-and they could ill bear it, but the result of a victory would have
-amply repaid the damage received; for the time gained by Clauzel
-was employed by Caffarelli to strengthen the castle of Burgos,
-which contained the greatest French dépôt in this part of Spain.
-A victory therefore would have entirely disarranged the enemy’s
-means of defence in the north, and would have sent the twice-broken
-and defeated army of Portugal, behind the Ebro; then neither the
-conscript reinforcements, nor the junction of Caffarelli’s troops,
-would have enabled Clauzel, with all his activity and talent, to
-re-appear in the field before Burgos would have fallen. But that
-fortress would most probably have fallen at once, in which case the
-English general might have returned to the Tagus, and perhaps in time
-to have met Soult as he issued forth from the mountains in his march
-from Andalusia.
-
-It may be objected, that as Burgos did not yield, it would not have
-yielded under any circumstances without a vigorous defence. This is
-not so certain, the effect of a defeat would have been very different
-from the effect of such a splendid operation as Clauzel’s retreat;
-and it appears also, that the prolonged defence of the castle may be
-traced to some errors of detail in the attack, as well as to want
-of sufficient artillery means. In respect of the great features of
-the campaign, it may be assumed that Wellington’s judgement on the
-spot, and with a full knowledge both of his own and his adversaries’
-situations, is of more weight than that of critics, however able
-and acute, who knew nothing of his difficulties. But in the details
-there was something of error exceedingly strange. It is said, I
-believe truly, that sir Howard Douglas being consulted, objected to
-the proceeding by gallery and mine against an outward, a middle,
-and an inward line of defence, as likely to involve a succession of
-tedious and difficult enterprizes, which even if successful, would
-still leave the White Church, and the upper castle or keep, to be
-carried;—that this castle, besides other artillery armament, was
-surmounted by a powerful battery of heavy guns, bearing directly
-upon the face of the horn-work of San Michael, the only point from
-which it could be breached, and until it was breached, the governor,
-a gallant man, would certainly not surrender. It could not however
-be breached without a larger battering train than the allies
-possessed, and would not, as he supposed, be effected by mines;
-wherefore proposing to take the guns from two frigates, then lying at
-Santander, he proffered to bring them up in time.
-
-In this reasoning lord Wellington partly acquiesced, but his hopes
-of success were principally founded on the scarcity of water in the
-castle, and upon the facility of burning the provision magazines; nor
-was he without hope that his fortune would carry him through, even
-with the scanty means he possessed. Towards the end of the siege,
-however, he did resort, though too late, to the plan of getting guns
-up from Santander. But while sir Howard Douglas thus counselled him
-on the spot, sir Edward Pakenham, then in Madrid, assured the author
-of this history, at the time, that he also, foreseeing the artillery
-means were too scanty, had proposed to send by the Somosierra twelve
-fine Russian battering guns, then in the Retiro; and he pledged
-himself to procure, by an appeal to the officers in the capital,
-animals sufficient to transport them and their ammunition to Burgos
-in a few days. The offer was not accepted.
-
-[Sidenote: Souham’s Official Correspondence, MSS.]
-
-Something also may be objected to the field operations, as connected
-with the siege; for it is the rule, although not an absolute one,
-that the enemy’s active army should first be beaten, or driven beyond
-some strong line, such as a river, or chain of mountains, before a
-siege is commenced. Now if Wellington had masked the castle after the
-horn-work was carried on the 19th, and had then followed Clauzel,
-the French generals, opposed to him, admit, that they would have
-gone over the Ebro, perhaps even to Pampeluna and St. Sebastian. In
-that case all the minor dépôts must have been broken up, and the
-reorganization of the army of Portugal retarded at least a month;
-before that time, the guns from Santander would have arrived and the
-castle of Burgos would have fallen. In Souham’s secret despatches, it
-is said, of course on the authority of spies, that Castaños urged an
-advance beyond Burgos instead of a siege; of this I know nothing, but
-it is not unlikely, because to advance continually, and to surround
-an enemy, constituted, with Spanish generals, the whole art of war.
-Howbeit on this occasion, the advice, if given, was not unreasonable;
-and it needed scarcely even to delay the siege while the covering
-army advanced, because one division of infantry might have come up
-from Madrid, still leaving two of the finest in the army, and a
-brigade of cavalry, at that capital, which was sufficient, seeing
-that Hill was coming up to Toledo, that Ballesteros’ disobedience was
-then unknown, and that the king was in no condition to advance before
-Soult arrived.
-
-The last point to which it is fitting to advert, was the stopping
-too long on the Tormes in hopes of fighting in the position of the
-Arapiles. It was a stirring thought indeed for a great mind, and the
-error was brilliantly redeemed, but the remedy does not efface the
-original fault; and this subject leads to a consideration, of some
-speculative interest, namely, why Wellington, desirous as he was to
-keep the line of the Tormes, and knowing with what difficulty the
-French fed their large army, did not order every thing in his rear to
-take refuge in Ciudad Rodrigo and Almeida, and entrench himself on
-St. Christoval and in Salamanca. Thus posted with a bridge-head on
-the left bank that he might operate on either side of the Tormes, he
-might have waited until famine obliged the enemy to separate, which
-would have been in a very few days; but perhaps the answer would be
-that the Spaniards had left Ciudad Rodrigo in a defenceless state.
-
-Turning now to the French side we shall find that they also committed
-errors.
-
-Souham’s pursuit after the cavalry combat at Vente de Pozo was
-feeble. Wellington, speaking of his own army, said, “no troops were
-ever less pressed by an enemy.” The king’s orders were however
-positive not to fight, and as the English general continually
-offered Souham battle in strong positions, the man had no power to
-do mischief. Soult’s pursuit of Hill, which was also remarkably
-cautious, arose from other motives. He was not desirous of a battle,
-and until the Guadarama was passed, Hill had the larger force, for
-then only was the whole French army united. The duke of Dalmatia
-wished to have marched in one great mass through La Mancha, leaving
-only a small corps, or a detachment of Suchet’s army, on the Cuenca
-road; but the king united the whole of the army of the centre, his
-own guards and seven thousand men of the army of the south, on the
-Cuenca line, and there were no good cross communications except
-by Taracon. Soult therefore advanced towards the Tagus with only
-thirty-five thousand men, and from commissariat difficulties and
-other obstacles, he was obliged to move by divisions, which followed
-each other at considerable distances; when his advanced guard was at
-Valdemoro, his rear-guard not having reached Ocaña was two marches
-distant. The danger of this movement is evident. Hill might have
-turned and driven him over the Tagus; or if his orders had permitted
-him to act offensively at first, he might, after leaving a small
-corps on the Upper Tagus, to watch the king, have passed that river
-at Toledo, and without abandoning his line of operations by the
-valley of the Tagus, have attacked Soult while on the march towards
-Ocaña. The latter in despite of his numerous cavalry must then have
-fallen back to concentrate his forces, and this would have deranged
-the whole campaign.
-
-The duke of Dalmatia, who thought Ballesteros was with Hill,
-naturally feared to press his adversary under such a vicious
-disposition of the French army, neither could that disposition be
-changed during the operation, because of the want of good cross
-roads, and because Souham had been taught that the king would meet
-him on the side of Guadalaxara. In fine Soult had learned to respect
-his adversaries, and with the prudence of a man whose mental grasp
-embraced the whole machinery of the war, he avoided a doubtful battle
-where a defeat would, from the unsettled state of the French affairs,
-have lost the whole Peninsula. Wellington had Portugal to fall back
-upon, but the French armies must have gone behind the Ebro.
-
-These seem to be the leading points of interest in this campaign, but
-it will not be uninteresting to mark the close affinities between
-Wellington’s retreat and that of sir John Moore. This last-named
-general marched from Portugal into the north of Spain, with the
-political view of saving Andalusia, by drawing on himself the
-French power, having before-hand declared that he expected to be
-overwhelmed. In like manner Wellington moved into the same country,
-to deliver Andalusia, and thus drew on himself the whole power of
-the enemy; like Moore declaring also before-hand, that the political
-object being gained, his own military position would be endangered.
-Both succeeded, and both were, as they had foretold, overwhelmed by
-superior forces. Moore was to have been aided by Romana’s Spanish
-army, but he found it a burthen; so also Wellington was impeded, not
-assisted, by the Gallicians, and both generals were without money.
-
-Moore having approached Soult, and menaced Burgos, was forced to
-retreat, because Napoleon moved from Madrid on his right flank and
-towards his rear. Wellington having actually besieged Burgos was
-obliged to raise the siege and retire, lest the king, coming through
-Madrid, should pass his right flank and get into his rear. Moore was
-only followed by Soult to the Esla, Wellington was only followed
-by Souham to the Duero. The one general looked to the mountains of
-Gallicia for positions which he could maintain, but the apathy of the
-Spanish people, in the south, permitted Napoleon to bring up such
-an overwhelming force that this plan could not be sustained; the
-other general had the same notion with respect to the Duero, and the
-defection of Ballesteros enabled the king to bring up such a power
-that further retreat became necessary.
-
-Moore’s soldiers at the commencement of the operation evinced want of
-discipline, they committed great excesses at Valderas, and disgraced
-themselves by their inebriety at Bembibre and Villa Franca. In
-like manner Wellington’s soldiers broke the bonds of discipline,
-disgraced themselves by drunkenness at Torquemada and on the retreat
-from the Puente Larga to Madrid; and they committed excesses every
-where. Moore stopped behind the Esla river to check the enemy, to
-restore order, and to enable his commissariat to remove the stores;
-Wellington stopped behind the Carrion for exactly the same purposes.
-The one general was immediately turned on his left, because the
-bridge of Mancilla was abandoned unbroken to Franceschi; the other
-general was also turned on his left, because the bridge of Palencia
-was abandoned unbroken to Foy.
-
-Moore’s retreat was little short of three hundred miles; Wellington’s
-was nearly as long, and both were in the winter season. The first
-halted at Benevente, at Villa Franca, and at Lugo; the last halted
-at Duenas, at Cabeçon, Tordesillas, and Salamanca. The principal
-loss sustained by the one, was in the last marches between Lugo and
-Coruña; so also the principal loss sustained by the other, was in
-the last marches between the Tormes and the Agueda. Some of Moore’s
-generals murmured against his proceedings, some of Wellington’s
-generals, as we have seen, went further; the first were checked
-by a reprimand, the second were humbled by a sarcasm. Finally
-both generals reproached their armies with want of discipline,
-both attributed it to the negligence of the officers generally,
-and in both cases the justice of the reproaches was proved by the
-exceptions. The reserve and the foot-guards in Moore’s campaign,
-the light division and the foot-guards in Wellington’s, gave signal
-proof, that it was negligence of discipline, not hardships, though
-the latter were severe in both armies, that caused the losses. Not
-that I would be understood to say that those regiments only preserved
-order; it is certain that many others were eminently well conducted,
-but those were the troops named as exceptions at the time.
-
-Such were the resemblances of these two retreats. The differences
-were, that Moore had only twenty-three thousand men in the first
-part of his retreat, and only nineteen thousand in the latter part,
-whereas Wellington had thirty-three thousand in the first part of his
-retreat, and sixty-eight thousand men in the latter part. Moore’s
-army were all of one nation and young soldiers, Wellington’s were of
-different nations but they were veterans. The first marched through
-mountains, where the weather was infinitely more inclement than in
-the plains, over which the second moved, and until he reached the
-Esla, Moore’s flank was quite exposed, whereas Wellington’s flank
-was covered by Hill’s army until he gained the Tormes. Wellington
-with veteran troops was opposed to Souham, to Soult, to the king, and
-to Jourdan, men not according in their views, and their whole army,
-when united, did not exceed the allies by more than twenty thousand
-men. Moore with young soldiers was at first opposed to four times,
-and latterly to three times his own numbers, for it is remarkable,
-that the French army assembled at Astorga was above eighty thousand,
-including ten thousand cavalry, which is nearly the same as the
-number assembled against Wellington on the Tormes; but Moore had
-little more than twenty thousand men to oppose to this overwhelming
-mass, and Wellington had nearly seventy thousand. The Partidas
-abounded at the time of Wellington’s retreat, they were unknown at
-the time of Moore’s retreat, and this general was confronted by
-Napoleon, who, despotic in command, was also unrivalled in skill,
-in genius, and in vigour. Wellington’s army was not pressed by the
-enemy, and he made short marches, yet he lost more stragglers than
-Moore, who was vigorously pressed, made long marches, and could
-only secure an embarkation by delivering a battle, in which he died
-most honourably. His character was immediately vilified. Wellington
-was relieved from his pursuers by the operation of famine, and had
-therefore no occasion to deliver a battle, but he also was vilified
-at the time, with equal injustice; and if he had then died it would
-have been with equal malice. His subsequent successes, his great name
-and power, have imposed silence upon his detractors, or converted
-censure into praise, for it is the nature of mankind, especially of
-the ignorant, to cling to fortune.
-
-[Sidenote: Appendix, No. 8, A.]
-
-Moore attributed his difficulties to the apathy of the Spaniards;
-his friends charged them on the incapacity of the English government.
-Wellington attributed his ultimate failure to the defection of
-Ballesteros; his brother, in the House of Lords, charged it on the
-previous contracted policy of Perceval’s government, which had
-crippled the general’s means; and certainly Wellington’s reasoning,
-relative to Ballesteros, was not quite sound. That general, he
-said, might either have forced Soult to take the circuitous route
-of Valencia, Requeña, and Cuenca, or leave a strong corps in
-observation, and then Hill might have detached men to the north. He
-even calculated upon Ballesteros being able to stop both Soult and
-Souham, altogether; for as the latter’s operations were prescribed
-by the king, and dependent upon his proceedings, Wellington judged
-that he would have remained tranquil if Joseph had not advanced.
-This was the error. Souham’s despatches clearly shew, that the
-king’s instructions checked, instead of forwarding his movements;
-and that it was his intention to have delivered battle at the end
-of four days, without regard to the king’s orders; and such was
-his force, that Wellington admitted his own inability to keep the
-field. Ballesteros’ defection therefore cannot be pleaded in bar of
-all further investigation; but whatever failures there were, and
-however imposing the height to which the English general’s reputation
-has since attained, this campaign, including the sieges of Ciudad
-Rodrigo, Badajos, the forts of Salamanca, and of Burgos, the assault
-of Almaraz, and the battle of Salamanca, will probably be considered
-his finest illustration of the art of war. Waterloo may be called
-a more glorious exploit because of the great man who was there
-vanquished; Assye may be deemed a more wonderful action, one indeed
-to be compared with the victory which Lucullus gained over Tygranes,
-but Salamanca will always be referred to as the most skilful of
-Wellington’s battles.
-
-
-
-
-BOOK XX.
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-
-[Sidenote: 1812.]
-
-While the armies were striving, the political affairs had become
-exceedingly complicated and unsteady. Their workings were little
-known or observed by the public, but the evils of bad government in
-England, Spain, and Portugal, the incongruous alliance of bigoted
-aristocracy with awakened democracy, and the inevitable growth
-of national jealousies as external danger seemed to recede, were
-becoming so powerful, that if relief had not been obtained from
-extraneous events, even the vigour of Wellington must have sunk under
-the pressure. The secret causes of disturbance shall now be laid
-bare, and it will then be seen that the catastrophe of Napoleon’s
-Russian campaign was absolutely necessary to the final success of
-the British arms in the Peninsula. I speak not of the physical
-power which, if his host had not withered on the snowy wastes of
-Muscovy, the emperor could have poured into Spain, but of those moral
-obstacles, which, springing up on every side, corrupted the very
-life-blood of the war.
-
-If Russia owed her safety in some degree to the contest in the
-Peninsula, it is undoubted that the fate of the Peninsula was in
-return, decided on the plains of Russia; for had the French veterans
-who there perished, returned victorious, the war could have been
-maintained for years in Spain, with all its waste of treasures and
-of blood, to the absolute ruin of England, even though her army
-might have been victorious in every battle. Yet who shall say with
-certainty what termination any war will ever have? Who shall prophecy
-of an art always varying, and of such intricacy that its secrets seem
-beyond the reach of human intellect? What vast preparations, what
-astonishing combinations were involved in the plan, what vigour and
-ability displayed in the execution of Napoleon’s march to Moscow! And
-yet when the winter came, only four days sooner than he expected, the
-giant’s scheme seemed a thing for children to laugh at!
-
-Nevertheless the political grandeur of that expedition will not
-be hereafter judged from the wild triumph of his enemies, nor its
-military merits from the declamation which has hitherto passed as the
-history of the wondrous, though unfortunate enterprise. It will not
-be the puerilities of Labaume, of Segur, and their imitators, nor
-even that splendid military and political essay of general Jomini,
-called the “_Life of Napoleon_,” which posterity will accept as the
-measure of a general, who carried four hundred thousand men across
-the Niemen, and a hundred and sixty thousand men to Moscow. And with
-such a military providence, with such a vigilance, so disposing his
-reserves, so guarding his flanks, so guiding his masses, that while
-constantly victorious in front, no post was lost in his rear, no
-convoy failed, no courier was stopped, not even a letter was missing:
-the communication with his capital was as regular and certain as
-if that immense march had been but a summer excursion of pleasure!
-However it failed, and its failure was the safety of the Peninsula.
-
-In England the retreat from Burgos was viewed with the alarm and
-anger which always accompanies the disappointment of high-raised
-public expectation; the people had been taught to believe the French
-weak and dispirited, they saw them so strong and daring, that even
-victory could not enable the allies to make a permanent stand beyond
-the frontiers of Portugal. Hence arose murmurs, and a growing
-distrust as to the ultimate result, which would not have failed to
-overturn the war faction, if the retreat of the French from Moscow,
-the defection of Prussia, and the strange unlooked-for spectacle of
-Napoleon vanquished, had not come in happy time as a counterpoise.
-
-When the parliament met, lord Wellesley undertook, and did very
-clearly show, that if the successes in the early part of the year had
-not been, by his brother, pushed to the extent expected, and had been
-followed by important reverses, the causes were clearly to be traced
-to the imbecile administration of Mr. Perceval and his coadjutors,
-whose policy he truly characterized as having in it “_nothing regular
-but confusion_.” With a very accurate knowledge of facts he discussed
-the military question, and maintained that twelve thousand infantry
-and three thousand cavalry, added to the army in the beginning of
-the year, would have rendered the campaign decisive, because the
-Russian contest, the incapacity of Joseph, and the dissentions of the
-French generals in Spain, had produced the most favourable crisis
-for striking a vital blow at the enemy’s power. The cabinet were
-aware of this, and in good time, but though there were abundance of
-soldiers idling at home, when the welfare of the state required their
-presence in the Peninsula, nay, although the ministers had actually
-sent within five thousand as many men as were necessary, they had,
-with the imbecility which marked all their proceedings, so contrived,
-that few or none should reach the theatre of war until the time for
-success had passed away. Then touching upon the financial question,
-with a rude hand he tore to pieces the minister’s pitiful pretexts,
-that the want of specie had necessarily put bounds to their efforts,
-and that the general himself did not complain. “No!” exclaimed lord
-Wellesley, “he does not complain because it is the sacred duty of
-a soldier not to complain. But he does not say that with greater
-means he could not do greater things, and his country will not be
-satisfied if these means are withheld by men, who having assumed the
-direction of affairs in such a crisis, have only incapacity to plead
-in extenuation of their failures.”
-
-This stern accuser was himself fresh from the ministry, versed in
-state matters, and of unquestionable talents; he was well acquainted
-with the actual resources and difficulties of the moment; he was
-sincere in his opinions because he had abandoned office rather than
-be a party to such a miserable mismanagement of England’s power; he
-was in fine no mean authority against his former colleagues, even
-though the facts did not so clearly bear him out in his views.
-
-[Sidenote: Wellington’s Correspondence, MSS.]
-
-That England possessed the troops and that they were wanted by
-Wellington is undeniable. Even in September there were still between
-fifty and sixty thousand soldiers present under arms at home, and
-that any additional force could have been fed in Portugal is equally
-beyond doubt, because the reserve magazines contained provisions for
-one hundred thousand men for nine months. The only question then
-was the possibility of procuring enough of specie to purchase those
-supplies which could not be had on credit. Lord Wellington had indeed
-made the campaign almost without specie, and a small additional force
-would certainly not have overwhelmed his resources; but setting
-this argument aside, what efforts, what ability, what order, what
-arrangements were made by the government to overcome the difficulties
-of the time? Was there less extravagance in the public offices, the
-public works, public salaries, public contracts? The very snuff-boxes
-and services of plate given to diplomatists, the gorgeous furniture
-of palaces, nay the gaudy trappings wasted on Whittingham’s, Roche’s,
-and Downie’s divisions, would almost have furnished the wants of the
-additional troops demanded by lord Wellesley. Where were all the
-millions lavished in subsidies to the Spaniards, where the millions
-which South America had transmitted to Cadiz, where those sums
-spent by the soldiers during the war? Real money had indeed nearly
-disappeared from England, and a base paper had usurped its place; but
-gold had not disappeared from the world, and an able ministry would
-have found it. These men only knew how to squander.
-
-[Sidenote: Stuart’s Correspondence, MSS.]
-
-The subsidy granted to Portugal was paid by the commercial
-speculation of lord Wellington and Mr. Stuart, speculations which
-also fed the army, saved the whole population of Portugal from
-famine, and prevented the war from stopping in 1811; and yet so
-little were the ministers capable even of understanding, much less
-of making such arrangements, that they now rebuked their general for
-having adopted them and after their own imbecile manner insisted upon
-a new mode of providing supplies. Every movement they made proved
-their incapacity. They had permitted lord William Bentinck to engage
-in the scheme of invading Italy when additional troops were wanted in
-Portugal; and they suffered him to bid, in the money-market, against
-lord Wellington, and thus sweep away two millions of dollars at an
-exorbitant premium, for a chimera, when the war in the Peninsula was
-upon the point of stopping altogether in default of that very money
-which Wellington could have otherwise procured—nay, had actually been
-promised at a reasonable cost. Nor was this the full measure of their
-folly.
-
-Lord Wellesley affirmed, and they were unable to deny the fact, that
-dollars might have been obtained from South America to any amount,
-if the government would have consented to pay the market-price for
-them; they would not do it, and yet afterwards sought to purchase the
-same dollars at a higher rate in the European markets. He told them,
-and they could not deny it, that they had empowered five different
-agents, to purchase dollars for five different services, without any
-controlling head; that these independent agents were bidding against
-each other in every money-market, and the restrictions as to the
-price were exactly in the inverse proportion to the importance of
-the service: the agent for the troops in Malta was permitted to offer
-the highest price, lord Wellington was restricted to the lowest. And
-besides this folly lord Wellesley shewed that they had, under their
-licensing system, permitted French vessels to bring French goods,
-silks and gloves, to England, and to carry bullion away in return.
-Napoleon thus paid his army in Spain with the very coin which should
-have subsisted the English troops.
-
-Incapable however as the ministers were of making the simplest
-arrangements; neglecting, as they did, the most obvious means of
-supplying the wants of the army; incapable even, as we have seen,
-of sending out a few bales of clothing and arms for the Spaniards
-without producing the utmost confusion, they were heedless of the
-counsels of their general, prompt to listen to every intriguing
-adviser, and ready to plunge into the most absurd and complicated
-measures, to relieve that distress which their own want of ability
-had produced. When the war with the United States broke out, a war
-provoked by themselves, they suffered the Admiralty, contrary to
-the wishes of Mr. Stuart, to reduce the naval force at Lisbon, and
-to neglect Wellington’s express recommendation as to the stationing
-of ships for the protection of the merchantmen bringing flour and
-stores to Portugal. Thus the American privateers, being unmolested,
-run down the coast of Africa, intercepted the provision trade from
-the Brazils, which was one of the principal resources of the army,
-and then, emboldened by impunity, infested the coast of Portugal,
-captured fourteen ships loaded with flour off the Douro, and a large
-vessel in the very mouth of the Tagus. These things happened also
-when the ministers were censuring and interfering with the general’s
-commercial transactions, and seeking to throw the feeding of his
-soldiers into the hands of British speculators; as if the supply of
-an army was like that of a common market! never considering that
-they thus made it the merchant’s interest to starve the troops with
-a view to increase profits; never considering that it was by that
-very commerce, which they were putting an end to, that the general
-had paid the Portuguese subsidy for them, and had furnished his own
-military chest with specie, when their administrative capacity was
-quite unequal to the task.
-
-Never was a government better served than the British government was
-by lord Wellington and Mr. Stuart. With abilities, vigilance, and
-industry seldom equalled, they had made themselves masters of all
-that related to the Portuguese policy, whether foreign or domestic,
-military, or civil, or judicial. They knew all the causes of
-mischief, they had faithfully represented them both to the Portuguese
-and British governments, and had moreover devised effectual remedies.
-But the former met them with the most vexatious opposition, and the
-latter, neglecting their advice, lent themselves to those foolish
-financial schemes which I have before touched upon as emanating from
-Mr. Villiers, Mr. Vansittart, and the count of Funchal. The first
-had been deficient as an ambassador and statesman, the second was
-universally derided as a financier, and the third, from his long
-residence in London, knew very little of the state of Portugal,
-had derived that little from the information of his brother, the
-restless Principal Souza, and in all his schemes had reference only
-to his own intrigues in the Brazils. Their plans were necessarily
-absurd. Funchal revived the old project of an English loan, and in
-concert with his coadjutors desired to establish a bank after the
-manner of the English institution; and they likewise advanced a
-number of minor details and propositions, most of which had been
-before suggested by Principal Souza and rejected by lord Wellington,
-and all of which went to evade, not to remedy the evils. Finally they
-devised, and the English cabinet actually entertained the plan, of
-selling the crown and church property of Portugal. This spoliation
-of the Catholic church was to be effected by commissioners, one of
-whom was to be Mr. Sydenham, an Englishman and a Protestant; and as
-it was judged that the pope would not readily yield his consent,
-they resolved to apply to his nuncio, who being in their power they
-expected to find more pliable.
-
-Having thus provided for the financial difficulties of Portugal,
-the ministers turned their attention to the supply of the British
-army, and in the same spirit concocted what they called a modified
-system of requisitions after the manner of the French armies! Their
-speeches, their manifestoes, their whole scheme of policy, which
-in the working had nearly crushed the liberties of England and had
-plunged the whole world into war; that policy whose aim and scope
-was, they said, to support established religion, the rights of
-monarchs, and the independence of nations, was now disregarded or
-forgotten. Yes, these men, to remove difficulties caused by their
-own incapacity and negligence, were ready to adopt all that they
-had before condemned and reviled in the French; they were eager to
-meddle, and in the most offensive manner, with the catholic religion,
-by getting from the nuncio, who was in their power, what they could
-not get from the pope voluntarily; they were ready to interfere with
-the rights of the Portuguese crown by selling its property, and
-finally they would have adopted that system of requisitions which
-they had so often denounced as rendering the very name of France
-abhorrent to the world.
-
-All these schemes were duly transmitted to lord Wellington and to Mr.
-Stuart, and the former had, in the field, to unravel the intricacies,
-to detect the fallacies, and to combat the wild speculations of men,
-who, in profound ignorance of facts, were giving a loose to their
-imaginations on such complicated questions of state. It was while
-preparing to fight Marmont that he had to expose the futility of
-relying upon a loan; it was on the heights of San Christoval, on
-the field of battle itself, that he demonstrated the absurdity of
-attempting to establish a Portuguese bank; it was in the trenches of
-Burgos that he dissected Funchal’s and Villiers’s schemes of finance,
-and exposed the folly of attempting the sale of church property; it
-was at the termination of the retreat that with a mixture of rebuke
-and reasoning he quelled the proposal to live by forced requisitions;
-and on each occasion he shewed himself as well acquainted with these
-subjects as he was with the mechanism of armies.
-
-Reform abuses, raise your actual taxes with vigour and impartiality,
-pay your present debt before you contract a new one, was his constant
-reply to the propositions for loans. And when the English ministers
-pressed the other plans, which, besides the bank, included a
-recoinage of dollars into cruzados, in other words the depreciation
-of the silver standard, he with an unsparing hand laid their folly
-bare. The military and political state of Portugal he said was such
-that no man in his senses, whether native or foreigner, would place
-his capital where he could not withdraw it at a moment’s notice. When
-Massena invaded that country unreasonable despondency had prevailed
-amongst the ministers, and now they seemed to have a confidence as
-wild as their former fear; but he who knew the real state of affairs;
-he who knew the persons that were expected to advance money; he who
-knew the relative forces of the contending armies, the advantages and
-disadvantages attending each; he who knew the absolute weakness of
-the Portuguese frontier as a line of defence, could only laugh at the
-notion that the capitalists would take gold out of their own chests
-to lodge it in the chests of the bank and eventually in those of the
-Portuguese treasury, a treasury deservedly without credit. The French
-armies opposed to him in the field (he was then on San Christoval)
-were, he said, just double his own strength, and a serious accident
-to Ballesteros, a rash general with a bad army, would oblige the
-Anglo-Portuguese force to retire into Portugal and the prospects of
-the campaign would vanish; and this argument left out of the question
-any accident which might happen to himself or general Hill. Portugal
-would, he hoped, be saved but its security was not such as these
-visionaries would represent it.
-
-But they had proposed also a British security, in jewels, for the
-capital of their bank, and their reasonings on this head were
-equally fallacious. This security was to be supported by collecting
-the duties on wines, exported from Portugal to England, and yet
-they had not even ascertained whether the existence of these
-duties was conformable to the treaty with England. Then came the
-former question. Would Great Britain guarantee the capital of the
-subscribers whether Portugal was lost or saved? If the country should
-be lost, the new possessors would understand the levying the duties
-upon wines as well as the old; would England make her drinkers of
-port pay two duties, the one for the benefit of the bank capitalists,
-the other for the benefit of the French conquerors? If all these
-difficulties could be got over, a bank would be the most efficacious
-mode in which England could use her credit for the benefit of
-Portugal; but all the other plans proposed were mere spendthrift
-schemes to defray the expenses of the war, and if the English
-government could descend to entertain them they would fail, because
-the real obstacle, scarcity of specie, would remain.
-
-A nation desirous of establishing public credit should begin, he
-said, by acquiring a revenue equal to its fixed expenditure, and must
-manifest an inclination to be honest by performing its engagements
-with respect to public debts. This maxim he had constantly enforced
-to the Portuguese government, and if they had minded it, instead of
-trusting to the fallacious hope of getting loans in England, the
-deficiency of their revenue would have been made up, without imposing
-new taxes, and even with the repeal of many which were oppressive
-and unjust. The fair and honest collection of taxes, which ought to
-exist, would have been sufficient. For after protracted and unsparing
-exertions, and by refusing to accept their paper money on any other
-condition in his commissariat transactions, he had at last forced
-the Portuguese authorities to pay the interest of that paper and of
-their exchequer bills, called “_Apolocies grandes_,” and the effect
-had been to increase the resources of the government though the
-government had even in the execution evinced its corruption. Then
-showing in detail how this benefit had been produced he traced the
-mischief created by men whom he called the _sharks_ of Lisbon and
-other great towns, meaning speculators, principally Englishmen, whose
-nefarious cupidity led them to cry down the credit of the army-bills,
-and then purchase them, to the injury of the public and of the poor
-people who furnished the supplies.
-
-A plan of recoining the Spanish dollars and so gaining eight in
-the hundred of pure silver which they contained above that of the
-Portuguese cruzado, he treated as a fraud, and a useless one. In
-Lisbon, where the cruzado was current, some gain might perhaps be
-made; but it was not even there certain, and foreigners, Englishmen
-and Americans, from whom the great supplies were purchased, would
-immediately add to their prices in proportion to the deterioration
-of the coin. Moreover the operations and expenditure of the army
-were not confined to Lisbon, nor even to Portugal, and the cruzado
-would not pass for its nominal value in Spain; thus instead of an
-advantage, the greatest inconvenience would result from a scheme at
-the best unworthy of the British government. In fine the reform of
-abuses, the discontinuance of useless expenses, economy and energy
-were the only remedies.
-
-Such was his reasoning but it had little effect on his persecutors;
-for when his best men were falling by hundreds, his brightest visions
-of glory fading on the smoky walls of Burgos, he was again forced
-to examine and refute anew, voluminous plans of Portuguese finance,
-concocted by Funchal and Villiers, with notes by Vansittart. All
-the old schemes of the Principal Souza, which had been so often
-before analyzed and rejected as impracticable, were revived with the
-addition of a mixed Anglo-Portuguese commission for the sale of the
-crown and church lands. And these projects were accompanied with
-complaints that frauds had been practised on the custom-house, and
-violence used towards the inhabitants by the British commissaries,
-and it was insinuated such misconduct had been the real cause of the
-financial distresses of Portugal. The patient industry of genius was
-never more severely taxed.
-
-Wellington began by repelling the charges of exactions and frauds,
-as applied to the army; he showed that to reform the custom-house
-so as to prevent frauds, had been his unceasing recommendation to
-the Portuguese government; that he had as repeatedly, and in detail,
-shewed the government, how to remedy the evils they complained of,
-how to increase their customs, how to levy their taxes, how in fine
-to arrange their whole financial system in a manner that would have
-rendered their revenues equal to their expenses, and without that
-oppression and injustice which they were in the habit of practising;
-for the extortions and violence complained of, were not perpetrated
-by the English but by the Portuguese commissariat, and yet the troops
-of that nation were starving. Having exposed Funchal’s ignorance
-of financial facts in detail, and challenged him to the proof of
-the charges against the British army, he entered deeply into the
-consideration of the great question of the sale of the crown and
-church lands, which it had been proposed to substitute for that
-economy and reform of abuses which he so long, so often, and so
-vainly had pressed upon the regency. The proposal was not quite new.
-“I have already,” he observed, “had before me a proposition for the
-sale or rather transfer, to the creditors of the ‘_Junta de Viveres_’
-of crown lands; but these were the uncultivated lands in Alemtejo,
-and I pointed out to the government the great improbability that any
-body would take such lands in payment, and the injury that would be
-done to the public credit by making the scheme public if not likely
-to be successful. My opinion is that there is nobody in Portugal
-possessed of capital who entertains, or who ought to entertain,
-such an opinion of the state of affairs in the Peninsula, as to lay
-out his money in the purchase of crown lands. The loss of a battle,
-not in the Peninsula even, but elsewhere, would expose his estate
-to confiscation, or at all events to ruin by a fresh incursion of
-the enemy. Even if any man could believe that Portugal is secure
-against the invasion of the enemy, and his estate and person against
-the ‘_violence, exactions, and frauds_’ (these were Funchal’s words
-respecting the allied army) of the enemy, he is not, during the
-existence of the war, according to the Conde de Funchal’s notion,
-exempt from those evils from his own countrymen and their allies. Try
-this experiment, offer the estates of the crown for sale, and it will
-be seen whether I have formed a correct judgment on this subject.”
-Then running with a rapid hand over many minor though intricate
-fallacies for raising the value of the Portuguese paper-money, he
-thus treated the great question of the church lands.
-
-First, as in the case of crown lands, there would be no purchasers,
-and as nothing could render the measure palatable to the clergy, the
-influence of the church would be exerted against the allies, instead
-of being, as hitherto, strongly exerted in their favour. It would be
-useless if the experiment of the crown lands succeeded, and if that
-failed the sale of church lands could not succeed; but the attempt
-would alienate the good wishes of a very powerful party in Spain, as
-well as in Portugal. Moreover if it should succeed, and be honestly
-carried into execution, it would entail a burthen on the finances of
-five in the hundred, on the purchase-money, for the support of the
-ecclesiastical owners of the estates. The best mode of obtaining for
-the state eventually the benefit of the church property, would be to
-prevent the monasteries and nunneries from receiving novices, and
-thus, in the course of time, the pope might be brought to consent
-to the sale of the estates, or the nation might assume possession
-when the ecclesiastical corporations thus became extinct. He however
-thought that it was no disadvantage to Spain or Portugal, that large
-portions of land should be held by the church. The bishops and monks
-were the only proprietors who lived on their estates, and spent
-the revenues amongst the labourers by whom those revenues had been
-produced; and until the habits of the new landed proprietors changed,
-the transfer of the property in land from the clergy to the laymen
-would be a misfortune.
-
-This memoir, sent from the trenches of Burgos, quashed Funchal’s
-projects; but that intriguer’s object was not so much to remove
-financial difficulties, as to get rid of his brother’s opponents in
-the regency by exciting powerful interests against them; wherefore
-failing in this proposal, he ordered Redondo, now marquis of Borba,
-the minister of finance, to repair to the Brazils, intending to
-supply his place with one of his own faction. Wellington and Stuart
-were at this time doggedly opposed by Borba, but as the credit of the
-Portuguese treasury was supported by his character for probity, they
-forbade him to obey the order, and represented the matter so forcibly
-to the prince regent, that Funchal was severely reprimanded for his
-audacity.
-
-It was amidst these vexations that Wellington made his retreat, and
-in such destitution that he declared all former distress for money
-had been slight in comparison of his present misery. So low were
-the resources, that British naval stores had been trucked for corn
-in Egypt; and the English ministers, finding that Russia, intent
-upon pushing her successes, was gathering specie from all quarters,
-desired Mr. Stuart to prevent the English and American captains of
-merchant vessels from carrying coin away from Lisbon; a remedial
-measure, indicating their total ignorance of the nature of commerce.
-It was not attempted to be enforced. Then also they transmitted their
-plan of supplying the English army by requisitions on the country, a
-plan the particulars of which may be best gathered from the answers
-to it.
-
-Mr. Stuart, firm in opposition, shortly observed that it was by
-avoiding and reprobating such a system, although pursued alike by the
-natives and by the enemy, that the British character, and credit,
-had been established so firmly as to be of the greatest use in the
-operations of the war. Wellington entered more deeply into the
-subject.
-
-Nothing, he said, could be procured from the country in the mode
-proposed by the ministers’ memoir, unless resort was also had to
-the French mode of enforcing their requisitions. The proceedings
-of the French armies were misunderstood. It was not true, as
-supposed in the memoir, that the French never paid for supplies.
-They levied contributions where money was to be had, and with this
-paid for provisions in other parts; and when requisitions for money
-or clothing were made, they were taken on account of the regular
-contributions due to the government. They were indeed heavier than
-even an usurping government was entitled to demand, still it was a
-regular government account, and it was obvious the British army could
-not have recourse to a similar plan without depriving its allies of
-their own legitimate resources.
-
-The requisitions were enforced by a system of terror. A magistrate
-was ordered to provide for the troops, and was told that the latter
-would, in case of failure, take the provisions and punish the village
-or district in a variety of ways. Now were it expedient to follow
-this mode of requisition there must be two armies, one to fight
-the enemy and one to enforce the requisitions, for the Spaniards
-would never submit to such proceedings without the use of force.
-The conscription gave the French armies a more moral description of
-soldiers, but even if this second army was provided, the British
-troops could not be trusted to inflict an exact measure of punishment
-on a disobedient village, they would plunder it as well as the
-others readily enough, but their principal object would be to get
-at and drink as much liquor as they could, and then to destroy as
-much valuable property as should fall in their way; meanwhile the
-objects of their mission, the bringing of supplies to the army and
-the infliction of an exact measure of punishment on the magistrates
-or district would not be accomplished at all. Moreover the holders
-of supplies in Spain being unused to commercial habits, would regard
-payment for these requisitions by bills of any description, to be
-rather worse than the mode of contribution followed by the French,
-and would resist it as forcibly. And upon such a nice point did the
-war hang, that if they accepted the bills, and were once to discover
-the mode of procuring cash for them by discounting high, it would
-be the most fatal blow possible to the credit and resources of the
-British army in the Peninsula. The war would then soon cease.
-
-The memoir asserted that sir John Moore had been well furnished
-with money, and that nevertheless the Spaniards would not give him
-provisions; and this fact was urged as an argument for enforcing
-requisitions. But the assertion that Moore was furnished with money,
-which was itself the index to the ministers’ incapacity, Wellington
-told them was not true. “Moore,” he said, “had been even worse
-furnished than himself; that general had borrowed a little, a very
-little money at Salamanca, but he had no regular supply for the
-military chest until the army had nearly reached Coruña; and the
-Spaniards were not very wrong in their reluctance to meet his wants,
-for the debts of his army were still unpaid in the latter end of
-1812.” In fine there was no mode by which supplies could be procured
-from the country without payment on the spot, or soon after the
-transaction, except by prevailing on the Spanish government to give
-the English army a part of the government contributions, and a part
-of the revenues of the royal domains, to be received from the people
-in kind at a reasonable rate. This had been already done by himself
-in the province of Salamanca with success, and the same system might
-be extended to other provinces in proportion as the legitimate
-government was re-established. But this only met a part of the evil,
-it would indeed give some supplies, cheaper than they could otherwise
-be procured, yet they must afterwards be paid for at Cadiz in specie,
-and thus less money would come into the military chest, which, as
-before noticed, was only supported by the mercantile speculations of
-the general.
-
-Such were the discussions forced upon Wellington when all his
-faculties were demanded on the field of battle, and such was the
-hardiness of his intellect to sustain the additional labour. Such
-also were the men calling themselves statesmen who then wielded the
-vast resources of Great Britain. The expenditure of that country for
-the year 1812, was above one hundred millions, the ministers who
-controuled it, were yet so ignorant of the elementary principles of
-finance, as to throw upon their general, even amidst the clangor
-and tumult of battle, the task of exposing such fallacies. And to
-reduce these persons from the magnitude of statesmen to their natural
-smallness of intriguing debaters is called political prejudice! But
-though power may enable men to trample upon reason for a time with
-impunity, they cannot escape her ultimate vengeance, she reassumes
-her sway and history delivers them to the justice of posterity.
-
-Perverse as the proceedings of the English ministers were, those
-of the Portuguese and Spanish governments were not less vexatious;
-and at this time the temper of the Spanish rulers was of infinite
-importance because of the misfortunes which had befallen the French
-emperor. The opportunity given to strike a decisive blow at his
-power in the Peninsula demanded an early and vigorous campaign in
-Spain, and the experience of 1812 had taught Wellington, that no
-aid could be derived from the Spaniards unless a change was made
-in their military system. Hence the moment he was assured that the
-French armies had taken winter-quarters, he resolved before all other
-matters, in person to urge upon the Cortez the necessity of giving
-him the real as well as the nominal command of their troops, seeing
-that without an immediate reformation the Spanish armies could not
-take the field in due season.
-
-During the past campaign, and especially after the Conde de Abispal,
-indignant at the censure passed in the Cortez on his brother’s
-conduct at Castalla, had resigned, the weakness of the Spanish
-government had become daily more deplorable; nothing was done to
-ameliorate the military system; an extreme jealousy raged between the
-Cortez and the regency; and when the former offered lord Wellington
-the command of their armies, Mr. Wellesley advised him to accept it,
-not so much in the hope of effecting any beneficial change, as to
-offer a point upon which the Spaniards who were still true to the
-English alliance and to the aristocratic cause might rally in case of
-reverse. The disobedience of Ballesteros had been indeed promptly
-punished; but the vigour of the Cortez on that occasion, was more the
-result of offended pride than any consideration of sound policy, and
-the retreat of the allies into Portugal was the signal for a renewal
-of those dangerous intrigues, which the battle of Salamanca had
-arrested without crushing.
-
-Lord Wellington reached Cadiz on the 18th of December, he was
-received without enthusiasm, yet with due honour, and his presence
-seemed agreeable both to the Cortes and to the people; the passions
-which actuated the different parties in the state subsided for the
-moment, and the ascendency of his genius was so strongly felt, that
-he was heard with patience, even when in private he strongly urged
-the leading men to turn their attention entirely to the war, to place
-in abeyance their factious disputes and above all things not to put
-down the inquisition lest they should drive the powerful church party
-into the arms of the enemy. His exhortation upon this last point,
-had indeed no effect save to encourage the Serviles to look more
-to England, yet it did not prevent the Cortez yielding to him the
-entire controul of fifty thousand men which were to be paid from the
-English subsidy; they promised also that the commanders should not be
-removed, nor any change made in the organization or destination of
-such troops without his consent.
-
-A fresh organization of the Spanish forces now had place. They were
-divided into four armies and two reserves.
-
-The Catalans formed the first army.
-
-Elio’s troops including the divisions of Duran, Bassecour, and Villa
-Campa, received the name of the second army.
-
-The forces in the Morena, formerly under Ballesteros, were
-constituted the third army, under Del Parque.
-
-The troops of Estremadura, Leon, Gallicia, and the Asturias,
-including Morillo’s, Penne Villemur’s, Downie’s, and Carlos
-d’España’s separate divisions, were called the fourth army, and
-given to Castaños, whose appointment to Catalonia was cancelled, and
-his former dignity of captain-general in Estremadura and Gallicia
-restored. The Partidas of Longa, Mina, Porlier, and the other chiefs
-in the northern provinces were afterwards united to this army as
-separate divisions.
-
-The conde d’Abispal, made captain-general of Andalusia, commanded
-the first reserve, and Lacy recalled from Catalonia, where he was
-replaced by Copons, was ordered to form a second reserve in the
-neighbourhood of San Roque. Such were the new dispositions, but when
-Wellington had completed this important negociation with the Spanish
-government some inactivity was for the first time discovered in his
-own proceedings. His stay was a little prolonged without apparent
-reason, and it was whispered that if he resembled Cæsar, Cadiz could
-produce a Cleopatra; but whether true or not, he soon returned to
-the army, first however visiting Lisbon where he was greeted with
-extraordinary honours, and the most unbounded enthusiasm, especially
-by the people.
-
-His departure from Cadiz was the signal for all the political
-dissentions to break out with more violence than before; the
-dissentions of the liberals and serviles became more rancorous, and
-the executive was always on the side of the latter, the majority of
-the cortez on the side of the former; neither enjoyed the confidence
-of the people nor of the allies, and the intrigues of Carlotta, which
-never ceased, advanced towards their completion. A strong inclination
-to make her sole regent was manifested, and sir Henry Wellesley,
-tired of fruitless opposition remained neuter, with the approbation
-of his brother. One of the principal causes of this feeling for
-Carlotta, was the violence she had shewn against the insurgents of
-Buenos Ayres, and another was the disgust given to the merchants of
-Cadiz, by certain diplomatic measures which lord Strangford had held
-with that revolted state. The agents of the princess represented the
-policy of England towards the Spanish colonies as a smuggling policy,
-and not without truth, for the advice of lord Wellington upon that
-subject had been unheeded. Lord Castlereagh had indeed offerred a new
-mediation scheme, whereby the old commission was to proceed under the
-Spanish restriction of not touching at Mexico, to which country a
-new mission composed of Spaniards was to proceed, accompanied by an
-English agent without any ostensible character. This proposal however
-ended as the others had done, and the Spanish jealousy of England
-increased.
-
-[Sidenote: 1813. March.]
-
-In the beginning of the year 1813, Carlotta’s cause ably and
-diligently served by Pedro Souza, had gained a number of adherents
-even amongst the liberals in the cortez. She was ready to sacrifice
-even the rights of her posterity, and as she promised to maintain all
-ancient abuses, the clergy and the serviles were in no manner averse
-to her success. Meanwhile the decree to abolish the inquisition
-which was become the great test of political party, passed on the
-7th of March, and the regency were ordered to have it read in the
-churches. The clergy of Cadiz resisted the order, and intimated
-their refusal through the medium of a public letter, and the regency
-encouraged them by removing the governor of Cadiz, admiral Valdez,
-a known liberal and opponent of the inquisition, appointing in his
-stead general Alos, a warm advocate for that horrid institution. But
-in the vindication of official power the Spaniards are generally
-prompt and decided. On the 8th Augustin Arguelles moved, and it was
-instantly carried, that the sessions of the extraordinary cortez
-should be declared permanent, with a view to measures worthy of the
-nation, and to prevent the evils with which the state was menaced by
-the opposition of the regency and the clergy to the cortes. A decree
-was then proposed for suppressing the actual regency, and replacing
-it with a provisional government to be composed of the three eldest
-councillors of state. This being conformable to the constitution, was
-carried by a majority of eighty-six to fifty-eight, while another
-proposition, that two members of the cortez, publicly elected,
-should be added to the regency, was rejected as an innovation, by
-seventy-two against sixty-six. The councillors Pedro Agar, Gabriel
-Ciscar, and the cardinal Bourbon, archbishop of Toledo, were
-immediately installed as regents.
-
-A committee which had been appointed to consider of the best means of
-improving a system of government felt by all parties to be imperfect,
-now recommended that the cardinal archbishop, who was of the blood
-royal, should be president of the regency, leaving Carlotta’s claims
-unnoticed, and as Ciscar and Agar had been formerly removed from the
-regency for incapacity, it was generally supposed that the intention
-was to make the archbishop in fact sole regent. Very soon however
-Carlotta’s influence was again felt, for a dispute having arisen in
-the cortez between what were called the Americans and the Liberals,
-about the annual Acapulco-ship, the former to the number of twenty
-joined the party of the princess, and it was resolved that Ruiez
-Pedron, a distinguished opponent of the inquisition, should propose
-her as the head of the regency. They were almost sure of a majority,
-when the scheme transpired, and the people, who liked her not,
-became so furious that her partizans were afraid to speak. Then the
-opposite side, fearing her power, proposed on the instant that the
-provisional regency should be made permanent which was carried. Thus,
-chance rather than choice ruling, an old prelate and two imbecile
-councillors were entrusted with the government, and the intrigues
-and rancour of the different parties exploded more frequently as the
-pressure from above became slight.
-
-[Sidenote: May.]
-
-More than all others the clergy were, as might be expected, violent
-and daring, yet the Cortez was not to be frightened. Four canons
-of the cathedrals were arrested in May, and orders were issued to
-arrest the archbishop of St. Jago and many bishops, because of a
-pastoral letter they had published against the abolition of the
-inquisition; for according to the habits of their craft of all sects,
-they deemed religion trampled under foot when the power of levying
-money and spilling blood was denied to ministers professing the
-faith of Christ. Nor amidst these broils did the English influence
-fail to suffer; the democratic spirit advanced hastily, the Cadiz
-press teemed with writings, intended to excite the people against
-the ultimate designs of the English cabinet, and every effort was
-made to raise a hatred of the British general and his troops. These
-efforts were not founded entirely on falsehoods, and were far
-from being unsuccessful, because the eager desire to preserve the
-inquisition displayed by lord Wellington and his brother, although
-arising from military considerations, was too much in accord with the
-known tendency of the English cabinet’s policy, not to excite the
-suspicions of the whole liberal party.
-
-The bishops of Logroño, Mondonedo, Astorga, Lugo, and Salamanca, and
-the archbishop of St. Jago were arrested, but several bishops escaped
-into Portugal, and were there protected as martyrs to the cause of
-legitimacy and despotism. The bishop of Orense and the ex-regent
-Lardizabal had before fled, the latter to Algarve, the former to
-the Tras os Montes, from whence he kept up an active intercourse
-with Gallicia, and the Cortez were far from popular there; indeed
-the flight of the bishops created great irritation in every part
-of Spain, for the liberal party of the Cortez was stronger in the
-Isla than in other parts, and by a curious anomaly the officers and
-soldiers all over Spain were generally their partizans while the
-people were generally the partizans of the clergy. Nevertheless the
-seeds of freedom, though carelessly sown by the French on one side,
-and by the Cortez on the other, took deep root, and have since sprung
-up into strong plants in due time to burgeon and bear fruit.
-
-When the bishops fled from Spain, Gravina, the pope’s Nuncio assumed
-such a tone of hostility, that notwithstanding the good offices of
-sir Henry Wellesley, which were for some time successful in screening
-him from the vengeance of the Cortez, the latter, encouraged by
-the English newspapers, finally dismissed him and sequestered his
-benefices. He also took refuge in Portugal, and like the rest of
-the expelled clergy, sought by all means to render the proceedings
-of the Cortez odious in Spain. He formed a strict alliance with the
-Portuguese nuncio, Vicente Machiechi, and working together with great
-activity, they interfered, not with the concerns of Spain only, but
-with the Catholics in the British army, and even extended their
-intrigues to Ireland. Hence, as just and honest government had never
-formed any part of the English policy towards that country, alarm
-pervaded the cabinet, and the nuncio, protected when opposed to the
-Cortez, was now considered a very troublesome and indiscreet person.
-
-Such a state of feud could not last long without producing a crisis,
-and one of a most formidable and decisive nature was really at
-hand. Already many persons in the Cortez held secret intercourse
-with Joseph, in the view of acknowledging his dynasty, on condition
-that he would accede to the general policy of the Cortez in civil
-government; that monarch had as we have seen organized a large native
-force, and the coasts of Spain and Portugal swarmed with French
-privateers manned with Spanish seamen. The victory at Salamanca had
-withered these resources for the moment, but Wellington’s failure at
-Burgos and retreat into Portugal again revived them, and at the same
-time gave a heavy shock to public confidence in the power of England,
-a shock which nothing but the misfortunes of Napoleon in Russia
-could have prevented from being fatal.
-
-The Emperor indeed with that wonderful intellectual activity and
-energy which made him the foremost man of the world, had raised a
-fresh army and prepared once more to march into the heart of Germany,
-yet to do this he was forced to withdraw such numbers of old soldiers
-from Spain that the French army could no longer hope permanently to
-act on the offensive. This stayed the Peninsula cause upon the very
-brink of a precipice, for in that very curious, useful, and authentic
-work, called “_Bourrienne and his errors_,” it appears that early in
-1813, the ever factious Conde de Montijo, then a general in Elio’s
-army, had secretly made proposals to pass over, with the forces under
-his command, to the king; and soon afterwards the whole army of Del
-Parque, having advanced into La Mancha, made offers of the same
-nature.
-
-They were actually in negociation with Joseph, when the emperor’s
-orders obliged the French army to abandon Madrid, and take up the
-line of the Duero. Then the Spaniards advertised of the French
-weakness, feared to continue their negociations, Wellington soon
-afterwards advanced, and as this feeling in favour of the intrusive
-monarch was certainly not general, the resistance to the invaders
-revived with the successes of the British general. But if instead
-of diminishing his forces, Napoleon, victorious in Russia, had
-strengthened them, this defection would certainly have taken place,
-and would probably have been followed by others. The king at the
-head of a Spanish army would then have reconquered Andalusia,
-Wellington would have been confined to the defence of Portugal, and
-it is scarcely to be supposed that England would have purchased the
-independence of that country with her own permanent ruin.
-
-This conspiracy is not related by me with entire confidence, because
-no trace of the transaction is to be found in the correspondence of
-the king taken at Vittoria. Nevertheless there are abundant proofs
-that the work called “_Bourrienne and his errors_,” inasmuch as it
-relates to Joseph’s transactions in Spain, is accurately compiled
-from that monarch’s correspondence. Many of his papers taken at
-Vittoria were lost or abstracted at the time, and as in a case
-involving so many persons’ lives, he would probably have destroyed
-the proofs of a conspiracy which had failed, there seems little
-reason to doubt that the general fact is correct. Napoleon also in
-his memoirs, speaks of secret negociations with the Cortez about this
-time, and his testimony is corroborated by the correspondence of the
-British embassy at Cadiz, and by the continued intrigues against the
-British influence. The next chapter will show that the policy of
-Spain was not the only source of uneasiness to Lord Wellington.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-
-[Sidenote: 1813.]
-
-Nothing could be more complicated than the political state of
-Portugal with reference to the situation of the English general.
-His object, as I have repeatedly shown, was to bring the whole
-resources of the country to bear on the war, but to effect this he
-had to run counter to the habits and customs, both of the people
-and of the government; to detect the intrigues of the subordinate
-authorities as well as those of the higher powers; to oppose the
-violence of factious men in the local government, and what was still
-more difficult, to stimulate the sluggish apathy and to combat the
-often honest obstinacy of those who were not factious. These things
-he was to effect without the power of recompensing or chastising,
-and even while forced to support those who merited rebuke, against
-the still more formidable intriguers of the court of Brazil; for the
-best men of Portugal actually formed the local government, and he was
-not foiled so much by the men as by the sluggish system which was
-national, and although dull for good purposes, vivacious enough for
-mischief. The dread of ultimate personal consequences attached, not
-to neglect of the war but to any vigorous exertions in support of it.
-
-The proceedings of the court of Rio Janeiro were not less
-mischievous, for there the personal intrigues fostered by the
-peculiar disposition of the English envoy, by the weak yet dogged
-habits of the prince, and by the meddling nature and violent
-passions of the princess Carlotta, stifled all great national views.
-There also the power of the Souza’s, a family deficient neither
-in activity nor in talent, was predominant, and the object of all
-was to stimulate the government in Portugal against the English
-general’s military policy. To this he could, and had opposed, as we
-have seen, the power of the English government, with some effect at
-different times, but that resource was a dangerous one and only to
-be resorted to in extreme circumstances. Hence when to all these
-things is added a continual struggle with the knavery of merchants
-of all nations, his difficulties must be admitted, his indomitable
-vigour, his patience and his extraordinary mental resources admired,
-and the whole scene must be considered as one of the most curious and
-instructive lessons in the study of nations.
-
-Wellington was not simply a general who with greater or less means,
-was to plan his military operations leaving to others the care of
-settling the political difficulties which might arise. He had,
-coincident with his military duties, to regenerate a whole people,
-to force them against the current of their prejudices and usages
-on a dangerous and painful course; he had to teach at once the
-populace and the government, to infuse spirit and order without the
-aid of rewards or punishments, to excite enthusiasm through the
-medium of corrupt oppressive institutions, and far from making any
-revolutionary appeal to suppress all tendency towards that resource
-of great minds on the like occasions. Thus only could he maintain an
-army at all, and as it was beyond the power of man to continue such
-a struggle for any length of time he was more than ever anxious to
-gather strength for a decisive blow, which the enemy’s situation now
-rendered possible, that he might free himself from the critical and
-anomalous relation in which he stood towards Portugal.
-
-It may indeed be wondered that he so long bore up against the
-encreasing pressure of these distracting affairs, and certain it is
-that more than once he was like to yield, and would have yielded
-if fortune had not offered him certain happy military chances, and
-yet such as few but himself could have profited from. In 1810, on
-the ridge of Busaco, and in the lines, the military success was
-rather over the Portuguese government than the enemy. At Santarem
-in 1811 the glory of arms scarcely compensated for the destitution
-of the troops. At Fuentes Onoro and on the Caya, after the second
-unsuccessful siege of Badajos, the Portuguese army had nearly
-dissolved; and the astonishing sieges of Ciudad Rodrigo and Badajos
-in 1812, were necessary to save the cause from dying of inanition
-and despair. Even then the early deliverance of Andalusia was
-frustrated, and time, more valuable than gold or life, in war, was
-lost, the enemy became the strongest in the field, and in despite of
-the victory of Salamanca, the bad effects of the English general’s
-political situation were felt in the repulse from Burgos, and in the
-double retreat from that place and from Madrid. Accumulated mischiefs
-were now to be encountered in Portugal.
-
-It has been shown how obstinately the regency opposed Wellington’s
-plans of financial reform, how they disputed and complained upon
-every circumstance, whether serious or trivial on which a complaint
-could be founded; for thinking Portugal no longer in danger they
-were tired of their British allies, and had no desire to aid nor
-indeed any wish to see Spain delivered from her difficulties. They
-designed therefore to harass the English general, hoping either to
-drive him away altogether, or to force him, and, through him, his
-government, to grant them loans or new subsidies. But Wellington knew
-that Portugal could, and he was resolved it should find resources
-within itself, wherefore, after the battle of Salamanca, when they
-demanded a fresh subsidy he would not listen to them; and when they
-adopted that scheme which I have already exposed, of feeding, or
-rather starving their troops, through the medium of a treaty with
-the Spanish government, he checked the shameful and absurd plan, by
-applying a part of the money in the chest of aids intended for the
-civil service to the relief of the Portuguese troops. Yet the regency
-did not entirely fail in their object inasmuch as many persons
-dependent upon the subsidy were thus deprived of their payments, and
-their complaints hurt the British credit, and reduced the British
-influence with the people whose faithful attachment to the alliance
-no intrigues had hitherto been able to shake.
-
-Into every branch of government, however minute, the regency now
-infused their own captious and discontented spirit. They complained
-falsely that general Campbell had insulted the nation by turning
-some Portuguese residents publicly out of Gibraltar in company with
-Jews and Moors; they refused the wheat which was delivered to them
-by lord Wellington in lieu of their subsidy, saying it was not fit
-for food notwithstanding that the English troops were then living
-upon parcels of the same grain, that their own troops were glad to
-get it, and that no other was to be had. When a wooden jetty was to
-be thrown in the Tagus for the convenience of landing stores, they
-supported one Caldas, a rich proprietor, in his refusal to permit the
-trees, wanted for the purpose, to be felled, alledging the rights
-of property, although he was to be paid largely, and although they
-had themselves then, and always, disregarded the rights of property,
-especially when poor men were concerned, seizing upon whatever was
-required either for the public service, or for the support of their
-own irregularities, without any payment at all and in shameful
-violation both of law and humanity.
-
-The commercial treaty, and the proceedings of the Oporto wine
-company, an oppressive corporation unfair in all its dealings,
-irresponsible, established in violation of that treaty, and supported
-without regard either to the interests of the prince regent or his
-British allies, furnished them with continual subjects for disputes,
-and nothing was too absurd or too gross for their interference. Under
-the management of Mr. Stuart who had vigorously enforced Wellington’s
-plans, their paper money had obtained a reasonable and encreasing
-circulation, and their custom-house resources had encreased, the
-expenses of their navy and of their arsenal had in some degree been
-reduced; and it was made evident that an extensive and vigorous
-application of the same principles would enable them to overcome
-all their financial difficulties; but there were too many personal
-interests, too much shameful profit made under the abuses to permit
-such a reform. The naval establishment instead of being entirely
-transferred, as Wellington desired, to the Brazils, was continued
-in the Tagus, and with it the arsenal as its natural appendage. The
-infamous Junta de Viveres had been suppressed by the prince regent,
-yet the government under the false pretext of paying its debts still
-disbursed above ten thousand pounds a month in salaries to men whose
-offices had been formally abolished.
-
-About this time also the opening of the Spanish ports in those
-provinces from whence the enemy had been driven, deprived Lisbon of a
-monopoly of trade enjoyed for the last three years, and the regency
-observing the consequent diminution of revenue, with inexpressible
-effrontery insisted that the grain, imported by Wellington, by which
-their army and their nation had been saved from famine, and by
-which their own subsidy had been provided, should enter the public
-warehouses under specific regulations and pay duty for so doing. So
-tenaciously did they hold to this point that Wellington was forced to
-menace a formal appeal to the English cabinet, for he knew that the
-subordinate officers of the government, knavish in the extreme, would
-have sold the secrets of the army magazines to the speculators; and
-the latter, in whose hands the furnishing of the army would under the
-new plan of the English ministers be placed, being thus accurately
-instructed of its resources would have regulated their supplies with
-great nicety so as to have famished the soldiers, and paralyzed the
-operations at the greatest possible expense.
-
-But the supply of the army under any system was now becoming
-extremely precarious, for besides the activity of the American
-privateers English ships of war used, at times, to capture the
-vessels secretly employed in bringing provision under licenses from
-Mr. Stuart and Mr. Forster. Nay the captain of a Scotch merchant
-vessel engaged in the same trade and having no letter of marque, had
-the piratical insolence to seize in the very mouth of the Tagus,
-and under the Portuguese batteries, an American vessel sailing
-under a license from Mr. Forster, and to carry her into Greenock,
-thus violating at once the license of the English minister, the
-independence of Portugal, and the general law of nations. Alarm
-immediately spread far and wide amongst the American traders, the
-indignation of the Portuguese government was strongly and justly
-excited, and the matter became extremely embarrassing, because no
-measure of punishment could be inflicted without exposing the secret
-of a system which had been the principal support of the army. However
-the Congress soon passed an act forbidding neutrals to ship flour in
-the American ports, and this blow, chiefly aimed at the Portuguese
-ships, following upon the non-importation act, and being combined
-with the illegal violence of the English vessels, nearly dried up
-this source of supply, and threw the army principally upon the Brazil
-trade, which by the negligence of the Admiralty was, as I have before
-noticed, exposed to the enterprize of the United States’ privateers.
-
-During Wellington’s absence in Spain the military administration of
-Portugal was necessarily in the hands of the regency and all the
-ancient abuses were fast reviving. The army in the field received no
-succours, the field-artillery had entirely disappeared, the cavalry
-was in the worst condition, the infantry was reduced in numbers, the
-equipments of those who remained were scarcely fit for service, and
-the spirit of the men had waned from enthusiasm to despondency. There
-was no money in the military chest, no recruits in the dépôts, and
-the transport service was neglected altogether. Beresford’s severity
-had failed to check desertion, because want, the parent of crimes,
-had proved too strong for fear; the country swarmed with robbers,
-and as no fault civil or military was punished by the regency, every
-where knaves triumphed over the welfare of the nation.
-
-Meanwhile all persons whose indolence or timidity led them to fly
-from the active defence of their country to the Brazils, were there
-received and cherished as martyrs to their personal affections for
-the prince; they were lauded for their opposition to the regency,
-and were called victims to the injustice of Beresford, and to the
-encroachments of the English officers. This mischief was accompanied
-by another of greater moment, for the prince continually permitted
-officers possessing family interest to retire from active service
-retaining their pay and rank, thus offering a premium for bad men to
-enter the army with the intent of quitting it in this disgraceful
-manner. Multitudes did so, promotion became rapid, the nobility whose
-influence over the poor classes was very great, and might have been
-beneficially employed in keeping up the zeal of the men, disappeared
-rapidly from the regiments, and the foul stream of knaves and cowards
-thus continually pouring through the military ranks destroyed all
-cohesion and tainted every thing as it passed.
-
-Interests of the same nature, prevailing with the regency, polluted
-the civil administration. The rich and powerful inhabitants,
-especially those of the great cities, were suffered to evade the
-taxes and to disobey the regulations for drawing forth the resources
-of the country in the military service; and during Wellington’s
-absence in Spain, the English under-commissaries, and that retinue
-of villains which invariably gather on the rear of armies, being in
-some measure freed from the immediate dread of his vigilance and
-vigour, violated all the regulations in the most daring manner. The
-poor husbandmen were cruelly oppressed, their farming animals were
-constantly carried off to supply food for the army, and agriculture
-was thus stricken at the root; the breed of horned cattle and of
-horses had rapidly and alarmingly decreased, and butcher’s meat was
-scarcely to be procured even for the troops who remained in Portugal.
-
-These irregularities, joined to the gross misconduct of the
-military detachments and convoys of sick men, on all the lines of
-communication, not only produced great irritation in the country but
-offered the means for malevolent and factious persons to assail the
-character and intentions of the English general; every where writings
-and stories were circulated against the troops, the real outrages
-were exaggerated, others were invented and the drift of all was to
-render Wellington, and the English, odious to the nation at large.
-Nor was this scheme confined to Portugal alone, agents were also
-busy to the same purpose in London, and when the enthusiasm, which
-Wellington’s presence at Lisbon had created amongst the people, was
-known at Cadiz, the press there teemed with abuse. Divers agents of
-the democratic party in Spain came to Lisbon to aid the Portuguese
-malcontents, writings were circulated accusing Wellington of an
-intention to subjugate the Peninsula for his own ambitious views,
-and, as consistency is never regarded on such occasions, it was
-diligently insinuated that he encouraged the excesses of his troops
-out of personal hatred to the Portuguese people; the old baseness
-of sending virulent anonymous letters to the English general was
-also revived. In fine the republican spirit was extending beyond
-the bounds of Spain, and the Portuguese regency, terrified at its
-approach, appealed to Mr. Stuart for the assistance of England
-to check its formidable progress. Neither were they wanting to
-themselves. They forbade the Portuguese newspapers to admit any
-observations on the political events in Spain, they checked the
-introduction of Spanish democratic publications, they ordered their
-diplomatists at Cadiz to encourage writings of an opposite tendency,
-and to support the election of deputies who were known for their
-love of despotism. This last measure was however baffled by the
-motion of Arguelles, already mentioned, which rendered the old Cortez
-permanent; and Mr. Stuart, judging the time unfavourable, advised the
-Portuguese government to reserve the exertion of its power against
-the democrats, until the military success which the state of the
-continent, and the weakness of the French troops in Spain, promised,
-should enable the victors to put down such doctrines with effect;
-advice which was not unmeaning as I shall have occasion hereafter to
-show.
-
-All these malignant efforts Wellington viewed with indifference.
-“Every leading man,” he said, “was sure to be accused of criminal
-personal ambition, and, if he was conscious of the charge being
-false, the accusation did no harm.” Nevertheless his position
-was thereby rendered more difficult, and these intrigues were
-accompanied by other mischiefs of long standing and springing from
-a different source, but even of a more serious character, for the
-spirit of captious discontent had reached the inferior magistracy,
-who endeavoured to excite the people against the military generally.
-Complaints came in from all quarters of outrages on the part of the
-troops, some too true, but many of them false, or frivolous; and
-when the English general ordered courts-martial for the trial of the
-accused, the magistrates refused to attend as witnesses, because
-Portuguese custom rendered such an attendance degrading, and by
-Portuguese law a magistrate’s written testimony was efficient in
-courts-martial. Wellington in vain assured them that English law
-would not suffer him to punish men upon such testimony; in vain he
-pointed out the mischief which must infallibly overwhelm the country
-if the soldiers discovered they might thus do evil with impunity. He
-offered to send in each case, lists of Portuguese witnesses required
-that they might be summoned by the native authorities, but nothing
-could overcome the obstinacy of the magistrates; they answered that
-his method was insolent; and with a sullen malignity they continued
-to accumulate charges against the troops, to refuse attendance in the
-courts, and to call the soldiers, their own as well as the British,
-“licensed spoliators of the community.”
-
-For a time the generous nature of the poor people, resisted all
-these combining causes of discontent; neither real injuries nor
-the exaggerations, nor the falsehoods of those who attempted to
-stir up wrath, produced any visible effect upon the great bulk of
-the population; yet by degrees affection for the British cooled,
-and Wellington expressed his fears that a civil war would commence
-between the Portuguese people on the one hand, and the troops of both
-nations on the other. Wherefore his activity was redoubled to draw,
-while he could still controul affairs, all the military strength to a
-head, and to make such an irruption into Spain as would establish a
-new base of operations beyond the power of such fatal dissensions.
-
-[Sidenote: March.]
-
-These matters were sufficiently vexatious and alarming, but what made
-him tremble, was, the course, which the misconduct of the Portuguese
-government, and the incapacity of the English cabinet, had forced
-upon the native furnishers of the supplies. Those persons, coming
-in the winter to Lisbon to have their bills on the military chest
-paid, could get no money, and in their distress had sold the bills to
-speculators, the Portuguese holders, at a discount of fifteen, the
-Spanish holders at a discount of forty in the hundred. The credit
-of the chest immediately fell, prices rose in proportion, and as no
-military enterprize could carry the army beyond the flight of this
-harpy, and no revenues could satisfy its craving, the contest must
-have ceased, if Mr. Stuart had not found a momentary and partial
-remedy, by publicly guaranteeing the payment of the bills and
-granting interest until they could be taken up. The expense was thus
-augmented, but the increase fell far short of the enhanced cost of
-the supplies which had already resulted even from this restricted
-practice of the bill-holders, and of two evils the least was chosen.
-It may seem strange that such transactions should belong to the
-history of the military operations in the Peninsula, that it should
-be the general’s instead of the minister’s task, to encounter such
-evils, and to find the remedy. Such however was the nature of the
-war, and no adequate notion of lord Wellington’s vigorous capacity
-and Herculean labours can be formed, without an intimate knowledge of
-the financial and political difficulties which oppressed him, and of
-which this work has necessarily only given an outline.
-
-The disorders of the Portuguese military system had brought Beresford
-back to Lisbon while the siege of Burgos was still in progress, and
-now, under Wellington’s direction, he strained every nerve to restore
-the army to its former efficient state. To recruit the regiments of
-the line he disbanded all the militia men fit for service, replacing
-them with fathers of families; to restore the field-artillery, he
-embodied all the garrison artillery-men, calling out the ordenança
-gunners to man the fortresses and coast-batteries; the worst
-cavalry regiments he reduced to render the best more efficient,
-but several circumstances prevented this arm from attaining any
-excellence in Portugal. Meanwhile Lord Wellington and Mr. Stuart
-strenuously grappled with the disorders of the civil administration
-and their efforts produced an immediate and considerable increase
-of revenue. But though the regency could not deny this beneficial
-effect, though they could not deny the existence of the evils which
-they were urged to remedy, though they admitted that the reform of
-their custom-house system was still incomplete, that their useless
-navy consumed large sums which were wanted for the army, and that
-the taxes especially the “_Decima_,” were partially collected, and
-unproductive, because the rich people in the great towns, who had
-benefited largely by the war, escaped the imposts which the poor
-people in the country, who had suffered most from the war, paid;
-though they acknowledged that while the soldiers’ hire was in
-arrears, the transport service neglected, and all persons, having
-just claims upon the government, suffering severe privations, the
-tax-gatherers were allowed to keep a month’s tribute in their hands
-even in the districts close to the enemy; though all these things
-were admitted, the regency would not alter their system, and Borba,
-the minister of finance, combatted Wellington’s plans in detail
-with such unusual obstinacy, that it became evident nothing could
-be obtained save by external pressure. Wherefore as the season
-for military operations approached, Mr. Stuart called upon lord
-Castlereagh to bring the power of England to bear at once upon the
-court of Rio Janeiro; and Wellington, driven to extremity, sent
-the Portuguese prince-regent one of those clear, powerful, and
-nervous statements, which left those to whom they were addressed,
-no alternative but submission, or an acknowledgement that sense and
-justice were to be disregarded.
-
-[Sidenote: April.]
-
-“I call your highness’s attention,” he said, “to the state of your
-troops and of all your establishments; the army of operations has
-been unpaid since September, the garrisons since June, the militia
-since February 1812. The transport service has never been regularly
-paid, and has received nothing since June. To these evils I have in
-vain called the attention of the local government, and I am now going
-to open a new campaign, with troops to whom greater arrears of pay
-are due than when the last campaign terminated, although the subsidy
-from Great Britain, granted especially for the maintenance of those
-troops, has been regularly and exactly furnished; and although it has
-been proved that the revenue for the last three months has exceeded,
-by a third, any former quarter. The honour of your highness’s arms,
-the cause of your allies, is thus seriously affected, and the uniform
-refusal of the governors of the kingdom to attend to any one of the
-measures which I have recommended, either for permanent or temporal
-relief, has at last obliged me to go as a complainant into your royal
-highness’s presence, for here I cannot prevail against the influence
-of the chief of the treasury.
-
-“I have recommended the entire reform of the customs system, but it
-has only been partially carried into effect. I have advised a method
-of actually and really collecting the taxes, and of making the rich
-merchants, and capitalists, pay the tenth of their annual profits
-as an extraordinary contribution for the war. I declare that no
-person knows better than I do, the sacrifices and the sufferings of
-your people, for there is no one for the last four years has lived
-so much amongst those people; but it is a fact, sir, that the great
-cities, and even some of the smallest places, have gained by the
-war and the mercantile class has enriched itself; there are divers
-persons in Lisbon and Oporto who have amassed immense sums. Now your
-government is, both from remote and recent circumstances, unable to
-draw resources from the capitalists by loans; it can only draw upon
-them by taxes. It is not denied that the regular tributes nor the
-extraordinary imposts on the mercantile profits are evaded; it is not
-denied that the measures I have proposed, vigorously carried into
-execution, would furnish the government with pecuniary resources,
-and it remains for that government to inform your highness, why they
-have neither enforced my plans, nor any others which the necessity
-of the times calls for. They fear to become unpopular, but such is
-the knowledge I have of the people’s good sense and loyalty, such my
-zeal for the cause, that I have offered to become responsible for the
-happy issue, and to take upon myself all the odium of enforcing my
-own measures. I have offered in vain!
-
-“Never was a sovereign in the world so ill served as your highness
-has been by the ‘_Junta de Viveres_,’ and I zealously forwarded your
-interests when I obtained its abolition; and yet, under a false
-pretext of debt, the government still disburse fifty millions of reis
-monthly on account of that board. It has left a debt undoubtedly,
-and it is of importance to pay it, although not at this moment; but
-let the government state in detail how these fifty millions, granted
-monthly, have been applied; let them say if all the accounts have
-been called in and liquidated? who has enforced the operation? to
-what does the debt amount? has it been classified? how much is really
-still due to those who have received instalments? finally, have these
-millions been applied to the payment of salaries instead of debt?
-But were it convenient now to pay the debt, it cannot be denied that
-to pay the army which is to defend the country, to protect it from
-the sweeping destructive hand of the enemy, is of more pressing
-importance; the troops will be neither able nor willing to fight if
-they are not paid.”
-
-Then touching upon the abuse of permitting the tax-gatherers to hold
-a month’s taxes in their hands, and upon the opposition he met with
-from the regency, he continued,
-
-“I assure your royal highness that I give my advice to the governor
-of the kingdom actuated solely by an earnest zeal for your service
-without any personal interest. I can have none relative to Portugal,
-and none with regard to individuals, for I have no private relation
-with, and scarcely am acquainted with those who direct, or would wish
-to direct your affairs. Those reforms recommended by me, and which
-have at last been partially effected in the custom-house, in the
-arsenal, in the navy, in the payment of the interest of the national
-debt, in the formation of a military chest, have succeeded, and I may
-therefore say that the other measures I propose would have similar
-results. I am ready to allow that I may deceive myself on this point,
-but certainly they are suggested by a desire for the good of your
-service; hence in the most earnest and decided manner, I express my
-ardent wish, and it is common to all your faithful servants, that
-you will return to the kingdom, and take charge yourself of the
-government.”
-
-These vigorous measures to bring the regency to terms succeeded only
-partially. In May they promulgated a new system for the collection
-of taxes which relieved the financial pressure on the army for the
-moment, but which did not at all content Wellington, because it was
-made to square with old habits and prejudices, and thus left the
-roots of all the evils alive and vigorous. Every moment furnished
-new proofs of the hopelessness of regenerating a nation through the
-medium of a corrupted government; and a variety of circumstances,
-more or less serious, continued to embarrass the march of public
-affairs.
-
-[Sidenote: May.]
-
-In the Madeiras the authorities vexatiously prevented the English
-money agents from exporting specie, and their conduct was approved
-of at Rio Janeiro. At Bisao, in Africa, the troops had mutinied for
-want of pay, and in the Cape de Verde Islands disturbances arose
-from the over-exaction of taxes; for when the people were weak, the
-regency were vigorous; pliant only to the powerful. These commotions
-were trifling and soon ended of themselves, yet expeditions were
-sent against the offenders in both places, and the troops thus
-employed immediately committed far worse excesses, and did more
-mischief than that which they were sent to suppress. At the same
-time several French frigates finding the coast of Africa unguarded,
-cruized successfully against the Brazil trade, and aided the American
-privateers to contract the already too straitened resources of the
-army.
-
-Amidst all these difficulties however the extraordinary exertions of
-the British officers had restored the numbers, discipline, and spirit
-of the Portuguese army. Twenty-seven thousand excellent soldiers were
-again under arms and ready to commence the campaign, although the
-national discontent was daily increasing; and indeed the very feeling
-of security created by the appearance of such an army rendered the
-citizens at large less willing to bear the inconveniences of the war.
-Distant danger never affects the multitude, and the billetting of
-troops, who, from long habits of war, little regarded the rights of
-the citizens in comparison with their own necessities, being combined
-with requisitions, and with a recruiting system becoming every year
-more irksome, formed an aggregate of inconveniences intolerable to
-men who desired ease and no longer dreaded to find an enemy on their
-hearth-stones. The powerful classes were naturally more affected
-than the poorer classes, because of their indolent habits; but their
-impatience was aggravated because they had generally been debarred of
-the highest situations, or supplanted, by the British interference in
-the affairs of the country, and, unlike those of Spain, the nobles
-of Portugal had lost little or none of their hereditary influence.
-Discontent was thus extended widely, and moreover the old dread of
-French power was entirely gone; unlimited confidence in the strength
-and resources of England had succeeded; and this confidence, to use
-the words of Mr. Stuart, “being opposed to the irregularities which
-have been practised by individuals, and to the difference of manners,
-and of religion, placed the British in the singular position of a
-class whose exertions were necessary for the country, but who, for
-the above reasons, were in every other respect as distinct from
-the natives as persons with whom, from some criminal cause, it was
-necessary to suspend communication.”—Hence he judged that the return
-of the prince-regent would be a proper epoch for the British to
-retire from all situations in Portugal not strictly military, for
-if any thing should delay that event, the time was approaching when
-the success of the army and the tranquillity of the country would
-render it necessary to yield to the first manifestations of national
-feeling. In fine, notwithstanding the great benefits conferred upon
-the Portuguese by the British, the latter were, and it will always be
-so on the like occasions, regarded by the upper classes as a captain
-regards galley-slaves, their strength was required to speed the
-vessel, but they were feared and hated.
-
-The prince-regent did not return to Portugal according to
-Wellington’s advice, but Carlotta immediately prepared to come
-alone; orders were given to furnish her apartments in the different
-palaces, and her valuable effects had actually arrived. Ill health
-was the pretext for the voyage, but the real object was to be near
-Spain to forward her views upon the government there; for intent
-upon mischief, indefatigable and of a violence approaching insanity,
-she had sold even her plate and jewels to raise money wherewith to
-corrupt the leading members of the cortez, and was resolved, if that
-should not promise success, to distribute the money amongst the
-Spanish partidas, and so create a powerful military support for her
-schemes. Fortunately the prince dreading the intriguing advisers of
-his wife would not suffer her to quit Rio Janeiro until the wish
-of the British cabinet upon the subject was known, and that was so
-decidedly adverse, that it was thought better to do without the
-prince himself than to have him accompanied by Carlotta; so they both
-remained in the Brazils, and this formidable cloud passed away, yet
-left no sunshine on the land.
-
-It was at this period that the offer of a Russian auxiliary force,
-before alluded to, being made to Wellington by admiral Grieg, was
-accepted by him to the amount of fifteen thousand men, and yet was
-not fulfilled because the Russian ambassador in London declared
-that the emperor knew nothing of it! Alexander however proposed to
-mediate in the dispute between Great Britain and America, but the
-English ministers, while lauding him as a paragon of magnanimity
-and justice, in regard to the war against Napoleon, remembered the
-armed neutrality and quadruple alliance, and wisely declined trusting
-England’s maritime pretensions to his faithless grasping policy.
-Neither would they listen to Austria, who at this time, whether with
-good faith or merely as a cloak I know not, desired to mediate a
-general peace. However, amidst this political confusion the progress
-of the military preparations was visible; and contemporary with
-the Portuguese, the Spanish troops under Wellington’s influence
-and providence acquired more consistence than they had ever before
-possessed; a mighty power was in arms; but the flood of war with
-which the English general finally poured into Spain, and the channels
-by which he directed the overwhelming torrent, must be reserved for
-another place. It is now time to treat of the political situation of
-king Joseph, and to resume the narrative of that secondary warfare
-which occupied the French armies while Wellington was uninterruptedly
-as far as the enemy were concerned, reorganizing his power.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-
-[Sidenote: 1813.]
-
-In war it is not so much the positive strength, as the relative
-situations of the hostile parties, which gives the victory. Joseph’s
-position, thus judged, was one of great weakness, principally because
-he was incapable of combining the materials at his disposal, or of
-wielding them when combined by others. France had been suddenly
-thrown by her failure in Russia, into a new and embarrassing
-attitude, more embarrassing even than it appeared to her enemies,
-or than her robust warlike proportions, nourished by twelve years
-of victory, indicated. Napoleon, the most indefatigable and active
-of mankind, turned his enemy’s ignorance on this head to profit;
-for scarcely was it known that he had reached Paris by that wise,
-that rapid journey, from Smorghoni, which, baffling all his enemies’
-hopes, left them only the power of foolish abuse; scarcely I say,
-was his arrival at Paris known to the world, than a new and enormous
-army, the constituent parts of which he had with his usual foresight
-created while yet in the midst of victory, was in march from all
-parts to unite in the heart of Germany.
-
-On this magical rapidity he rested his hopes to support the tottering
-fabric of his empire; but well aware of the critical state of his
-affairs, his design was, while presenting a menacing front on every
-side, so to conduct his operations that if he failed in his first
-stroke, he might still contract his system gradually and without any
-violent concussion. And good reason for hope he had. His military
-power was rather broken and divided than lessened, for it is certain
-that the number of men employed in 1813 was infinitely greater than
-in 1812; in the latter four hundred thousand, but in the former more
-than seven hundred thousand men, and twelve hundred field-pieces were
-engaged on different points, exclusive of the armies in Spain. Then
-on the Vistula, on the Oder, on the Elbe, he had powerful fortresses,
-and numerous garrisons, or rather armies, of strength and goodness
-to re-establish his ascendancy in Europe, if he could reunite them
-in one system by placing a new host victoriously in the centre of
-Germany. And thus also he could renew the adhesive qualities of
-those allies, who still clung to him though evidently feeling the
-attraction of his enemies’ success.
-
-But this was a gigantic contest, for his enemies, by deceiving their
-subjects with false promises of liberty, had brought whole nations
-against him. More than eight hundred thousand men were in arms in
-Germany alone; secret societies were in full activity all over the
-continent; and in France a conspiracy was commenced by men who
-desired rather to see their country a prey to foreigners and degraded
-with a Bourbon king, than have it independent and glorious under
-Napoleon. Wherefore that great monarch had now to make application,
-on an immense scale, of the maxim which prescribes a skilful
-offensive as the best defence, and he had to sustain two systems of
-operation not always compatible; the one depending upon moral force
-to hold the vast fabric of his former policy together, the other to
-meet the actual exigencies of the war. The first was infinitely more
-important than the last, and as Germany and France were the proper
-theatres for its display, the Spanish contest sunk at once from
-a principal into an accessary war. Yet this delicate conjuncture
-of affairs made it of vital importance, that Napoleon should have
-constant and rapid intelligence from Spain, because the ascendancy,
-which he yet maintained over the world by his astounding genius,
-might have been broken down in a moment if Wellington, overstepping
-the ordinary rules of military art, had suddenly abandoned the
-Peninsula, and thrown his army, or a part of it into France. For then
-would have been deranged all the emperor’s calculations; then would
-the defection of all his allies have ensued; then would he have been
-obliged to concentrate both his new forces and his Spanish troops for
-the defence of his own country, abandoning all his fortresses and his
-still vast though scattered veteran armies in Germany and Poland, to
-the unrestrained efforts of his enemies beyond the Rhine. Nothing
-could have been more destructive to Napoleon’s moral power, than to
-have an insult offered and commotions raised on his own threshold at
-the moment when he was assuming the front of a conqueror in Germany.
-
-To obviate this danger or to meet it, alike required that the armies
-in the Peninsula should adopt a new and vigorous system, under which,
-relinquishing all real permanent offensive movements, they should
-yet appear to be daring and enterprising, even while they prepared
-to abandon their former conquests. But the emperor wanted old
-officers and non-commissioned officers, and experienced soldiers,
-to give consistency to the young levies with which he was preparing
-to take the field, and he could only supply this want by drawing
-from the veterans of the Peninsula; wherefore he resolved to recal
-the division of the young guard, and with it many thousand men and
-officers of the line most remarkable for courage and conduct. In lieu
-he sent the reserve at Bayonne into Spain, replacing it with another,
-which was again to be replaced in May by further levies; and besides
-this succour, twenty thousand conscripts were appropriated for the
-Peninsula.
-
-The armies thus weakened in numbers, and considerably so during the
-transit of the troops, were also in quality greatly deteriorated, and
-at a very critical time, for not only was Wellington being powerfully
-reinforced, but the audacity, the spirit, the organization, the
-discipline, and the numbers of the Partidas, were greatly increased
-by English supplies, liberally, and now usefully dealt out. And
-the guerilla operations in the northern parts, being combined with
-the British naval squadrons, had, during the absence of the French
-armies, employed to drive the allies back to Portugal, aroused
-anew the spirit of insurrection in Navarre and Biscay; a spirit
-exacerbated by some recent gross abuses of military authority
-perpetrated by some of the French local commanders.
-
-[Sidenote: Duke of Feltre’s official correspondence, MSS.]
-
-The position of the invading armies was indeed become more
-complicated than ever. They had only been relieved from the
-crushing pressure of lord Wellington’s grand operations to struggle
-in the meshes of the Guerilla and insurrectional warfare of the
-Spaniards. Nor was the importance of these now to be measured by
-former efforts. The Partida chiefs had become more experienced
-and more docile to the suggestions of the British chief; they had
-free communication with, and were constantly supplied with arms,
-ammunition, and money from the squadrons on the coast; they possessed
-several fortified posts and harbours, their bands were swelling to
-the size of armies, and their military knowledge of the country and
-of the French system of invasion was more matured; their own dépôts
-were better hidden, and they could, and at times did, bear the shock
-of battle on nearly equal terms. Finally, new and large bands of
-another and far more respectable and influential nature, were formed
-or forming both in Navarre and Biscay, where insurrectional juntas
-were organized, and where men of the best families had enrolled
-numerous volunteers from the villages and towns.
-
-These volunteers were well and willingly supplied by the country,
-and of course not obnoxious, like the Partidas, from their
-rapine and violence. In Biscay alone several battalions of this
-description, each mustering a thousand men, were in the field, and
-the communication with France was so completely interrupted, that
-the French minister of war only heard that Joseph had received his
-dispatches of the 4th of January, on the 18th of March, and then
-through the medium of Suchet! The contributions could no longer be
-collected, the magazines could not be filled, the fortresses were
-endangered, the armies had no base of operations, the insurrection
-was spreading to Aragon, and the bands of the interior were also
-increasing in numbers and activity. The French armies, sorely pressed
-for provisions, were widely disseminated, and every where occupied,
-and each general was averse either to concentrate his own forces
-or to aid his neighbour. In fine the problem of the operations was
-become extremely complicated, and Napoleon only seems to have seized
-the true solution.
-
-When informed by Caffarelli of the state of affairs in the north, he
-thus wrote to the king, “Hold Madrid only as a point of observation;
-fix your quarters not as monarch, but as general of the French forces
-at Valladolid; concentrate the armies of the south, of the centre,
-and of Portugal around you; the allies will not and indeed cannot
-make any serious offensive movement for several months; wherefore it
-is your business to profit from their forced inactivity, to put down
-the insurrection in the northern provinces, to free the communication
-with France, and to re-establish a good base of operations before
-the commencement of another campaign, that the French army may be in
-condition to fight the allies if the latter advance towards France.”
-Very important indeed did Napoleon deem this object, and so earnest
-was he to have constant and rapid intelligence from his armies in
-the Peninsula, that the couriers and their escorts were directed to
-be dispatched twice a week, travelling day and night at the rate
-of a league an hour. He commanded also that the army of the north
-should be reinforced even by the whole army of Portugal, if it was
-necessary to effect the immediate pacification of Biscay and Navarre;
-and while this pacification was in progress, Joseph was to hold the
-rest of his forces in a position offensive towards Portugal, making
-Wellington feel that his whole power was required on the frontier,
-and that neither his main body nor even any considerable detachment
-could safely embark to disturb France. In short that he must cover
-Lisbon strongly, and on the frontier, or expect to see the French
-army menacing that capital. These instructions well understood, and
-vigorously executed, would certainly have put down the insurrection
-in the rear of the king’s position, and the spring would have seen
-that monarch at the head of ninety thousand men, having their retreat
-upon France clear of all impediments, and consequently free to fight
-the allies on the Tormes, the Duero, the Pisuerga, and the Ebro; and
-with several supporting fortresses in a good state.
-
-[Sidenote: King’s correspondence, MSS.]
-
-Joseph was quite unable to view the matter in this common-sense
-point of view. He could not make his kingly notions subservient
-to military science, nor his military movements subservient to an
-enlarged policy. Neither did he perceive that his beneficent notions
-of government were misplaced amidst the din of arms. Napoleon’s
-orders were imperative, but the principle of them, Joseph could
-not previously conceive himself nor execute the details after his
-brother’s conception. He was not even acquainted with the true state
-of the northern provinces, nor would he at first credit it when
-told to him. Hence while his thoughts were intent upon his Spanish
-political projects, and the secret negociations with Del Parque’s
-army, the northern partidas and insurgents became masters of all his
-lines of communication in the north; the Emperor’s orders dispatched
-early in January, and reiterated week after week, only reached the
-king in the end of February; their execution did not take place
-until the end of March, and then imperfectly. The time thus lost was
-irreparable; and yet as the emperor reproachfully observed, the
-bulletin which revealed the extent of his disasters in Russia might
-alone have taught the king what to do.
-
-Joseph was nearly as immoveable in his resolutions as his brother,
-the firmness of the one being however founded upon extraordinary
-sagacity, and of the other upon the want of that quality. Regarding
-opposition to his views as the result of a disloyal malevolence,
-he judged the refractory generals to be enemies to the emperor, as
-well as to himself. Reille, Caffarelli, Suchet, alike incurred his
-displeasure, and the duke of Feltre French minister of war also,
-because of a letter in which, evidently by the orders of the emperor,
-he rebuked the king for having removed Souham from the command of the
-army of Portugal.
-
-[Sidenote: King’s correspondence, MSS.]
-
-Feltre’s style, addressed to a monarch was very offensive, and Joseph
-attributed it to the influence of Soult, for his hatred of the latter
-was violent and implacable even to absurdity. “The duke of Dalmatia
-or himself,” he wrote to the Emperor, “must quit Spain. At Valencia
-he had forgotten his own injuries, he had suppressed his just
-indignation, and instead of sending marshal Soult to France had given
-him the direction of the operations against the allies, but it was in
-the hope that shame for the past combined with his avidity for glory,
-would urge him to extraordinary exertions; nothing of the kind had
-happened; Soult was a man not to be trusted. Restless, intriguing,
-ambitious, he would sacrifice every thing to his own advancement,
-and possessed just that sort of talent which would lead him to mount
-a scaffold when he thought he was ascending the steps of a throne,
-because he would want the courage to strike when the crisis arrived.”
-He acquitted him, he said, with a coarse sarcasm, “of treachery at
-the passage of the Tormes, because there fear alone operated to
-prevent him from bringing the allies to a decisive action, but he was
-nevertheless treacherous to the emperor, and his proceedings in Spain
-were probably connected with the conspiracy of Malet at Paris.”
-
-Such was the language with which Joseph in his anger assailed one of
-the greatest commanders and most faithful servants of his brother;
-and such the greetings which awaited Napoleon on his arrival at Paris
-after the disasters of Russia. In the most calm and prosperous state
-of affairs, coming from this source, the charges might well have
-excited the jealous wrath of the strongest mind; but in the actual
-crisis, when the emperor had just lost his great army, and found the
-smoking embers of a suppressed conspiracy at his very palace-gates,
-when his friends were failing, and his enemies accumulating, it
-seemed scarcely possible that these accusations should not have
-proved the ruin of Soult. Yet they did not even ruffle the temper of
-Napoleon. Magnanimous as he was sagacious, he smiled at the weakness
-of Joseph, and though he removed Soult from Spain, because the feud
-between him and the king would not permit them to serve beneficially
-together, it was only to make him the commander of the imperial
-guard; and that no mark of his confidence might be wanting, he
-afterwards chose him, from amongst all his generals, to retrieve the
-affairs of the Peninsula when Joseph was driven from that country, an
-event the immediate causes of which were now being laid.
-
-It has been already shown, that when Wellington took his
-winter-quarters, the French armies occupied a line stretching from
-the sea-coast at Valencia to the foot of the Gallician mountains. In
-these positions Suchet on the extreme left was opposed by the allies
-at Alicant. Soult, commanding the centre, had his head-quarters at
-Toledo, with one detachment at the foot of the Sierra Morena to
-watch the army of Del Parque, and two others in the valley of the
-Tagus. Of these last one was at Talavera and one on the Tietar. The
-first observed Morillo and Penne Villemur, who from Estremadura
-were constantly advancing towards the bridges on the Tagus, and
-menacing the rear of the French detachment which was on the Tietar
-in observation of general Hill then at Coria. Soult’s advanced post
-in the valley of the Tagus communicated by the Gredos mountains with
-Avila, where Foy’s division of the army of Portugal was posted partly
-for the sake of food, partly to watch Bejar and the Upper Tormes,
-because the allies, possessing the pass of Bejar, might have suddenly
-united north of the mountains, and breaking the French line have
-fallen on Madrid.
-
-On the right of Foy, the remainder of the army of Portugal occupied
-Salamanca, Ledesma, and Alba on the Lower Tormes; Valladolid, Toro,
-and Tordesillas on the Duero; Benevente, Leon, and other points on
-the Esla, Astorga being, as I have before observed, dismantled by the
-Spaniards. Behind the right of this great line, the army of the north
-had retaken its old positions, and the army of the centre was fixed
-as before in and around Madrid, its operations being bounded on the
-right bank of the Tagus by the mountains which invest that capital,
-and on the left bank of the Tagus by the districts of Aranjuez,
-Tarancon, and Cuenca.
-
-[Sidenote: King’s correspondence, MSS.]
-
-Joseph while disposing his troops in this manner, issued a royal
-regulation marking the extent of country which each army was to
-forage, requiring at the same time a certain and considerable
-revenue to be collected by his Spanish civil authorities for the
-support of his court. The subsistence of the French armies was
-thus made secondary to the revenue of the crown, and he would have
-had the soldiers in a time of war, of insurrectional war, yield to
-the authority of the Spanish civilians; an absurdity heightened by
-the peculiarly active, vigorous, and prompt military method of the
-French, as contrasted with the dilatory improvident promise-breaking
-and visionary system of the Spaniards. Hence scarcely was the royal
-regulation issued when the generals broke through it in a variety of
-ways, and the king was, as usual, involved in the most acrimonious
-disputes with all the emperor’s lieutenants. If he ordered one
-commander to detach troops to the assistance of another commander, he
-was told that he should rather send additional troops to the first.
-If he reprimanded a general for raising contributions contrary to
-the regulations, he was answered that the soldiers were starving
-and must be fed. At all times also the authority of the prefects
-and intendants was disregarded by all the generals; and this was in
-pursuance of Napoleon’s order; for that monarch continually reminded
-his brother, that as the war was carried on by the French armies
-their interests were paramount; that the king of Spain could have no
-authority over them, and must never use his military authority as
-lieutenant of the empire, in aid of his kingly views, for with those
-the French soldiers could have nothing to do; their welfare could
-not be confided to Spanish ministers whose capacity was by no means
-apparent and of whose fidelity the emperor had no security.
-
-Nothing could be clearer or wiser than these instructions, but
-Joseph would not see this distinction between his military and his
-monarchical duties, and continually defended his conduct by reference
-to what he owed his subjects as king of Spain. His sentiments,
-explained with great force of feeling, and great beneficence of
-design, were worthy of all praise if viewed abstractedly, but totally
-inapplicable to the real state of affairs, because the Spaniards were
-not his faithful and attached subjects, they were his inveterate
-enemies; and it was quite impossible to unite the vigour of a war
-of conquest with the soft and benevolent government of a paternal
-monarch. Thus one constant error vitiated all the king’s political
-proceedings, an error apparently arising from an inability to view
-his situation as a whole instead of by parts, for his military
-operations were vitiated in the same manner.
-
-As a man of state and of war he seems to have been acute, courageous,
-and industrious, with respect to any single feature presented for his
-consideration, but always unable to look steadily on the whole and
-consequently always working in the dark. Men of his character being
-conscious of the merit of labour and good intentions, are commonly
-obstinate; and those qualities, which render them so useful under
-the direction of an able chief, lead only to mischief when they
-become chiefs themselves. For in matters of great moment, and in war
-especially, it is not the actual importance but the comparative
-importance of the operations which should determine the choice
-of measures; and when all are very important this choice demands
-judgment of the highest kind, judgment which no man ever possessed
-more largely than Napoleon, and which Joseph did not possess at all.
-
-He was never able to comprehend the instructions of his brother, and
-never would accept the advice of those commanders whose capacity
-approached in some degree to that of the emperor. When he found that
-every general complained of insufficient means, instead of combining
-their forces so as to press with the principal mass against the most
-important point, he disputed with each, and turned to demand from
-the emperor additional succours for all; at the same time unwisely
-repeating and urging his own schemes upon a man so infinitely his
-superior in intellect. The insurrection in the northern provinces he
-treated not as a military but a political question, attributing it
-to the anger of the people at seeing the ancient supreme council of
-Navarre unceremoniously dismissed and some of the members imprisoned
-by a French general, a cause very inadequate to the effect. Neither
-was his judgment truer with respect to the fitness of time. He
-proposed, if a continuation of the Russian war should prevent the
-emperor from sending more men to Spain, to make Burgos the royal
-residence, to transport there the archives, and all that constituted
-a capital; then to have all the provinces behind the Ebro, Catalonia
-excepted, governed by himself through the medium of his Spanish
-ministers and as a country at peace, while those beyond the Ebro
-should be given up to the generals as a country at war.
-
-In this state his civil administration would he said remedy the evils
-inflicted by the armies, would conciliate the people by keeping all
-the Spanish families and authorities in safety and comfort, would
-draw all those who favoured his cause from all parts of Spain, and
-would encourage the display of that attachment to his person which he
-believed so many Spaniards to entertain. And while he declared the
-violence and injustice of the French armies to be the sole cause of
-the protracted resistance of the Spaniards, a declaration false in
-fact, that violence being only one of many causes, he was continually
-urging the propriety of beating the English first and then pacifying
-the people by just and benevolent measures. As if it were possible,
-off-hand, to beat Wellington and his veterans, embedded as they were
-in the strong country of Portugal, and having British fleets with
-troops and succours of all kinds, hovering on the flanks of the
-French, and feeding and sustaining the insurrection of the Spaniards
-in their rear.
-
-Napoleon was quite as willing and anxious as Joseph could be to drive
-the English from the Peninsula, and to tranquillize the people by a
-regular government; but with a more profound knowledge of war, of
-politics and of human nature, he judged that the first could only
-be done by a methodical combination, in unison with that rule of
-art which prescribes the establishment and security of the base of
-operations, security which could not be obtained if the benevolent
-but weak and visionary schemes of the king, were to supersede
-military vigour in the field. The emperor laughed in scorn when
-his brother assured him that the Peninsulars with all their fiery
-passions, their fanaticism and their ignorance, would receive an
-equable government as a benefit from the hands of an intrusive
-monarch before they had lost all hope of resistance by arms.
-
-Yet it is not to be concluded that Joseph was totally devoid of
-grounds for his opinions; he was surrounded by difficulties and
-deeply affected by the misery which he witnessed, his Spanish
-ministers were earnest and importunate, and many of the French
-generals gave him but too much reason to complain of their violence.
-The length and mutations of the war had certainly created a large
-party willing enough to obtain tranquillity at the price of
-submission, while others were, as we have seen, not indisposed, if he
-would hold the crown on their terms, to accept his dynasty, as one
-essentially springing from democracy, in preference to the despotic,
-base, and superstitious family which the nation was called upon to
-uphold. It was not unnatural therefore for Joseph to desire to retain
-his capital while the negociations with Del Parque’s army were still
-in existence, it was not strange that he should be displeased with
-Soult after reading that marshal’s honest but offensive letter, and
-certainly it was highly creditable to his character as a man and as a
-king that he would not silently suffer his subjects to be oppressed
-by the generals.
-
-“I am in distress for money,” he often exclaimed to Napoleon, “such
-distress as no king ever endured before, my plate is sold, and on
-state occasions the appearance of magnificence is supported by false
-metal. My ministers and household are actually starving, misery is
-on every face, and men, otherwise willing, are thus deterred from
-joining a king so little able to support them. My revenue is seized
-by the generals for the supply of their troops, and I cannot as a
-king of Spain without dishonour partake of the resources thus torn
-by rapine from my subjects whom I have sworn to protect; I cannot
-in fine be at once king of Spain and general of the French; let me
-resign both and live peaceably in France. Your majesty does not know
-what scenes are enacted, you will shudder to hear that men formerly
-rich and devoted to our cause have been driven out of Zaragoza and
-denied even a ration of food. The marquis Cavallero, a councillor of
-state, minister of justice, and known personally to your majesty,
-has been thus used. He has been seen actually begging for a piece of
-bread!”
-
-[Sidenote: Jourdan’s Official correspondence, MSS.]
-
-If this Caballero was the old minister to Charles the IVth, no
-misery was too great a punishment for his tyrannical rule under
-that monarch, yet it was not from the hands of the French it should
-have come; and Joseph’s distress for money must certainly have been
-great, since that brave and honest man Jourdan, a marshal of France,
-major-general of the armies, and a personal favourite of the king’s,
-complained that the non-payment of his appointments had reduced
-him to absolute penury, and after borrowing until his credit was
-exhausted he could with difficulty procure subsistence. It is now
-time to describe the secondary operations of the war, but as these
-were spread over two-thirds of Spain, and were simultaneous, to avoid
-complexity it will be necessary to class them under two great heads,
-namely those which took place north and those which took place south
-of the Tagus.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-OPERATIONS SOUTH OF THE TAGUS.
-
-
-[Sidenote: 1813. February.]
-
-In December 1812 general Copons had been appointed captain-general
-of Catalonia instead of Eroles, but his arrival was delayed and the
-province was not relieved from Lacy’s mischievous sway until February
-1813, when Eroles, taking the temporary command, re-established the
-head-quarters at Vich. The French, being then unmolested, save by the
-English ships, passed an enormous convoy to France, but Eroles was
-not long idle. Through the medium of a double spy, he sent a forged
-letter to the governor of Taragona, desiring him to detach men to
-Villa Nueva de Sitjes, with carts to transport some stores; at the
-same time he gave out that he was himself going to the Cerdaña, which
-brought the French moveable column to that quarter, and then, Eroles,
-Manso, and Villamil, making forced marches from different points,
-reached Torre dem barra where they met the British squadron. The
-intention was to cut off the French detachment on its march to Villa
-Nueva and then to attack Taragona, but fortune rules in war; the
-governor received a letter from Maurice Mathieu of a different tenor
-from the forged letter, and with all haste regaining his fortress
-balked this well-contrived plan.
-
-Sarzfield, at enmity with Eroles, was now combining his operations
-with Villa Campa, and they menaced Alcanitz in Aragon; but general
-Pannetier who had remained at Teruel to watch Villa Campa, and to
-protect Suchet’s communications, immediately marched to Daroca,
-Severoli came from Zaragoza to the same point, and the Spaniards,
-alarmed by their junction, dispersed. Sarzfield returned to
-Catalonia, Bassecour and the Empecinado remained near Cuenca, and
-Villa Campa as usual hung upon the southern skirts of the Albaracyn
-mountain, ready to pounce down on the Ebro or on the Guadalquivir
-side as advantage might offer. Meanwhile Suchet was by no means
-at ease. The successes in Catalonia did not enable him to draw
-reinforcements from thence, because Napoleon, true to his principle
-of securing the base of operations, forbad him to weaken the army
-there, and Montmarie’s brigade was detached from Valencia to preserve
-the communication between Saguntum and Tortoza. But Aragon which was
-Suchet’s place of arms and principal magazine, being infested by
-Mina, Duran, Villa Campa, the Empecinado, and Sarzfield, was becoming
-daily more unquiet, wherefore Pannetier’s brigade remained between
-Segorbé and Daroca to aid Severoli. Thus although the two armies of
-Aragon and Catalonia mustered more than seventy thousand men, that
-of Aragon alone having forty thousand, with fifty field-pieces,
-Suchet could not fight with more than sixteen thousand infantry,
-two thousand cavalry and perhaps thirty guns beyond the Xucar. His
-right flank was always liable to be turned by Requeña, his left by
-the sea which was entirely at his adversary’s command, and his front
-was menaced by fifty thousand men, of which three thousand might be
-cavalry with fifty pieces of artillery.
-
-The component parts of the allied force were the Anglo-Sicilians
-which, including Whittingham’s and Roche’s divisions, furnished
-eighteen thousand soldiers. Elio’s army furnishing twelve thousand
-exclusive of the divisions of Bassecour, Villa Campa, and the
-Empecinado, which, though detached, belonged to him. Del Parque’s
-army reinforced by new levies from Andalusia, and on paper twenty
-thousand. Numerically this was a formidable power if it had
-been directed in mass against Suchet; but on his right the duke
-of Dalmatia, whose head-quarters were at Toledo, sent forward
-detachments which occupied the army of Del Parque; moreover the
-secret negociations for the defection of the latter were now in
-full activity, and from the army of the centre a column was sent
-towards Cuenca to draw Bassecour and the Empecinado from Suchet’s
-right flank; but those chiefs had five thousand men, and in return
-continually harassed the army of the centre.
-
-[Sidenote: 1813.]
-
-On the side of the Morena and Murcia, Soult’s operations were
-confined to skirmishes and foraging parties. Early in January his
-brother, seeking to open a communication with Suchet by Albacete,
-defeated some of Elio’s cavalry with the loss of fifty men, and
-pursued them until they rallied on their main body, under Freyre;
-the latter offered battle with nine hundred horsemen in front of
-the defile leading to Albacete; but Soult, disliking his appearance
-turned off to the right, and passing through Villa Nueva de los
-Infantes joined a French post established in Valdepeña at the foot
-of the Morena, where some skirmishes had also taken place with Del
-Parque’s cavalry. The elder Soult thus learned, that Freyre, with two
-thousand five hundred horsemen, covered all the roads leading from La
-Mancha, to Valencia and Murcia; that Elio’s infantry was at Tobara
-and Hellin, Del Parque’s head-quarters at Jaen; that the passes of
-the Morena were guarded, and magazines formed at Andujar, Linares,
-and Cordoba, while on the other side of La Mancha, the Empecinado had
-come to Hinojoso with fifteen hundred horsemen, and the column sent
-from the army of the centre was afraid to encounter him.
-
-These dispositions, and the strength of the Spaniards, not only
-prevented the younger Soult from penetrating into Murcia, but delayed
-the march of a column, under general Daricau, destined to communicate
-with Suchet, and bring up the detachments baggage and stores, which
-the armies of the south and centre had left at Valencia. The scouting
-parties of both sides now met at different points, and on the 27th
-of January, a sharp cavalry fight happened at El Corral, in which
-the French commander was killed, and the Spaniards, though far the
-most numerous, defeated. Meanwhile Daricau, whose column had been
-reinforced, reached Utiel, opened the communication with Suchet by
-Requeña, cut off some small parties of the enemy, and then continuing
-his march received a great convoy, consisting of two thousand
-fighting men, six hundred travellers, and the stores and baggage
-belonging to Soult’s and the king’s armies. This convoy had marched
-for Madrid by the way of Zaragoza, but was recalled when Daricau
-arrived, and under his escort, aided by a detachment of Suchet’s army
-placed at Yniesta, it reached Todelo in the latter end of February
-safely, though Villa Campa came down to the Cabriel River, to trouble
-the march.
-
-During these different operations numerous absurd and contradictory
-reports, principally originating in the Spanish and English
-newspapers, obtained credit in the French armies, such as, that sir
-Henry Wellesley and Infantado had seized the government at Cadiz;
-that Clinton, by an intrigue, had got possession of Alicant; that
-Ballesteros had shewn Wellington secret orders from the cortez not
-to acknowledge him as generalissimo, or even as a grandee; that
-the cortez had removed the regency because the latter permitted
-Wellington to appoint intendants and other officers to the Spanish
-provinces; that Hill had devastated the frontier and retired
-to Lisbon though forcibly opposed by Morillo; that a nephew of
-Ballesteros had raised the standard of revolt; that Wellington was
-advancing, and that troops had been embarked at Lisbon for a maritime
-expedition, with other stories of a like nature, which seem to have
-disturbed all the French generals save Soult, whose information as
-to the real state of affairs continued to be sure and accurate. He
-also at this time detected four or five of Wellington’s emissaries,
-amongst them, was a Portuguese officer on his own staff; a man called
-Piloti, who served and betrayed both sides; and an amazon called
-Francisca de la Fuerte, who, though only twenty-two years old, had
-already commanded a partida of sixty men with some success, and was
-now a spy. But in the latter end of February the duke of Dalmatia was
-recalled, and the command of his army fell to Gazan, whose movements
-belong rather to the operations north of the Tagus. Wherefore turning
-to Suchet, I shall proceed to give an exact notion of his resources
-and of the nature of the country where his operations were conducted.
-
-[Sidenote: See Plan 6.]
-
-The city of Valencia, though nominally the seat of his power, was
-not so. He had razed all the defences constructed by the Spaniards,
-confining his hold to the old walls and to a small fortified post
-within the town sufficient to resist a sudden attack, and capable of
-keeping the population in awe; his real place of arms was Saguntum,
-and between that and Tortoza he had two fortresses, namely, Oropesa
-and Peniscola; he had also another line of communication, but for
-infantry only, through Morella, a fortified post, to Mequinenza.
-Besides these lines there were roads both from Valencia and Saguntum,
-leading through Segorbé to Teruel a fortified post, and from thence
-to Zaragoza by Daroca another fortified post. These roads were
-eastward of the Guadalaviar, and westward of that river Suchet had
-a line of retreat from Valencia to Madrid by Requeña, which was
-also a fortified post. Now if the whole of the French general’s
-command be looked to, his forces were very numerous, but that command
-was wide, and in the field his army was, as I have before shewn,
-not very numerous. Valencia was in fact a point made on hostile
-ground which, now that the French were generally on the defensive,
-was only maintained with a view of imposing upon the allies and
-drawing forth the resources of the country as long as circumstances
-would permit. The proper line for covering Valencia and the rich
-country immediately around it was on the Xucar, or rather beyond
-it, at San Felippe de Xativa and Moxente, where a double range of
-mountains afforded strong defensive positions, barring the principal
-roads leading to Valencia. On this position Suchet had formed his
-entrenched camp, much talked of at the time, but slighter than fame
-represented it; the real strength was in the natural formation of the
-ground.
-
-[Sidenote: February.]
-
-[Sidenote: See Plan 7.]
-
-Beyond his left flank the coast road was blocked by the castle of
-Denia, but his right could be turned from Yecla and Almanza, through
-Cofrentes and Requeña, and he was forced to keep strict watch and
-strong detachments always towards the defile of Almanza, lest Elio’s
-army and Del Parque’s should march that way. This entrenched camp was
-Suchet’s permanent position of defence, but there were reasons why
-he should endeavour to keep his troops generally more advanced; the
-country in his front was full of fertile plains, or rather coves,
-within the hills, which run in nearly parallel ranges, and are
-remarkably rocky and precipitous, enclosing the plains like walls,
-and it was of great importance who should command their resources.
-Hence as the principal point in Suchet’s front was the large and
-flourishing town of Alcoy, he occupied it, and from thence threw
-off smaller bodies to Biar, Castalla, Ibi, and Onil, which were on
-the same strong ridge as the position covering the cove of Alcoy.
-On his right there was another plain in which Fuente La Higuera,
-Villena, and Yecla were delineated at opposite points of a triangle,
-and as this plain and the smaller valleys ministered to Suchet’s
-wants because of his superior cavalry, the subsistence of the French
-troops was eased, while the cantonments and foraging districts of the
-Sicilian army were contracted: the outposts of the allied army were
-in fact confined to a fourth and fifth parallel range of mountains
-covering the towns of Elda, Tibi, Xixona, and Villa Joyosa which was
-on the sea-coast.
-
-[Sidenote: Appendix, No. 16, 17.]
-
-Suchet thus assumed an insulting superiority over an army more
-numerous than his own, but outward appearances are deceitful in
-war; the French general was really the strongest, because want,
-ignorance, dissention, and even treachery, were in his adversary’s
-camps. Del Parque’s army remained behind the Morena, Elio’s was at
-Tobarra and Hellin, and of the Anglo-Sicilian army, the British
-only were available in the hour of danger, and they were few. When
-general Campbell quarrelled with Elio the latter retired for a time
-towards Murcia, but after Wellington’s journey to Cadiz he again came
-forward, and his cavalry entering La Mancha skirmished with general
-Soult’s and communicating with Bassecour and the Empecinado delayed
-the progress of Daricau towards Valencia. Meanwhile general Campbell
-remained quiet, in expectation that lord William Bentinck would come
-with more troops to Alicant, but in February fresh troubles broke
-out in Sicily, and in the latter end of that month sir John Murray
-arriving, assumed the command. Thus in a few months, five chiefs with
-different views and prejudices successively came to the command,
-and the army was still unorganized and unequipped for vigorous
-service. The Sicilians, Calabrese, and French belonging to it were
-eager to desert, one Italian regiment had been broken for misconduct
-by general Maitland, the British and Germans were humiliated in
-spirit by the part they were made to enact, and the Spaniards under
-Whittingham and Roche were starving; for Wellington knowing by
-experience how the Spanish government, though receiving a subsidy,
-would, if permitted, throw the feeding of their troops entirely upon
-the British, forbade their being supplied from the British stores,
-and the Spanish intendants neglected them.
-
-[Sidenote: General Donkin’s papers.]
-
-Murray’s first care was to improve the equipment of his troops, and
-with the aid of Elio he soon put them in a better condition. The two
-armies together furnished thirty thousand effective men, of which
-about three thousand were cavalry, and they had thirty-seven guns,
-yet very inadequately horsed, and Whittingham’s and Elio’s cavalry
-were from want of forage nearly unfit for duty. The transport mules
-were hired at an enormous price, the expense being at the rate of one
-hundred and thirty thousand pounds annually, and yet the supply was
-bad, for here as in all other parts of Spain, corruption and misuse
-of authority prevailed. The rich sent their fine animals to Alicant
-for sanctuary and bribed the Alcaldes, the mules of the poor alone
-were pressed, the army was ill provided, and yet the country was
-harassed. In this state it was necessary to do something, and as the
-distress of Whittingham and Roche’s troops could not be removed, save
-by enlarging their cantonments, Murray after some hesitation resolved
-to drive the French from the mountains in his front, and he designed,
-as the first step, to surprise fifteen hundred men which they had
-placed in Alcoy. Now five roads led towards the French positions. 1º.
-On the left the great road from Alicant passing through Monforte,
-Elda, Sax, Villena, and Fuente de la Higuera, where it joins the
-great road from Valencia to Madrid, which runs through Almanza. This
-way turned both the ridges occupied by the armies. 2º. A good road
-leading by Tibi to Castalla, from whence it sent off two branches,
-on the left hand, one leading to Sax, the other through the pass of
-Biar to Villena; two other branches on the right hand went, the one
-through Ibi to Alcoy, the other through Onil to the same place. 3º.
-The road from Alicant to Xixona, a bad road, leading over the very
-steep rugged ridge of that name to Alcoy. At Xixona also there was a
-narrow way on the right hand, through the mountains to Alcoy, which
-was followed by Roche when he attacked that place in the first battle
-of Castalla. 4º. A carriage-road running along the sea-coast as far
-as Villa Joyosa, from whence a narrow mountain-way leads to the
-village of Consentayna, situated in the cove of Alcoy and behind that
-town.
-
-[Sidenote: March.]
-
-On the 6th of March the allied troops moved in four columns, one
-on the left by Elda, to watch the great Madrid road; one on the
-right composed of Spanish troops under colonel Campbell, from Villa
-Joyosa, to get to Consentayna behind Alcoy; a third, under lord
-Frederick Bentinck, issuing by Ibi, was to turn the French right;
-the fourth was to march from Xixona straight against Alcoy, and to
-pursue the remainder of Habert’s division, which was behind that
-town. Lord Frederick Bentinck attacked in due time, but as colonel
-Campbell did not appear the surprise failed, and when the French
-saw the main body winding down the Sierra in front of Alcoy, they
-retired, pursued by general Donkin with the second battalion of the
-twenty-seventh regiment. The head of lord Frederick Bentinck’s column
-was already engaged, but the rear had not arrived, and the whole of
-Habert’s division was soon concentrated a mile beyond Alcoy, and
-there offered battle; yet sir John Murray, instead of pushing briskly
-forward, halted, and it was not until several demands for support
-had reached him, that he detached the fifty-eighth to the assistance
-of the troops engaged, who had lost about forty men, chiefly of the
-twenty-seventh. Habert, fearing to be cut off by Consentayna, and
-seeing the fifty-eighth coming on, retreated, and the allies occupied
-Alcoy, which greatly relieved their quarters; but the want of vigour
-displayed by sir John Murray when he had gained Alcoy did not escape
-the notice of the troops.
-
-[Sidenote: Plan 7.]
-
-After this affair the armies remained quiet until the 15th, when
-Whittingham forced the French posts with some loss from Albayda, and
-general Donkin, taking two battalions and some dragoons from Ibi,
-drove back their outposts from Rocayrente and Alsafara, villages
-situated beyond the range bounding the plain of Alcoy. He repassed
-the hills higher up with the dragoons and a company of the grenadiers
-of twenty-seventh, under captain Waldron, and returned by the main
-road to Alcoy, having in his course met a French battalion, through
-which the gallant Waldron broke with his grenadiers. Meanwhile
-sir John Murray, after much vacillation, at one time resolving to
-advance, at another to retreat, thinking it impossible first to
-force Suchet’s entrenched camp, and then his second line behind the
-Xucar, a difficult river with muddy banks, believing also that the
-French general had his principal magazines at Valencia, conceived
-the idea of seizing the latter by a maritime expedition. He judged
-that the garrison which he estimated at eight hundred infantry, and
-one thousand cavalry, would be unable to resist, and that the town
-once taken the inhabitants would rise; Suchet could not then detach
-men enough to quell them without exposing himself to defeat on
-the Xucar, and if he moved with all his force he could be closely
-followed by the allies and driven upon Requeña. In this view he made
-fresh dispositions.
-
-On the 18th Roche’s division reinforced by some troops from Elio’s
-army and by a British grenadier battalion, was selected for the
-maritime attack, and the rest of the army was concentrated on
-the left at Castalla with the exception of Whittingham’s troops
-which remained at Alcoy, for Suchet was said to be advancing, and
-Murray resolved to fight him. But to form a plan and to execute it
-vigorously, were with sir John Murray very different things. Although
-far from an incapable officer in the cabinet, he shewed none of the
-qualities of a commander in the field. His indecision was remarkable.
-On the morning of the 18th he resolved to fight in front of Castalla,
-and in the evening he assumed a weaker position behind that town,
-abandoning the command of a road, running from Ibi in rear of Alcoy,
-by which Whittingham might have been cut off. And when the strong
-remonstrances of his quarter-master general induced him to relinquish
-this ground, he adopted a third position, neither so strong as the
-first nor so defective as the last.
-
-In this manner affairs wore on until the 26th, when Roche’s division
-and the grenadier battalion marched to Alicant to embark, with
-orders, if they failed at Valencia, to seize and fortify Cullera at
-the mouth of the Xucar; and if this also failed to besiege Denia.
-But now the foolish ministerial arrangements about the Sicilian
-army worked out their natural result. Lord Wellington, though he
-was permitted to retain the Anglo-Sicilian army in Spain beyond the
-period lord William Bentinck had assigned for its stay, had not the
-full command given to him; he was clogged with reference to the
-state of Sicily, until the middle of March, and this new arrangement
-was still unknown to lord William Bentinck and to sir John Murray.
-Thus there were at this time, in fact, three commanding officers;
-Wellington for the general operations, Murray for the particular
-operations, and lord William Bentinck still empowered to increase or
-diminish the troops, and even upon emergency to withdraw the whole.
-And now in consequence of the continued dissentions in Sicily, the
-king of that country having suddenly resumed the government, lord
-William did recal two thousand of Murray’s best troops, and amongst
-them the grenadier battalion intended to attack Valencia. That
-enterprize instantly fell to the ground.
-
-[Sidenote: Appendix to Phillipart’s Military Calendar.]
-
-Upon this event sir John Murray, or some person writing under his
-authority, makes the following observations. “The most careful
-combination could not have selected a moment when the danger of such
-authority was more clearly demonstrated, more severely felt. Had
-these orders been received a very short time before, the allied army
-would not have been committed in active operations; had they reached
-sir John Murray a week later, there is every reason to believe that
-the whole country from Alicant to Valencia would have passed under
-the authority of the allied army, and that marshal Suchet cut off
-from his magazines in that province, and in Aragon, would have been
-compelled to retire through a mountainous and barren country on
-Madrid. But the order of lord William Bentinck was peremptory, and
-the allied army which even before was scarcely balanced, was now so
-inferior to the enemy that it became an indispensible necessity
-to adopt a system strongly defensive, and all hope of a brilliant
-commencement of the campaign vanished.”
-
-Upon this curious passage it is necessary to remark, 1º. that
-Suchet’s great magazines were not at Valencia but at Saguntum; 2º.
-that from the castle of Denia the fleet would have been descried,
-and the strong garrison of Saguntum could have reinforced the troops
-in Valencia; Montmarie’s brigade also would soon have come up from
-Oropesa. These were doubtless contingencies not much to be regarded
-in bar of such an enterprize, but Suchet would by no means have
-been forced to retire by Requeña upon Madrid, he would have retired
-to Liria, the road to which steered more than five miles clear of
-Valencia. He could have kept that city in check while passing, in
-despite of sir John Murray, and at Liria he would have been again
-in his natural position, that is to say, in full command of his
-principal lines of communication. Moreover, however disagreeable to
-Suchet personally it might have been to be forced back upon Madrid,
-that event would have been extremely detrimental to the general
-cause, as tending to reinforce the king against Wellington. But the
-singular part of the passage quoted, is the assertion that the delay
-of a week in lord William Bentinck’s order would have ensured such a
-noble stroke against the French army. Now lord William Bentinck only
-required the troops to proceed in the first instance to Mahon; what a
-dull flagging spirit then was his, who dared not delay obedience to
-such an order even for a week!
-
-[Sidenote: April.]
-
-[Sidenote: General Donkin’s Papers, MSS.]
-
-The recalled troops embarked for Sicily on the 5th of April, and
-Suchet alarmed at the offensive position of the allies, which he
-attributed to the general state of affairs, because the king’s march
-to Castile permitted all the Spanish armies of Andalusia to reinforce
-Elio, resolved to strike first, and with the greater avidity because
-Elio had pushed general Mijares with an advanced guard of three
-or four thousand men to Yecla where they were quite unsupported.
-This movement had been concerted in March, with Murray who was to
-occupy Villena, and be prepared to fall upon the French left, if the
-Spaniards were attacked at Yecla; and in return the Spaniards were
-to fall on the French right if Murray was attacked. Elio however
-neglected to strengthen his division at Yecla with cavalry, which
-he had promised to do, nor did Murray occupy Villena in force;
-nevertheless Mijares remained at Yecla, Elio with the main body
-occupied Hellin, and the cavalry were posted on the side of Albacete,
-until the departure of the troops for Sicily. Roche then joined the
-army at Castalla, and Elio’s main body occupied Elda and Sax to cover
-the main road from Madrid to Alicant.
-
-On the night of the 11th Suchet having by a forced march assembled
-sixteen battalions of infantry, ten squadrons of cavalry, and twelve
-pieces of artillery at Fuente la Higuera, marched straight upon
-Caudete, while Harispe’s division by a cross road endeavoured to
-surprise the Spaniards at Yecla. The latter retired fighting towards
-Jumilla by the hills, but the French artillery and skirmishers
-followed close, and at last the Spaniards being pierced in the
-centre, one part broke and fled, and the other part after some
-farther resistance surrendered. Two hundred were killed, and fifteen
-hundred prisoners, including wounded, fell into the hands of the
-victors, who lost about eighty men and officers.
-
-Suchet’s movement on Fuente la Higuera was known in the night of the
-10th at Castalla, where all the Anglo-Sicilian army was in position,
-because Whittingham had come from Alcoy, leaving only a detachment
-on that side. Hence while Harispe was defeating Mijares at Yecla,
-Suchet in person remained at Caudete with two divisions and the heavy
-cavalry in order of battle, lest Murray should advance by Biar and
-Villena. The latter town, possessing an old wall and a castle, was
-occupied by the regiment of Velez-Malaga, a thousand strong, and in
-the course of the day Murray also came up with the allied cavalry and
-a brigade of infantry. Here he was joined by Elio, without troops,
-and when towards evening Harispe’s fight being over and the prisoners
-secured, Suchet advanced, Murray retired with the cavalry through the
-pass of Biar leaving his infantry, under colonel Adam, in front of
-that defile. He wished also to draw the Spanish garrison from Villena
-but Elio would not suffer it, and yet during the night, repenting of
-his obstinacy, came to Castalla entreating Murray to carry off that
-battalion. It was too late, Suchet had broken the gates of the town
-the evening before, and the castle with the best equipped and finest
-regiment in the Spanish army had already surrendered.
-
-[Sidenote: See Plan 7.]
-
-Murray’s final position was about three miles from the pass of Biar.
-His left, composed of Whittingham’s Spaniards, was entrenched on a
-rugged sierra ending abruptly above Castalla, which, with its old
-castle crowning an isolated sugar-loaf hill, closed the right of that
-wing and was occupied in strength by Mackenzie’s division.
-
-A space between Whittingham’s troops and the town was left on the
-sierra for the advanced guard, then in the pass of Biar; Castalla
-itself, covered by the castle, was prepared for defence, and the
-principal approaches were commanded by strong batteries, for Murray
-had concentrated nearly all his guns at this point. The cavalry was
-partly behind partly in front of the town on an extensive plain which
-was interspersed with olive plantations.
-
-The right wing, composed of Clinton’s division and Roche’s Spaniards,
-was on comparatively low ground, and extended to the rear at right
-angles with the centre, but well covered by a “_barranco_” or bed of
-a torrent, the precipitous sides of which were, in some places, one
-hundred feet deep.
-
-Suchet could approach this position, either through the pass of Biar,
-or turning that defile, by the way of Sax; but the last road was
-supposed to be occupied by Elio’s army, and as troops coming by it
-must make a flank march along the front of the position, it was not a
-favourable line of attack; moreover the allies, being in possession
-of the defiles of Biar, and of Alcoy, might have gained the Xucar,
-either by Fuentes de la Higuera or by Alcoy, seeing that Alicant,
-which was their base, was safe, and the remnants of Elio’s army could
-easily have got away. Murray’s army was however scarcely active
-enough for such an operation, and Suchet advanced very cautiously, as
-it behoved him to do, for the ground between Castalla and Biar was
-just such as a prompt opponent would desire for a decisive blow.
-
-The advanced guard, in the pass of Biar, about two thousand five
-hundred men was composed of two Italian regiments and a battalion
-of the twenty-seventh British; two companies of German riflemen,
-a troop of foreign hussars and six guns, four of which were
-mountain-pieces. The ground was very strong and difficult but at two
-o’clock in the afternoon the French, having concentrated in front
-of the pass, their skirmishers swarmed up the steep rocks on either
-flank, with a surprising vigour and agility, and when they had gained
-the summit, the supporting columns advanced. Then the allies who had
-fought with resolution for about two hours abandoned the pass with
-the loss of two guns and about thirty prisoners, retreating however
-in good order to the main position, for they were not followed
-beyond the mouth of the defile. The next day, that is the 13th about
-one o’clock, the French cavalry, issuing cautiously from the pass,
-extended to the left in the plain as far as Onil, and they were
-followed by the infantry who immediately occupied a low ridge about
-a mile in front of the allies’ left; the cavalry then gained ground
-to the front, and closing towards the right of the allies menaced the
-road to Ibi and Alcoy.
-
-Murray had only occupied his ground the night before, but he had
-studied it and entrenched it in parts. His right wing was quite
-refused, and so well covered by the barranco that nearly all the
-troops could have been employed as a reserve to the left wing, which
-was also very strongly posted and presented a front about two miles
-in extent. But notwithstanding the impregnable strength of the ground
-the English general shrunk from the contest, and while the head of
-the French column was advancing from the defile of Biar, thrice he
-gave his quarter-master general orders to put the army in retreat,
-and the last time so peremptorily, that obedience must have ensued
-if at that moment the firing between the picquets and the French
-light troops had not begun.
-
-
-BATTLE OF CASTALLA.
-
-Suchet’s dispositions were made slowly and as if he also had not made
-up his mind to fight, but a crooked jut of the sierra, springing from
-about the middle of the ridge, hid from him all the British troops,
-and two-thirds of the whole army, hence his first movement was to
-send a column towards Castalla, to turn this jut of the sierra and
-discover the conditions of the position. Meanwhile he formed two
-strong columns immediately opposite the left wing, and his cavalry,
-displaying a formidable line in the plain closed gradually towards
-the barranco. The French general however soon discovered that the
-right of the allies was unattackable. Wherefore retaining his reserve
-on the low ridge in front of the left wing, and still holding the
-exploring column of infantry near Castalla, to protect his flank
-against any sally from that point, he opened his artillery against
-the centre and right wing of the allies, and forming several columns
-of attack commenced the action against the allies’ left on both sides
-of the jut before spoken of.
-
-The ascent in front of Whittingham’s post, being very rugged and
-steep, and the upper parts entrenched, the battle there resolved
-itself at once into a fight of light troops, in which the Spaniards
-maintained their ground with resolution; but on the other side of
-the jut, the French mounted the heights, slowly indeed and with many
-skirmishers, yet so firmly, that it was evident nothing but good
-fighting would send them down again. Their light troops spread
-over the whole face of the Sierra, and here and there attaining
-the summit were partially driven down again by the Anglo-Italian
-troops; but where the main body came upon the second battalion of
-the twenty-seventh there was a terrible crash. For the ground having
-an abrupt declination near the top enabled the French to form a line
-under cover, close to the British, who were lying down waiting for
-orders to charge; and while the former were unfolding their masses
-a grenadier officer, advancing alone, challenged the captain of
-the twenty-seventh grenadiers to single combat. Waldron an agile
-vigorous Irishman and of boiling courage instantly sprung forward,
-the hostile lines looked on without firing a shot, the swords of
-the champions glittered in the sun, the Frenchman’s head was cleft
-in twain, and the next instant the twenty-seventh jumping up with a
-deafening shout, fired a deadly volley, at half pistol-shot distance,
-and then charged with such a shock that, maugre their bravery and
-numbers, the enemy’s soldiers were overthrown and the side of the
-Sierra was covered with the killed and wounded. In Murray’s despatch
-this exploit was erroneously attributed to colonel Adam, but it was
-ordered and conducted by colonel Reeves alone.
-
-The French general seeing his principal column thus overthrown,
-and at every other point having the worst of the fight, made two
-secondary attacks to cover the rallying of the defeated columns, but
-these also failing, his army was separated in three parts, namely
-the beaten troops which were in great confusion, the reserve on the
-minor heights from whence the attacking columns had advanced, and
-the cavalry, which being far on the left in the plain, was also
-separated from the point of action by the bed of the torrent, a
-bridge over which was commanded by the allies. A vigorous sally from
-Castalla and a general advance would have obliged the French reserves
-to fall back upon Biar in confusion before the cavalry could come to
-their assistance, and the victory might have been thus completed; but
-Murray, who had remained during the whole action behind Castalla,
-gave the French full time to rally all their forces and retire in
-order towards the pass of Biar. Then gradually passing out by the
-right of the town, with a tedious pedantic movement, he changed his
-front, forming two lines across the valley, keeping his left at the
-foot of the heights, and extending his right, covered by the cavalry,
-towards the Sierra of Onil. Meanwhile Mackenzie moving out by the
-left of Castalla with three British, and one German battalion, and
-eight guns followed the enemy more rapidly.
-
-Suchet had by this time plunged into the pass with his infantry
-cavalry and tumbrils in one mass, leaving a rear-guard of three
-battalions with eight guns to cover the passage; but these being
-pressed by Mackenzie, and heavily cannonaded, were soon forced to
-form lines and offer battle, answering gun for gun. The French
-soldiers were heavily crushed by the English shot, the clatter of
-musketry was beginning, and one well-directed vigorous charge,
-would have overturned and driven the French in a confused mass upon
-the other troops then wedged in the narrow defile; but Mackenzie’s
-movement had been made by the order of the quarter-master-general
-Donkin, without Murray’s knowledge, and the latter instead of
-supporting it strongly, sent repeated orders to withdraw the troops
-already engaged, and in despite of all remonstrance caused them to
-fall back on the main body, when victory was in their grasp. Suchet
-thus relieved at a most critical moment immediately occupied a
-position across the defile with his flanks on the heights, and though
-Murray finally sent some light companies to attack his left the
-effort was feeble and produced no result; he retained his position
-and in the night retired to Fuente de la Higuera.
-
-On the 14th Murray marched to Alcoy where a small part of
-Whittingham’s forces had remained in observation of a French
-detachment left to hold the pass of Albayda, and through this pass he
-proposed to intercept the retreat of Suchet, but his movements were
-slow, his arrangements bad, and the army became so disordered, that
-he halted the 15th at Alcoy. A feeble demonstration on the following
-days towards Albayda terminated his operations.
-
-[Sidenote: Suchet’s official despatch to the king, MSS.]
-
-[Sidenote: Suchet’s Memoirs.]
-
-[Sidenote: Murray’s despatch.]
-
-In this battle of Castalla, the allies had, including Roche’s
-division, about seventeen thousand of all arms, and the French about
-fifteen thousand. Suchet says that the action was brought on, against
-his wish, by the impetuosity of his light troops, and that he lost
-only eight hundred men; his statement is confirmed by Vacani the
-Italian historian. Sir John Murray affirms that it was a pitched
-battle and that the French lost above three thousand men. The reader
-may choose between these accounts. In favour of Suchet’s version
-it may be remarked that neither the place, nor the time, nor the
-mode of attack, was such as might be expected from his talents and
-experience in war, if he had really intended a pitched battle; and
-though the action was strongly contested on the principal point, it
-is scarcely possible that so many as three thousand men could have
-been killed and wounded. And yet eight hundred seems too few, because
-the loss of the victorious troops with all advantages of ground, was
-more than six hundred. One thing is however certain that if Suchet
-lost three thousand men, which would have been at least a fourth
-of his infantry, he must have been so disabled, so crippled, that
-what with the narrow defile of Biar in the rear, and the distance
-of his cavalry in the plain, to have escaped at all was extremely
-discreditable to Murray’s generalship. An able commander having a
-superior force, and the allies were certainly the most numerous,
-would never have suffered the pass of Biar to be forced on the 12th,
-or if it were forced, he would have had his army well in hand behind
-it, ready to fall upon the head of the French column as it issued
-into the low ground.
-
-Suchet violated several of the most important maxims of art. For
-without an adequate object, he fought a battle, having a defile in
-his rear, and on ground where his cavalry, in which he was superior,
-could not act. Neither the general state of the French affairs, nor
-the particular circumstances, invited a decisive offensive movement
-at the time, wherefore the French general should have been contented
-with his first successes against the Spaniards, and against Colonel
-Adam, unless some palpable advantage had been offered to him by
-Murray. But the latter’s position was very strong indeed, and the
-French army was in imminent danger, cooped up between the pass of
-Biar and the allied troops; and this danger would have been increased
-if Elio had executed a movement which Murray had proposed to him in
-the night of the 12th, namely, to push troops into the mountains from
-Sax, which would have strengthened Whittingham’s left and menaced the
-right flank of the enemy. Elio disregarded this request, and during
-the whole of the operations the two armies were unconnected, and
-acting without concert, although only a few miles distant from each
-other. This might have been avoided if they had previously put the
-castle and town of Villena in a good state of defence, and occupied
-the pass of Biar in force behind it. The two armies would then have
-been secure of a junction in advance, and the plain of Villena would
-have been commanded. To the courage of the troops belongs all the
-merit of the success obtained, there was no generalship, and hence
-though much blood was spilt no profit was derived from victory.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-OPERATIONS NORTH OF THE TAGUS.
-
-
-[Sidenote: 1813. April.]
-
-On this side as in the south, one part of the French fronted lord
-Wellington’s forces, while the rest warred with the Partidas, watched
-the English fleets on the coast, and endeavoured to maintain a free
-intercourse with France; but the extent of country was greater, the
-lines of communication longer, the war altogether more difficult, and
-the various operations more dissevered.
-
-Four distinct bodies acted north of the Tagus.
-
-1º. The army of Portugal, composed of six divisions under Reille,
-observing the allies from behind the Tormes; the Gallicians from
-behind the Esla.
-
-2º. That part of the army of the south which, posted in the valley of
-the Tagus, observed Hill from behind the Tietar, and the Spaniards of
-Estremadura from behind the Tagus.
-
-3º. The army of the north, under Caffarelli, whose business was to
-watch the English squadrons in the Bay of Biscay, to scour the great
-line of communication with France, and to protect the fortresses of
-Navarre and Biscay.
-
-4º. The army of the centre, under count D’Erlon whose task was to
-fight the Partidas in the central part of Spain, to cover Madrid and
-to connect the other armies by means of moveable columns radiating
-from that capital. Now if the reader will follow the operations of
-these armies in the order of their importance and will mark their
-bearing on the main action of the campaign, he will be led gradually
-to understand how it was, that in 1813, the French, although
-apparently in their full strength, were suddenly, irremediably and as
-it were by a whirlwind, swept from the Peninsula.
-
-[Sidenote: 1813.]
-
-[Sidenote: Vacani.]
-
-The army of the centre was composed of Darmagnac’s and Barrois’
-French divisions, of Palombini’s Italians, Casa Palacio’s Spaniards,
-Trielhard’s cavalry, and the king’s French guards. It has been
-already shewn how, marching from the Tormes, it drove the Empecinado
-and Bassecour from the capital; but in passing the Guadarama one
-hundred and fifty men were frozen to death, a catastrophe produced
-by the rash use of ardent spirits. Palombini immediately occupied
-Alcala, and, having foraged the country towards Guadalaxara, brought
-in a large convoy of provisions to the capital. He would then have
-gone to Zaragoza to receive the recruits and stores which had arrived
-from Italy for his division, but Caffarelli was at this time so
-pressed that the Italian division finally marched to his succour, not
-by the direct road, such was the state of the northern provinces, but
-by the circuitous route of Valladolid and Burgos. The king’s guards
-then replaced the Italians at Alcala, and excursions were commenced
-on every side against the Partidas, which being now recruited and
-taught by French deserters were become exceedingly wary and fought
-obstinately.
-
-On the 8th of January, Espert, governor of Segovia, beat Saornil not
-far from Cuellar.
-
-On the 3d of February, general Vichery, marching upon Medina Celi,
-routed a regiment of horse called the volunteers of Madrid, and took
-six hundred prisoners. The Empecinado with two thousand infantry and
-a thousand cavalry intercepted him on his return, but Vichery beat
-him with considerable slaughter, and made the retreat good with a
-loss of only seventy men. However the Guerilla chief being reinforced
-by Saornil and Abril, still kept the hills about Guadalaxara, and
-when D’Erlon sent fresh troops against him, he attacked a detachment
-under colonel Prieur, killed twenty men, took the baggage and
-recovered a heavy contribution.
-
-During these operations the troops in the valley of the Tagus were
-continually harassed, especially by a chief called Cuesta who was
-sometimes in the Guadalupe mountains, sometimes on the Tietar,
-sometimes in the Vera de Placentia, and he was supported at times
-on the side of the Guadalupe by Morillo and Penne Villemur. The
-French were however most troubled by Hill’s vicinity, for that
-general’s successful enterprises had made a profound impression, and
-the slightest change of his quarters, or even the appearance of an
-English uniform beyond the line of cantonments caused a concentration
-of French troops as expecting one of his sudden blows.
-
-Nor was the army of Portugal tranquil. The Gallicians menaced it from
-Puebla Senabria and the gorges of the Bierzo; Silveira from the Tras
-os Montes; the mountains separating Leon from the Asturias were full
-of bands; Wellington was on the Agueda; and Hill, moving from Coria
-by the pass of Bejar might make a sudden incursion towards Avila.
-Finally the communication with the army of the north was to be kept
-up, and on every side the Partidas were enterprising, especially the
-horsemen in the plains of Leon. Reille however did not fail to war
-down these last.
-
-Early in January Foy, returning from Astorga to relieve general
-Leval, then at Avila, killed some of Marquinez’ cavalry in San Pedro,
-and more of them at Mota la Toro; and on the 15th of that month the
-French captain Mathis killed or took four hundred of the same Partida
-at Valderas. A convoy of Guerilla stores coming from the Asturias
-was intercepted by general Boyer’s detachments, and one Florian, a
-celebrated Spanish Partizan in the French service, destroyed the
-band of Garido, in the Avila district. The same Florian on the 1st
-of February defeated the Medico and another inferior chief, and soon
-after, passing the Tormes, captured some Spanish dragoons who had
-come out of Ciudad Rodrigo. On the 1st of March he crushed the band
-of Tonto and at the same time captain Mathis, acting on the side of
-the Carrion river, again surprised Marquinez’ band at Melgar Abaxo,
-and that Partida, reduced to two hundred men under two inferior
-chiefs called Tobar and Marcos, ceased to be formidable.
-
-Previous to this some Gallician troops having advanced to Castro
-Gonzalo on the Esla, were attacked by Boyer who beat them through
-Benevente with the loss of one hundred and fifty men, and then
-driving the Spanish garrison from Puebla Senabria, raised
-contributions with a rigour and ferocity said to be habitual to him.
-His detachments afterwards penetrating into the Asturias, menaced
-Oviedo, and vexed the country in despite of Porlier and Barceña who
-were in that province. General Foy also having fixed his quarters at
-Avila, feeling uneasy as to Hill’s intentions, had endeavoured on
-the 20th of February to surprise Bejar with the view of ascertaining
-if any large body was collected behind it, but he was vigorously
-repulsed by the fiftieth regiment and sixth caçadores under the
-command of colonel Harrison. However this attack and the movements
-of Florian beyond the Tormes, induced Lord Wellington to bring up
-another division to the Agueda, which, by a reaction, caused the
-French to believe the allies were ready to advance.
-
-During these events Caffarelli vainly urged Reille to send him
-reinforcements, the insurrection in the north gained strength, and
-the communications were entirely intercepted until Palombini, driving
-away Mendizabal and Longa from Burgos, enabled the great convoy and
-all Napoleon’s despatches, which had been long accumulating there, to
-reach Madrid in the latter end of February. Joseph then reluctantly
-prepared to abandon his capital and concentrate the armies in
-Castile, but he neglected those essential ingredients of the
-emperor’s plan, rapidity and boldness. By the first Napoleon proposed
-to gain time for the suppression of the insurrection in the northern
-provinces. By the second to impose upon Lord Wellington and keep him
-on the defensive. Joseph did neither, he was slow and assumed the
-defensive himself, and he and the other French generals expected
-to be attacked, for they had not fathomed the English general’s
-political difficulties; and French writers since, misconceiving the
-character of his warfare, have attributed to slowness in the man
-what was really the long-reaching policy of a great commander. The
-allied army was not so lithe as the French army; the latter carried
-on occasion ten days’ provisions on the soldiers’ backs, or it lived
-upon the country, and was in respect of its organization and customs
-a superior military machine; the former never carried more than
-three days’ provisions, never lived upon the country, avoided the
-principle of making the war support the war, payed or promised to pay
-for every thing, and often carried in its marches even the corn for
-its cavalry. The difference of this organization resulting from the
-difference of policy between the two nations, was a complete bar to
-any great and sudden excursion on the part of the British general and
-must always be considered in judging his operations.
-
-It is true that if Wellington had then passed the Upper Tormes with
-a considerable force, drawing Hill to him through Bejar, and moving
-rapidly by Avila, he might have broken in upon the defensive system
-of the king and beat his armies in detail, and much the French
-feared such a blow, which would have been quite in the manner of
-Napoleon. But Wellington’s views were directed by other than mere
-military principles. Thus striking, he was not certain that his blow
-would be decisive, his Portuguese forces would have been ruined, his
-British soldiers seriously injured by the attempt, and the resources
-of France would have repaired the loss of the enemy, sooner than
-he could have recovered the weakness which must necessarily have
-followed such an unseasonable exertion. His plan was to bring a great
-and enduring power early into the field, for like Phocion he desired
-to have an army fitted for a long race and would not start on the
-short course.
-
-Joseph though he conceived the probability and dreaded the effect
-of such a sudden attack, could by no means conceive the spirit of
-his brother’s plans. It was in vain that Napoleon, while admitting
-the bad moral effect of abandoning the capital, pointed out the
-difference between flying from it and making a forward movement
-at the head of an army; the king even maintained that Madrid was
-a better military centre of operations than Valladolid, because
-it had lines of communication by Segovia, Aranda de Duero, and
-Zaragoza; nothing could be more unmilitary, unless he was prepared to
-march direct upon Lisbon if the allies marched upon the Duero. His
-extreme reluctance to quit Madrid induced slowness, but the actual
-position of his troops at the moment likewise presented obstacles to
-the immediate execution of the emperor’s orders; for as Daricau’s
-division had not returned from Valencia, the French outposts towards
-the Morena could not be withdrawn, nor could the army of the centre
-march upon Valladolid until the army of the south relieved it at
-Madrid. Moreover Soult’s counsels had troubled the king’s judgment;
-for that marshal agreeing that to abandon Madrid at that time was
-to abandon Spain, offered a project for reconciling the possession
-of the capital with the emperor’s views. This was to place the
-army of Portugal, and the army of the south, in position along the
-slopes of the Avila mountains, and on the Upper Tormes menacing
-Ciudad Rodrigo, while the king with the army of the centre remained
-at Madrid in reserve. In this situation he said they would be an
-over-match for any force the allies could bring into the field, and
-the latter could not move either by the valley of the Tagus or upon
-the Duero without exposing themselves to a flank attack.
-
-The king objected that such a force could only be fed in that
-country by the utter ruin of the people, which he would not consent
-to; but he was deceived by his ministers; the comfortable state
-of the houses, the immense plains of standing corn seen by the
-allies in their march from the Esla to the Carrion proved that the
-people were not much impoverished. Soult, well acquainted with the
-resources of the country and a better and more practised master of
-such operations, looked to the military question rather than to the
-king’s conciliatory policy, and positively affirmed that the armies
-could be subsisted; yet it does not appear that he had taken into
-his consideration how the insurrection in the northern provinces was
-to be suppressed, which was the principal object of Napoleon’s plan.
-He no doubt expected that the emperor would, from France send troops
-for that purpose, but Napoleon knowing the true state of his affairs
-foresaw that all the resources of France would be required in another
-quarter.
-
-[Sidenote: March.]
-
-[Sidenote: Marshal Jourdan’s Official correspondence, MSS.]
-
-Hatred and suspicion would have made Joseph reject any plan suggested
-by Soult, and the more so that the latter now declared the armies
-could exist without assistance in money from France; yet his mind
-was evidently unsettled by that marshal’s proposal, and by the
-coincidence of his ideas as to holding Madrid, for even when the
-armies were in movement towards the northern parts, he vacillated
-in his resolutions, at one time thinking to stay at Madrid, at
-another to march with the army of the centre to Burgos, instead of
-Valladolid. However upon the 18th of March he quitted the capital
-leaving the Spanish ministers Angulo and Almenara to govern there
-in conjunction with Gazan. The army of the south then moved in two
-columns, one under Couroux across the Gredos mountains to Avila, the
-other under Gazan upon Madrid to relieve the army of the centre,
-which immediately marched to Aranda de Duero and Lerma, with orders
-to settle at Burgos. Meanwhile Villatte’s division and all the
-outposts withdrawn from La Mancha remained on the Alberche, and the
-army of the south was thus concentrated between that river, Madrid,
-and Avila.
-
-North of the Tagus the troops were unmolested, save by the bands
-during these movements, which were not completed before April, but in
-La Mancha the retiring French posts had been followed by Del Parque’s
-advanced guard under Cruz Murgeon, as far as Yebenes, and at the
-bridge of Algobar the French cavalry checked the Spanish horsemen
-so roughly, that Cruz Murgeon retired again towards the Morena. At
-the same time on the Cuenca side, the Empecinado having attempted to
-cut off a party of French cavalry, escorting the marquis of Salices
-to collect his rents previous to quitting Madrid, was defeated with
-the loss of seventy troopers. Meanwhile the great dépôt at Madrid
-being partly removed, general Villatte marched upon Salamanca and
-Gazan fixed his head-quarters at Arevalo. The army of the south was
-thus cantoned between the Tormes, the Duero, and the Adaja, with
-exception of six chosen regiments of infantry and four of cavalry,
-in all about ten thousand men; these remained at Madrid under Leval,
-who was ordered to push advanced guards to Toledo, and the Alberche,
-lest the allies should suddenly march that way and turn the left of
-the French army. But beyond the Alberche there were roads leading
-from the valley of the Tagus over the Gredos mountains into the rear
-of the advanced positions which the French had on the Upper Tormes,
-wherefore these last were now withdrawn from Pedrahita and Puente
-Congosto.
-
-In proportion as the troops arrived in Castile Reille sent men to
-the army of the north, and contracting his cantonments, concentrated
-his remaining forces about Medina de Rio Seco with his cavalry on
-the Esla. But the men recalled by the emperor were now in full
-march, the French were in a state of great confusion, the people
-urged by Wellington’s emissaries and expecting great events every
-where showed their dislike by withholding provisions, and the
-Partida warfare became as lively in the interior as on the coast,
-yet with worse fortune. Captain Giordano, a Spaniard of Joseph’s
-guard killed one hundred and fifty of Saornil’s people near Arevalo,
-and the indefatigable Florian defeated Morales’ band, seized a
-dépôt in the valley of the Tietar, beat the Medico there, and then
-crossing the Gredos mountains, destroyed near Segovia on the 28th
-the band of Purchas; the king’s Spanish guards also crushed some
-smaller Partidas, and Renovales with his whole staff was captured
-at Carvajales and carried to Valladolid. Meanwhile the Empecinado
-gained the hills above Sepulveda and joining with Merino obliged the
-people of the Segovia district, to abandon their houses and refuse
-the supplies demanded by the army of the centre. When D’Armagnac
-and Cassagne marched against them, Merino returned to his northern
-haunts, the Empecinado to the Tagus, and D’Erlon then removed his
-head-quarters to Cuellar.
-
-[Sidenote: April.]
-
-[Sidenote: French Papers captured at Vittoria, MSS.]
-
-During April Leval was very much disturbed, and gave false alarms,
-which extending to Valladolid caused an unseasonable concentration of
-the troops and D’Erlon abandoned Cuellar and Sepulveda. Del Parque
-and the Empecinado were said to have established the bridge of
-Aranjuez, Elio to be advancing in La Mancha, Hill to be in the valley
-of the Tagus and moving by Mombeltran with the intention of seizing
-the passes of the Guadarama. All of this was false. It was the
-Empecinado and Abuelo who were at Aranjuez, the Partidas of Firmin,
-Cuesta, Rivero, and El Medico who were collecting at Arzobispo, to
-mask the march of the Spanish divisions from Estremadura, and of
-the reserve from Andalusia; it was the prince of Anglona who was
-advancing in La Mancha to cover the movement of Del Parque upon
-Murcia. When disabused of his error, Leval easily drove away the
-Empecinado who had advanced to Alcala; afterwards chasing Firmin
-from Valdemoro into the valley of the Tagus, he re-established his
-advanced posts in Toledo and on the Alberche, and scoured the whole
-country around. But Joseph himself was anxious to abandon Madrid
-altogether, and was only restrained by the emperor’s orders and by
-the hope of still gathering some contributions there to support
-his court at Valladolid. With reluctance also he had obeyed his
-brother’s reiterated orders to bring the army of the centre over the
-Duero to replace the detached divisions of the army of Portugal.
-He wished D’Erlon rather than Reille, to reinforce the north, and
-nothing could more clearly show how entirely the subtle spirit of
-Napoleon’s instructions had escaped his perception. It was necessary
-that Madrid should be held, to watch the valley of the Tagus and
-if necessary to enable the French armies to fall back on Zaragoza,
-but principally to give force to the moral effect of the offensive
-movement towards Portugal. It was equally important and for the same
-reason, that the army of Portugal instead of the army of the centre
-should furnish reinforcements for the north.
-
-In the contracted positions which the armies now occupied, the
-difficulty of subsisting was increased, and each general was
-dissatisfied with his district, disputes multiplied, and the court
-clashed with the army at every turn. Leval also inveighed against
-the conduct of the Spanish ministers and minor authorities left at
-Madrid, as being hurtful to both troops and people, and no doubt
-justly, since it appears to have been precisely like that of the
-Portuguese and Spanish authorities on the other side towards the
-allies. Joseph’s letters to his brother became daily more bitter.
-Napoleon’s regulations for the support of the troops were at
-variance with his, and when the king’s budget shewed a deficit of
-many millions, the emperor so little regarded it that he reduced
-the French subsidy to two millions per month, and strictly forbad
-the application of the money to any other purpose than the pay of
-the soldiers. When Joseph asked, how he was to find resources?
-his brother with a just sarcasm on his political and military
-blindness, desired him to seek what was necessary in those provinces
-of the north which were rich enough to nourish the Partidas and the
-insurrectional juntas. The king thus pushed to the wall prevailed
-upon Gazan secretly to lend him fifty thousand francs, for the
-support of his court, from the chest of the army of the south; but
-with the other generals he could by no means agree, and instead of
-the vigour and vigilance necessary to meet the coming campaign there
-was weakness, disunion, and ill blood.
-
-All the movements and arrangements for concentrating the French
-forces, as made by Joseph, displeased Napoleon. The manner in which
-the army of the centre stole away from Madrid by the road of Lerma
-was, he said, only calculated to expose his real views and draw
-the allies upon the French before the communication with France
-was restored. But more than all his indignation was aroused by the
-conduct of the king after the concentration. The French armies
-were held on the defensive and the allies might without fear for
-Portugal embark troops to invade France, whereas a bold and confident
-offensive movement sustained by the formation of a battering train at
-Burgos, as if to besiege Ciudad Rodrigo, would have imposed upon the
-English general, secured France from the danger of such an insult,
-and would at the same time have masked the necessary measures for
-suppressing the insurrection in the northern provinces. To quell
-that insurrection was of vital importance, but from the various
-circumstances already noticed it had now existed for seven months,
-five of which, the king, although at the head of ninety thousand
-men, and uninterrupted by Wellington, had wasted unprofitably, having
-done no more than chase a few inferior bands of the interior while
-this formidable warfare was consolidating in his rear; and while his
-great adversary was organizing the most powerful army which had yet
-taken the field in his front. It is thus kingdoms are lost. I shall
-now trace the progress of the northern insurrection so unaccountably
-neglected by the king, and to the last misunderstood by him; for
-when Wellington was actually in movement; when the dispersed French
-corps were rushing and crowding to the rear to avoid the ponderous
-mass which the English general was pushing forward; even then, the
-king, who had done every thing possible to render defeat certain,
-was urging upon Napoleon the propriety of first beating the allies
-and afterwards reducing the insurrection by the establishment of a
-Spanish civil government beyond the Ebro!
-
-
-NORTHERN INSURRECTION.
-
-[Sidenote: 1813.]
-
-It has been already shewn how the old Partidas had been strengthened
-and new corps organized on a better footing in Biscay and Navarre;
-how in the latter end of 1812 Caffarelli marched to succour Santona,
-and how Longa taking advantage of his absence captured a convoy
-near Burgos while other bands menaced Logroño. All the littoral
-posts, with the exception of Santona and Gueteria were then in the
-possession of the Spaniards, and Mendizabel made an attempt on Bilbao
-the 6th of January. Repulsed by general Rouget he rejoined Longa and
-together they captured the little fort of Salinas de Anara, near the
-Ebro, and that of Cuba in the Bureba, while the bands of Logroño
-invested Domingo Calçada in the Rioja. On the 26th of January,
-Caffarelli, having returned from Santona, detached Vandermaesen and
-Dubreton to drive the Spaniards from Santander, and they seized many
-stores there, but neglected to make any movement to aid Santona which
-was again blockaded by the Partidas; meanwhile the convoy with all
-the emperor’s despatches was stopped at Burgos. Palombini re-opened
-the communications and enabled the convoy to reach Madrid, but his
-division did not muster more than three thousand men, and various
-detachments belonging to the other armies were now in march to the
-interior of Spain. The regiments recalled to France from all parts
-were also in full movement, together with many convoys and escorts
-for the marshals and generals quitting the Peninsula; thus the army
-of the north was reduced, as its duties increased, and the young
-French soldiers died fast of a peculiar malady which especially
-attacked them in small garrisons. Meanwhile the Spaniards’ forces
-increased. In February Mendizabel and Longa were again in the
-Bureba intercepting the communication between Burgos and Bilbao,
-and they menaced Pancorbo and Briviesca. This brought Caffarelli
-from Vittoria and Palombini from Burgos. The latter surprised by
-Longa, lost many men near Poza de Sal, and only saved himself by his
-courage and firmness yet he finally drove the Spaniards away. But
-now Mina returning from Aragon after his unsuccessful action near
-Huesca surprized and burned the castle of Fuenterrabia in a most
-daring manner on the 11th of March, after which, having assembled
-five thousand men in Guipuscoa, he obtained guns from the English
-fleet at Motrico, invested Villa Real within a few leagues of
-Vittoria, and repulsed six hundred men who came to relieve the
-fort. This brought Caffarelli back from Pancorbo. Mina then raised
-the siege, and Palombini marching into the Rioja, succoured the
-garrison of San Domingo Calçada and drove the Partidas towards
-Soria. The communication with Logroño was thus re-opened, and the
-Italians passing the Ebro marched by Vittoria towards Bilbao where
-they arrived the 21st of February; but the gens-d’armes and imperial
-guards immediately moved from Bilbao to France, Caffarelli went with
-them, and the Spanish chiefs remained masters of Navarre and Biscay.
-The people now refused war contributions both in money and kind, the
-harvest was not ripe, and the distress of the French increased in
-an alarming manner because the weather enabled the English fleets
-to keep upon the coast and intercept all supplies from France by
-sea. The communications were all broken; in front by Longa who was
-again at the defile of Pancorbo; in the rear by Mina who was in the
-hills of Arlaban; on the left by a collection of bands at Caroncal
-in Navarre. Abbé, governor of Pampeluna severely checked these
-last, but Mina soon restored affairs; for leaving the volunteers of
-Guipuscoa to watch the defiles of Arlaban, he assembled all the bands
-in Navarre, destroyed the bridges leading to Taffalla from Pampeluna
-and from Puente la Reyna, and though Abbé twice attacked him, he got
-stronger, and bringing up two English guns from the coast besieged
-Taffalla.
-
-[Sidenote: February.]
-
-Napoleon, discontented with Caffarelli’s mode of conducting the
-war, now gave Clauzel the command in the north, with discretionary
-power to draw as many troops from the army of Portugal as he judged
-necessary. He was to correspond directly with the emperor to avoid
-loss of time, but was to obey the king in all things not clashing
-with Napoleon’s orders, which contained a complete review of what
-had passed and what was necessary to be done. “The Partidas,” the
-emperor said, “were strong, organized, exercised, and seconded by
-the exaltation of spirit which the battle of Salamanca had produced.
-The insurrectional juntas had been revived, the posts on the coast
-abandoned by the French and seized by the Spaniards gave free
-intercourse with the English; the bands enjoyed all the resources
-of the country, and the system of warfare hitherto followed had
-favoured their progress. Instead of forestalling their enterprises
-the French had waited for their attacks, and contrived to be always
-behind the event; they obeyed the enemy’s impulsion and the troops
-were fatigued without gaining their object. Clauzel was to adopt
-a contrary system, he was to attack suddenly, pursue rapidly, and
-combine his movements with reference to the features of the country.
-A few good strokes against the Spaniards’ magazines, hospitals,
-or dépôts of arms would inevitably trouble their operations, and
-after one or two military successes some political measures would
-suffice to disperse the authorities, disorganise the insurrection,
-and bring the young men who had been enrolled by force back to their
-homes. All the generals recommended, and the emperor approved of
-the construction of block-houses on well-chosen points, especially
-where many roads met; the forests would furnish the materials
-cheaply, and these posts should support each other and form chains
-of communication. With respect to the greater fortresses, Pampeluna
-and Santona were the most important, and the enemy knew it, for Mina
-was intent to famish the first and the English squadron to get hold
-of the second. To supply Pampeluna it was only necessary to clear the
-communications, the country around being rich and fertile. Santona
-required combinations. The emperor wished to supply it by sea from
-Bayonne and St. Sebastian, but the French marine officers would never
-attempt the passage, even with favourable winds and when the English
-squadron were away, unless all the intermediate ports were occupied
-by the land forces.
-
-“Six months before, these ports had been in the hands of the French,
-but Caffarelli had lightly abandoned them, leaving the field open
-to the insurgents in his rear while he marched with Souham against
-Wellington. Since that period the English and Spaniards held them.
-For four months the emperor had unceasingly ordered the retaking of
-Bermeo and Castro, but whether from the difficulty of the operations
-or the necessity of answering more pressing calls, no effort had been
-made to obey, and the fine season now permitted the English ships to
-aid in the defence. Castro was said to be strongly fortified by the
-English, no wonder, Caffarelli had given them sufficient time, and
-they knew its value. In one month every post on the coast from the
-mouth of the Bidassoa to St. Ander should be again re-occupied by
-the French, and St. Ander itself should be garrisoned strongly. And
-simultaneous with the coast operations should be Clauzel’s attack on
-Mina in Navarre and the chasing of the Partidas in the interior of
-Biscay. The administration of the country also demanded reform, and
-still more the organization and discipline of the army of the north
-should be attended to. It was the pith and marrow of the French power
-in Spain, all would fail if that failed, whereas if the north was
-strong, its administration sound, its fortresses well provided and
-its state tranquil, no irreparable misfortune could happen in any
-other part.”
-
-Clauzel assumed the command on the 22d of February, Abbé was then
-confined to Pampeluna, Mina, master of Navarre, was besieging
-Taffalla; Pastor, Longa, Campillo, Merino and others ranged through
-Biscay and Castile unmolested; and the spirit of the country was so
-changed that fathers now sent their sons to join Partidas which had
-hitherto been composed of robbers and deserters. Clauzel demanded a
-reinforcement of twenty thousand men from the army of Portugal, but
-Joseph was still in Madrid and proposed to send D’Erlon with the army
-of the centre instead, an arrangement to which Clauzel would not
-accede. Twenty thousand troops were, he said, wanted beyond the Ebro.
-Two independent chiefs, himself and D’Erlon, could not act together;
-and if the latter was only to remain quiet at Burgos his army would
-devour the resources without aiding the operations of the army of
-the north. The king might choose another commander, but the troops
-required must be sent. Joseph changed his plan, yet it was the end of
-March before Reille’s divisions moved, three upon Navarre, and one
-upon Burgos. Meanwhile Clauzel repaired with some troops to Bilbao,
-where general Rouget had eight hundred men in garrison besides
-Palombini’s Italians.
-
-[Sidenote: March.]
-
-This place was in a manner blockaded by the Partidas. The Pastor
-with three thousand men was on the right of the Durango river, in
-the hills of Guernica, and Navarnis, between Bilbao and the fort
-of Bermeo. Mendizabal with from eight to ten thousand men was on
-the left of the Durango in the mountains, menacing at once Santoña
-and Bilbao and protecting Castro. However the French had a strong
-garrison in the town of Durango, the construction of new works
-round Bilbao was in progress, and on the 22d of March Clauzel
-moved with the Italians and a French regiment to assault Castro.
-Campillo and Mendizabel immediately appeared from different sides
-and the garrison made a sally; the Spaniards after some sharp
-fighting regained the high valleys in disorder, and the design of
-escalading Castro was resumed, but again interrupted by the return
-of Mendizabel to Trucios, only seven miles from the French camp,
-and by intelligence that the Pastor with the volunteers of Biscay
-and Guipuscoa was menacing Bilbao. Clauzel immediately marched with
-the French regiments to the latter place, leaving Palombini to
-oppose Mendizabel. Finding all safe at Bilbao, he sent Rouget with
-two French battalions to reinforce the Italians, who then drove
-Mendizabel from Trucios into the hills about Valmaceda. It being now
-necessary to attack Castro in form, Palombini occupied the heights
-of Ojeba and Ramales, from whence he communicated with the garrison
-of Santona, introduced a convoy of money and fresh provisions there,
-received ammunition in return, and directed the governor Lameth to
-prepare a battering train of six pieces for the siege. This done, the
-Italians who had lost many men returned hastily to Bilbao, for the
-Pastor was again menacing that city.
-
-[Sidenote: April.]
-
-On the evening of the 31st Palombini marched against this new
-enemy and finding him too strong retreated, but being promised a
-reinforcement of two regiments from Durango he returned; Pastor was
-then with three thousand men in position at Navarnis, Palombini gave
-him battle on the 3d and was defeated with the loss of eighty men,
-but on the 5th being joined by the French regiments from Durango
-he beat the Spaniards. They dispersed and while some collected in
-the same positions behind him, and others under Pastor gained the
-interior, one column retired by the coast towards the Deba on the
-side of St. Sebastian. Palombini eagerly pursued these last, because
-he expected troops from that fortress to line the Deba, and hoped
-thus to surround the Spaniards, but the English squadron was at
-Lequitio and carried them off. Pastor meanwhile descending the Deba
-drove the French from that river to the very walls of St. Sebastian,
-and Palombini was forced to make for Bergara on the road to Vittoria.
-
-At Bergara he left his wounded men with a garrison to protect
-them, and returning on the 9th of April attacked the volunteers of
-Guipuscoa at Ascoytia; repulsed in this attempt he retired again
-towards Bergara, and soon after took charge of a convoy of artillery
-going from St. Sebastian for the siege of Castro. Meanwhile Bilbao
-was in great danger, for the volunteers of Biscay coming from the
-Arlaban, made on the 10th a false attack at a bridge two miles above
-the entrenched camp, while Tapia, Dos Pelos, and Campillo fell on
-seriously from the side of Valmaceda. Mendizabel, who commanded, did
-not combine his movements well and was repulsed by Rouget although
-with difficulty; the noise of the action reached Palombini who
-hastened his march, and having deposited his convoy, followed the
-volunteers of Biscay to Guernica and drove them upon Bermeo where
-they got on board the English vessels.
-
-During these events Clauzel was at Vittoria arranging the general
-plan of operations. Mina had on the 1st of April defeated one of
-his columns near Lerin with the loss of five or six hundred men.
-The four divisions sent from the army of Portugal, together with
-some unattached regiments furnished, according to Reille, the
-twenty thousand men demanded, yet only seventeen thousand reached
-Clauzel; and as the unattached regiments merely replaced a like
-number belonging to the other armies, and now recalled from the
-north, the French general found his expected reinforcements dwindled
-to thirteen thousand. Hence notwithstanding Palombini’s activity,
-the insurrection was in the beginning of April more formidable than
-ever; the line of correspondence from Torquemada to Burgos was quite
-unprotected for want of troops, neither was the line from Burgos
-to Irun so well guarded that couriers could pass without powerful
-escorts, nor always then. The fortifications of the castle of Burgos
-were to have been improved, but there was no money to pay for the
-works, the French, in default of transport, could not collect
-provisions for the magazines ordered to be formed there by the king,
-and two generals, La Martiniere and Rey, were disputing for the
-command. Nearly forty thousand irregular Spanish troops were in the
-field. The garrison of Taffalla, five hundred strong, had yielded
-to Mina, and that chief, in concert with Duran, Amor, Tabueca, the
-militia men of Logroña, and some minor guerillas occupied both sides
-of the Ebro, between Calahora, Logroño, Santa Cruz de Campero, and
-Guardia. They could in one day unite eighteen thousand infantry and a
-thousand horsemen. Mendizabel, Longa, Campillo, Herrera, El Pastor,
-and the volunteers of Biscay, Guipuscoa, and Alava, in all about
-sixteen thousand, were on the coast acting in conjunction with the
-English squadrons, Santander, Castro, and Bermeo were still in their
-hands, and maritime expeditions were preparing at Coruña and in the
-Asturias.
-
-This Partizan war thus presented three distinct branches, that of
-Navarre, that of the coast, and that on the lines of communication.
-The last alone required above fifteen thousand men; namely ten
-thousand from Irun to Burgos, and the line between Tolosa and
-Pampeluna, which was destroyed, required fifteen hundred to restore
-it, while four thousand were necessary between Mondragon and Bilbao,
-comprising the garrison of the latter place; even then no post would
-be safe from a sudden attack. Nearly all the army of the north was
-appropriated to the garrisons and lines of communication, but the
-divisions of Abbé and Vandermaesen could be used on the side of
-Pampeluna, and there were besides, disposable, Palombini’s Italians
-and the divisions sent by Reille. But one of these, Sarrut’s, was
-still in march, and all the sick of the armies in Castile were now
-pouring into Navarre, when, from the loss of the contributions,
-there was no money to provide assistance for them. Clauzel had
-however ameliorated both the civil and the military administrations,
-improved the works of Gueteria, commenced the construction of
-block-houses between Irun and Vittoria, and as we have seen had
-shaken the bands about Bilbao. Now dividing his forces he destined
-Palombini to besiege Castro, ordering Foy and Sarrut’s divisions when
-the latter should arrive, to cover the operation and to oppose any
-disembarkation.
-
-The field force thus appropriated, together with the troops in
-Bilbao under Rouget, was about ten thousand men, and in the middle
-of April, Clauzel, beating Mina from Taffalla and Estella, assembled
-the remainder of the active army, composed of Taupin and Barbout’s
-divisions of the army of Portugal, Vandermaesen’s and Abbé’s
-divisions of the army of the north, in all about thirteen thousand
-men, at Puenta La Reyna in Navarre. He urged general L’Huillier,
-who commanded the reserve at Bayonne, to reinforce St. Sebastian
-and Gueteria and to push forward his troops of observation into the
-valley of Bastan, and he also gave the commandant of Zaragoza notice
-of his arrival, that he might watch Mina on that side. From Puente
-la Reyna he made some excursions but he lost men uselessly, for the
-Spaniards would only fight at advantage, and to hunt Mina without
-first barring all his passages of flight was to destroy the French
-soldiers by fatigue. And here the king’s delay was most seriously
-felt because the winter season, when, the tops of the mountains
-being covered with snow, the Partidas could only move along the
-ordinary roads, was most favourable for the French operations, and
-it had passed away. Clauzel despairing to effect any thing with so
-few troops was even going to separate his forces and march to the
-coast, when in May Mina, who had taken post in the valley of Ronçal,
-furnished an occasion which did not escape the French general.
-
-[Sidenote: May.]
-
-On the 13th Abbé’s and Vandermaesen’s divisions and the cavalry
-entered that valley at once by the upper and lower parts, and
-suddenly closing upon the Guerilla chief killed and wounded a
-thousand of his men and dispersed the rest; one part fled by the
-mountains to Navarquez, on the side of Sanguessa, with the wounded
-whom they dropped at different places in care of the country people.
-Chaplangarra, Cruchaga, and Carena, Mina’s lieutenants, went off,
-each with a column, in the opposite direction and by different routes
-to the valley of the Aragon, they passed that river at St. Gilla, and
-made their way towards the sacred mountain of La Pena near Jaeca. The
-French cavalry following them by Villa Real, entered that town the
-14th on one side, while Mina with twelve men entered it on the other,
-but he escaped to Martes where another ineffectual attempt was made
-to surprise him. Abbé’s columns then descended the smaller valleys
-leading towards the upper valley of the Aragon, while Vandermaesen’s
-infantry and the cavalry entered the lower part of the same valley,
-and the former approaching Jacca sent his wounded men there and got
-fresh ammunition.
-
-Meanwhile Mina and the insurgent junta making a push to regain
-Navarre by the left of the Aragon river were like to have been taken,
-but again escaped towards the valley of the Gallego, whither also the
-greater part of their troops now sought refuge. Clauzel was careful
-not to force them over that river, lest they should remain there
-and intercept the communication from Zaragoza by Jacca, which was
-the only free line the French now possessed and too far removed from
-Clauzel’s true theatre of operations to be watched. Abbé therefore
-returned to Roncal in search of the Spanish dépôts, and Vandermaesen
-entered Sos at one end just as Mina, who had now one hundred and
-fifty horsemen and was always intent upon regaining Navarre, passed
-out at the other; the light cavalry pursuing overtook him at Sos
-Fuentes and he fled to Carcastillo, but there unexpectedly meeting
-some of his own squadrons which had wandered over the mountains after
-the action at Roncal, he gave battle, was defeated with the loss of
-fifty men and fled once more to Aragon, whereupon the insurrectional
-junta dispersed, and dissentions arose between Mina and the minor
-chiefs under his command. Clauzel anxious to increase this discord
-sent troops into all the valleys to seek out the Spanish dépôts
-and to attack their scattered men, and he was well served by the
-Aragonese, for Suchet’s wise administration was still proof against
-the insurrectional juntas.
-
-[Sidenote: 1813.]
-
-During these events four battalions left by Mina at Santa Cruz de
-Campero in the Amescoas, were chased by Taupin, who had remained at
-Estella when the other divisions marched up the valley of Roncal.
-Mina, however, reassembled at Barbastro in Aragon a strong column,
-crowds of deserters from the other Spanish armies were daily
-increasing his power, and so completely had he organized Navarre that
-the presence of a single soldier of his in a village sufficed to
-have any courier without a strong escort stopped. Many bands also
-were still in the Rioja, and two French regiments rashly foraging
-towards Lerim were nearly all destroyed. In fine the losses were
-well balanced, and Clauzel demanded more troops, especially cavalry,
-to scour the Rioja. Nevertheless the dispersion of Mina’s troops
-lowered the reputation of that chief, and the French general taking
-up his quarters in Pampeluna so improved this advantage by address,
-that many townships withdrew from the insurrection, and recalling
-their young men from the bands commenced the formation of eight free
-Spanish companies to serve on the French side. Corps of this sort
-were raised with so much facility in every part of Spain, that it
-would seem nations, as well as individuals, have an idiosyncrasy, and
-in these changeable warriors we again see the Mandonius and Indibilis
-of ancient days.
-
-Joseph, urged by Clauzel, now sent Maucune’s division and some
-light cavalry of the army of Portugal, to occupy Pampleiga, Burgos,
-and Briviesca, and to protect the great communication, which the
-diverging direction of Clauzel’s double operations had again exposed
-to the partidas. Meanwhile the French troops had not been less
-successful in Biscay than in Navarre. Foy reached Bilbao the 24th of
-April, and finding all things there ready for the siege of Castro
-marched to Santona to hasten the preparations at that place, and he
-attempted also to surprise the chiefs Campillo and Herrera in the
-hills above Santona, but was worsted in the combat. The two battering
-trains then endeavoured to proceed from Bilbao and Santona by sea to
-Castro, but the English vessels, coming to the mouth of the Durango,
-stopped those at Bilbao, and obliged them to proceed by land, but
-thus gave an opportunity for those at Santona to make the sea-run in
-safety.
-
-
-SIEGE OF CASTRO.
-
-[Sidenote: May.]
-
-This place situated on a promontory was garrisoned by twelve hundred
-men, under the command of Don Pedro Alvarez, three English sloops
-of war commanded by the captains Bloye, Bremen, and Tayler, were at
-hand, some gun-boats were in the harbour, and twenty-seven guns were
-mounted on the works. An outward wall with towers, extended from
-sea to sea on the low neck which connected the promontory with the
-main land; this line of defence was strengthened by some fortified
-convents, behind it came the town, and behind the town at the
-extremity of the promontory stood the castle.
-
-On the 4th of May, Foy, Sarrut, and Palombini, took post at different
-points to cover the siege; the Italian general St. Paul invested the
-place; the engineer Vacani conducted the works, having twelve guns
-at his disposal. The defence was lively and vigorous, and captain
-Tayler with great labour landed a heavy ship-gun on a rocky island
-to the right of the town, looking from the sea, which he worked with
-effect against the French counter-batteries. On the 11th a second
-gun was mounted on this island, but that day the breaching batteries
-opened, and in a few hours broke the wall while the counter-batteries
-set fire to some houses with shells, wherefore the English guns were
-removed from the island. The assault was then ordered but delayed
-by a sudden accident, for a foraging party having been sent into
-the hills, came flying back, pursued by a column of Spaniards which
-had passed unperceived through the positions of the French; and the
-besiegers were for some time in confusion as thinking the covering
-army had been beaten; however they soon recovered, and the assault
-and escalade took place in the night.
-
-The attack was rapid and fierce, the walls were carried, and the
-garrison driven through the town to the castle which was maintained
-by two companies, while the flying troops got on board the English
-vessels; finally the Italians stormed the castle, but every gun
-had been destroyed, and the two companies safely rejoined their
-countrymen on board the ships. The English had ten seamen wounded,
-the Spaniards lost about a hundred and eighty, and the remainder
-were immediately conveyed to Bermeo from whence they marched inland
-to join Longa. The besiegers lost only fifty men killed and wounded,
-and the Italian soldiers committed great excesses, setting fire
-to the town in many places. Foy and Sarrut, separating after the
-siege, marched, the former through the district of Incartaciones to
-Bilbao defeating a battalion of Biscay volunteers on his route; the
-latter to Orduña with the design of destroying Longa; but that chief
-crossed the Ebro at Puente Lara, and finding the additional troops
-sent by Joseph were beginning to arrive in the vicinity of Burgos,
-recrossed the river, and after a long chase escaped in the mountains
-of Espinosa. Sarrut having captured a few gun-carriages and one of
-Longa’s forest dépôts of ammunition, returned towards Bilbao, and
-Foy immediately marched from that place against the two remaining
-battalions of Biscay volunteers, which under the chiefs Mugartegui
-and Artola were now at Villaro and Guernica.
-
-These battalions, each a thousand strong, raised by conscription, and
-officered from the best families, were the champions of Biscay; but
-though brave and well-equipped, the difficulty of crushing them and
-the volunteers of Guipuscoa, was not great, because neither would
-leave their own peculiar provinces. The third battalion had been
-already dispersed in the district of Incartaciones, and Foy having
-in the night of the 29th combined the march of several columns to
-surround Villaro, fell at day-break upon Mugartegui’s battalion
-and dispersed it with the loss of all its baggage. Two hundred of
-the volunteers immediately returned to their homes, and the French
-general marched rapidly, through Durango, against Artola, who was at
-Guernica. The Italians who were still at Bilbao, immediately turned
-Guernica on the west by Mungia, while a French column turned it
-eastward by Marquinez; then Artola fled to Lequitio, but the column
-from Marquinez, coming over the mountain, fell upon his right flank
-just as he was defiling by a narrow way along the sea-coast. Artola
-himself escaped, but two hundred Biscayens were killed or drowned,
-more than three hundred with twenty-seven officers were taken, and
-two companies which formed his rear-guard dispersed in the mountains,
-and some men finding a few boats rowed to an English vessel. The
-perfect success of this action, which did not cost the French a
-man killed or wounded, was attributed to the talents and vigour of
-captain Guinget, the daring officer who won the passage of the Douro
-at Tordesillas in Wellington’s retreat from Burgos.
-
-When the three battalions of Biscay were thus disposed of, all their
-magazines, hospitals, and dépôts fell into Foy’s hands, the junta
-dispersed, the privateers quitted the coast for Santander, Pastor
-abandoned Guipuscoa, and the Italians recovered Bermeo from which the
-garrison fled to the English ships. They also destroyed the works
-of the little island of Isaro, which being situated three thousand
-yards from the shore, and having no access to the summit, save by
-a staircase cut in the rock, was deemed impregnable, and used as
-a dépôt for the English stores; but this was the last memorable
-exploit of Palombini’s division in the north. That general himself
-had already gone to Italy to join Napoleon’s reserves, and his
-troops being ordered to march by Aragon to join Suchet, were in
-movement, when new events caused them to remain in Guipuscoa, with
-the reputation of being brave and active but ferocious soldiers,
-barbarous and devastating, differing little from their Roman
-ancestors.
-
-It has been already observed that, during these double operations
-of the French on the coast and in Navarre, the partidas had fallen
-upon the line of communication with France, thus working out the
-third branch of the insurrectional warfare. Their success went nigh
-to balance all their losses on each flank. For Mendizabel settled
-with Longa’s partida upon the line between Burgos and Miranda de
-Ebro; the volunteers of Alava and Biscay, and part of Pastor’s bands
-concentrated on the mountains of Arlaban above the defiles of Salinas
-and Descarga; Merino and Salazar came up from the country between
-the Ebro and the Duero; and the three battalions left by Mina in the
-Amescoa, after escaping from Taupin, reassembled close to Vittoria.
-Every convoy and every courier’s escort was attacked at one or other
-of these points without hindering Mendizabel from making sudden
-descents towards the coast when occasion offered. Thus, on the 11th
-of April, as we have seen, he attacked Bilbao. On the 25th of April
-Longa, who had four thousand men and several guns, was repulsed at
-Armiñion, between Miranda and Trevino, by some of the drafted men
-going to France; but on the 3d of May at the same place Longa met and
-obliged a large convoy, coming from Castile with an escort of eight
-hundred men, to return to Miranda, and even cannonaded that place
-on the 5th. Thouvenot the commandant of the government, immediately
-detached twelve hundred men and three guns from Vittoria to relieve
-the convoy; but then Mina’s battalions endeavoured to escalade
-Salvatierra, and they were repulsed with difficulty. Meanwhile the
-volunteers of Alava gathered above the pass of Salinas to intercept
-the rescued convoy, and finding that the latter would not stir
-from Vittoria, they went on the 10th to aid in a fresh attack on
-Salvatierra; being again repulsed they returned to the Arlaban, where
-they captured a courier with a strong escort in the pass of Descarga
-near Villa Real. A French regiment sent to succour Salvatierra
-finally drove these volunteers towards Bilbao where, as we have seen,
-Foy routed them, but Longa continued to infest the post of Armiñion
-until Sarrut arriving from the siege of Castro chased him also.
-
-[Sidenote: June.]
-
-Notwithstanding these successes Clauzel, whose troops were worn
-out with fatigue, declared that it would require fifty thousand
-men and three months’ time to quell the insurrection entirely. And
-Napoleon more discontented than ever with the king, complained that
-the happy enterprizes of Clauzel, Foy, Sarrut, and Palombini, had
-brought no safety to his couriers and convoys; that his orders about
-the posts and the infantry escorts had been neglected; that the
-reinforcements sent to the north from Castile had gone slowly and in
-succession instead of at once; finally that the cautious movement
-of concentration by the other armies was inexcusable, since the
-inaction of the allies, their distance, their want of transport,
-their ordinary and even timid circumspection in any operation out of
-the ordinary course, enabled the French to act in the most convenient
-manner. The growing dissentions between the English and the
-Spaniards, the journey of Wellington to Cadiz, and the changes in his
-army, were, he said, all favourable circumstances for the French, but
-the king had taken no advantage of them; the insurrection continued,
-and the object of interest was now changed. Joseph defended himself
-with more vehemence than reason against these charges, but Wellington
-soon vindicated Napoleon’s judgement, and the voice of controversy
-was smothered by the din of battle, for the English general was again
-abroad in his strength, and the clang of his arms resounded through
-the Peninsula.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-
-[Sidenote: 1813.]
-
-While the French power in Spain was being disorganized by the various
-circumstances related in the former chapter, Lord Wellington’s
-diligence and energy had reorganized the allied army with greater
-strength than before. Large reinforcements, especially of cavalry,
-had come out from England. The efficiency and the spirit of the
-Portuguese had been restored in a surprizing manner, and discipline
-had been vindicated, in both services, with a rough but salutary
-hand; rank had not screened offenders; some had been arrested,
-some tried, some dismissed for breach of duty; the negligent were
-terrified, the zealous encouraged; in short every department was
-reformed with vigour, and it was full time. Confidential officers
-commissioned to detect abuses in the general hospitals and dépôts,
-those asylums for malingerers, discovered and drove so many skulkers
-to their duty, that the second division alone recovered six hundred
-bayonets in one month; and this salutary scouring was rendered more
-efficient by the establishment of both permanent, and ambulent
-regimental hospitals, a wise measure, and founded on a principle
-which cannot be too widely extended; for it is certain that as the
-character of a battalion depends on its fitness for service, a moral
-force will always be brought to bear upon the execution of orders
-under regimental controul which it is in vain to look for elsewhere.
-
-The Douro had been rendered navigable as high up as Castillo de Alva
-above the confluence of the Agueda; a pontoon train of thirty-five
-pieces had been formed; carts of a peculiar construction had
-been built to repair the great loss of mules during the retreat
-from Burgos, and a recruit of these animals was also obtained by
-emissaries who purchased them with English merchandize, even at
-Madrid, under the beards of the enemy, and at the very time when
-Clauzel was unable for want of transport to fill the magazines of
-Burgos. The ponderous iron camp-kettles of the soldiers had been laid
-aside for lighter vessels carried by men, the mules being destined
-to carry tents instead; it is, however, doubtful if these tents were
-really useful on a march in wet weather, because when soaked they
-became too heavy for the animal, and seldom arrived in time for use
-at the end of a march. Their greatest advantage was found when the
-soldiers halted for a few days. Beside these amendments many other
-changes and improvements had taken place, and the Anglo-Portuguese
-troops conscious of a superior organization, were more proudly
-confident than ever, while the French were again depressed by
-intelligence of the defection of the Prussians following on the
-disasters in Russia. Nor had the English general failed to amend
-the condition of those Spanish troops which the Cortez had placed
-at his disposal. By a strict and jealous watch over the application
-of the subsidy he had kept them clothed and fed during the winter,
-and now reaped the benefit by having several powerful bodies fit
-to act in conjunction with his own forces. Wherefore being thus
-prepared he was anxious to strike, anxious to forestall the effects
-of his Portuguese political difficulties as well as to keep pace with
-Napoleon’s efforts in Germany, and his army was ready to take the
-field in April, but he could not concentrate before the green forage
-was fit for use, and deferred the execution of his plan until May.
-What that plan was and what the means for executing it shall now be
-shewn.
-
-[Sidenote: May.]
-
-[Sidenote: Appendix, No. 18.]
-
-The relative strength of the contending armies in the Peninsula
-was no longer in favour of the French. Their force which at the
-termination of Wellington’s retreat into Portugal was above two
-hundred and sixty thousand men and thirty-two thousand horses, two
-hundred and sixteen thousand being present with the eagles, was
-by the loss in subsequent operations, and by drafts for the army
-in Germany reduced in March, 1813, to two hundred and thirty-one
-thousand men and twenty-nine thousand horses. Thirty thousand of
-these were in hospital, and only one hundred and ninety-seven
-thousand men, including the reserve at Bayonne, were present with
-the eagles. Of this number sixty-eight thousand including sick, were
-in Aragon, Catalonia, and Valencia. The remainder with the exception
-of the ten thousand left at Madrid, were distributed on the northern
-line of communication, from the Tormes to Bayonne, and it has been
-already shewn how scattered and how occupied.
-
-But Wellington had so well used the five months’ cessation of active
-operations that nearly two hundred thousand allied troops were ready
-to take the field, and on each flank there was a British fleet, now a
-more effective aid than before, because the French lines of retreat
-run parallel to, and near the sea-coast on each side of Spain, and
-every part opened by the advance of the allies would furnish a fresh
-dépôt for the subsistence of their armies. This mass of troops was
-composed in the following manner.
-
-The first army under Copons nominally ten thousand, really about six
-thousand strong, was in Catalonia.
-
-The second army under Elio was in Murcia about twenty thousand,
-including the divisions of Villa Campa, Bassecour, Duran, and
-Empecinado.
-
-The Anglo-Sicilian army under Murray, near Alicant, about sixteen
-thousand.
-
-The third army under Del Parque, in the Morena about twelve thousand.
-
-The first army of reserve under the Conde d’Abispal, in Andalusia,
-about fifteen thousand.
-
-The fourth army, under Castaños, which included the Spanish divisions
-in Estremadura, Julian Sanchez’ Partida and the Gallicians under
-Giron, the Asturians under Porlier and Barceña, together with the
-Partidas of Longa and Mina, likewise belonged to this army and were
-mustered amongst its divisions. This army was computed at forty
-thousand men, to which may be added the minor bands and volunteers in
-various parts.
-
-Lastly there was the noble Anglo-Portuguese army which now furnished
-more than seventy thousand fighting men, with ninety pieces of
-artillery; and the real difference between the French and the
-allies was greater than the apparent difference. The French returns
-included officers, sergeants, drummers, artillery-men, engineers, and
-waggoners, whereas the allies’ numbers were all sabres and bayonets.
-Moreover this statement of the French number was on the 15th of
-March, and as there were drafts made by Napoleon after that period,
-and as Clauzel and Foy’s losses, and the reserves at Bayonne must be
-deducted, it would be probably more correct to assume that the whole
-number of sabres and bayonets in June, was not more than one hundred
-and sixty thousand, of which one hundred and ten thousand were on the
-northern line of invasion.
-
-The campaign of 1812 had taught the English general the strength of
-the French lines of defence, especially on the Duero, which they had
-since entrenched in different parts, and most of the bridges over
-it, he had himself destroyed in his retreat. But for many reasons it
-was not advisable to operate in the central provinces of Spain. The
-country there was exhausted, the lines of supply would be longer and
-more exposed, the army further removed from the sea, the Gallicians
-could not be easily brought down to co-operate, the services of the
-northern Partidas would not be so advantageous, and the ultimate
-result would be less decisive than operations against the great
-line of communication with France; wherefore against the northern
-provinces he had early resolved to direct his attack and had well
-considered how to evade those lines which he could scarcely hope to
-force.
-
-All the enemy’s defences on the Lower Duero could be turned by a
-movement on the right, across the Upper Tormes, and from thence
-skirting the mountains towards the Upper Duero; but that line
-although most consonant to the rules of art, because the army would
-thus be kept in one mass, led through a very difficult and wasted
-country, the direct aid of the Gallicians must have been dispensed
-with, and moreover it was there the French looked for the allies.
-Hence Wellington resolved not to operate by his right, and with great
-skill and dexterity, he had by the disposition of his troops in
-winter-quarters, by false reports and false movements masked his real
-intentions. For the gathering of the Partidas in the valley of the
-Tagus, the demonstrations made in Estremadura and La Mancha by Penne
-Villemur, Morillo and Del Parque’s army, together with the presence
-of Hill at Coria, that general’s hold of the passes of Bejar, and the
-magazines formed there, all intimated a design of moving either by
-the valley of the Tagus or by the district of Avila; and the great
-magazines collected at Celerico, Viseu, Penamacor, Almeida, and
-Ciudad Rodrigo, in no manner belied the other indications. But half
-the army widely cantoned in the interior of Portugal, apparently for
-the sake of subsistence or health, was really so placed as to be in
-the direction of the true line of operations which was by the left
-through the Tras os Montes.
-
-Wellington’s plan was to pass the Duero, within the Portuguese
-frontier, with a part of his army; to ascend the right bank of that
-river towards Zamora, and then crossing the Esla, to unite with the
-Gallician forces, while the remainder of the army, advancing from the
-Agueda, forced the passage of the Tormes. By this great movement,
-which he hoped to effect so suddenly that the king would not have
-time to concentrate the French armies in opposition, the front of the
-allies would be changed to their right, the Duero and the Pisuerga
-would be turned, and the enemy forced in confusion over the Carion.
-Then with his powerful army well in hand the English general could
-march in advance without fear, strong enough to fight and strong
-enough to turn the right flank of any position which the French might
-take up; and with this advantage also, that at each step he would
-gain additional help by the junction of the irregular Spanish forces
-until he gave his hand to the insurgents in Biscay, and every port
-opened would furnish him a new dépôt and magazines.
-
-But in executing this movement the army would necessarily be divided
-into three separate divisions each too weak to beat the whole French
-force singly; the march of the centre division by the Tras os Montes,
-upon the nice execution of which the concentration of the whole
-depended, would be through an extremely difficult and mountainous
-country, and there were three great rivers to pass. The operation
-was therefore one of extreme delicacy requiring nice and extensive
-arrangements; yet there was not much danger to be apprehended from
-failure; because as each separate corps had a strong country to
-retire upon, the probable extent of the mischief would only be the
-loss of time, and the disadvantage of pursuing other operations when
-the harvest being ripe the French could easily keep in masses. The
-secret then was to hide the true plan as long as possible, to gain
-some marches for the centre corps, and by all means to keep the
-French so scattered and occupied by minor combinations, that they
-should be unable to assemble in time to profit from their central
-positions. Now the bridge equipage being prepared at Abrantes in the
-interior of Portugal was unknown, and gave no intimation of the real
-design, for the bullocks which drew it came with cars from Spain to
-Lamego and from thence went down to Abrantes; the free navigation of
-the Douro up to the Agueda was more conducive to a movement by the
-right, and it furnished abundance of large boats wherewith to pass
-that river without creating any suspicion from their presence; the
-wide cantonments of the allies permitted various changes of quarters
-under the pretence of sickness, and the troops thus gradually closed
-upon the Douro, within the Portuguese frontier, unobserved of the
-enemy who was likewise deceived by many reports purposely spread
-abroad. The menacing head which Hill, and the Spaniards in southern
-Estremadura and Andalusia, carried towards the valley of the Tagus
-and towards the Avila district, also contributed to draw the enemy’s
-attention away from the true point of danger; but more than all other
-things the vigorous excitement of the insurrection in the north
-occupied the French, scattered their forces, and rendered the success
-of the English general’s plan nearly certain.
-
-[Sidenote: 1813.]
-
-Neither did lord Wellington fail to give ample employment to Suchet’s
-forces, for his wings were spread for a long flight even to the
-Pyrennees, and he had no desire to find that marshal’s army joined
-with the other French forces on the Ebro. The lynx eyes of Napoleon
-had scanned this point of war also, and both the king and Clauzel
-had received orders to establish the shortest and most certain line
-of correspondence possible with Suchet, because the emperor’s plan
-contemplated the arrival of the army of Aragon in the north, but
-Wellington furnished a task for it elsewhere. Sir John Murray as we
-have seen, had just repulsed the French at Castalla, and general
-Frere’s cavalry had joined the Andalusian reserve under Abispal,
-but Elio with the third army remained near Alicant and Wellington
-destined Del Parque’s army to join him. This with the Anglo-Sicilian
-army made more than fifty thousand men, including the divisions of
-Duran, Villa Campa, the Empecinado, and other partizans always lying
-on Suchet’s right flank and rear. Now with such a force, or even half
-this number of good troops, the simplest plan would have been to
-turn Suchet’s right flank and bring him to action with his back to
-the sea; but the Spanish armies were not efficient for such work and
-Wellington’s instructions were adapted to the actual circumstances.
-To win the open part of the kingdom, to obtain a permanent footing
-on the coast beyond the Ebro, and to force the enemy from the lower
-line of that river by acting in conjunction with the Catalans, these
-were the three objects which Wellington proposed to reach and in the
-following manner. Murray was to sail against Taragona, to save it
-Suchet would have to weaken his army in Valencia; Elio and Del Parque
-might then seize that kingdom. If Taragona fell, good. If the French
-proved too strong, Murray could return instantly by sea, and secure
-possession of the country gained by the Spanish generals. These last
-were however to remain strictly on the defensive until Murray’s
-operations drew Suchet away, for they were not able to fight alone,
-and above all things it was necessary to avoid a defeat which would
-leave the French general free to move to the aid of the king.
-
-The force necessary to attack Taragona Wellington judged at ten
-thousand, and if Murray could not embark that number there was
-another mode of operating. Some Spanish divisions, to go by sea,
-were then to reinforce Copons in Catalonia and enable him to hold
-the country between Taragona, Tortoza, and Lerida; meanwhile Murray
-and Elio were to advance against Suchet in front, and Del Parque
-in conjunction with the Portuguese troops to turn his right flank
-by Requeña; and this operation was to be repeated until the allies
-communicated with Copons by their left, the partizans advancing in
-proportion and cutting off all communication with the northern parts
-of Spain. Thus in either case Suchet would be kept away from the
-Upper Ebro, and there was no reason to expect any interruption from
-that quarter.
-
-But Wellington was not aware that the infantry of the army of
-Portugal were beyond the Ebro; the spies deceived by the multitude
-of detachments passing in and out of the Peninsula supposed the
-divisions which reinforced Clauzel to be fresh conscripts from
-France; the arrangements for the opening of the campaign were
-therefore made in the expectation of meeting a very powerful force
-in Leon. Hence Freire’s cavalry, and the Andalusian reserve under
-the Conde de Abispal, received orders to march upon Almaraz, to
-pass the Tagus there by a pontoon bridge which was established
-for them, and then crossing the Gredos by Bejar or Mombeltran, to
-march upon Valladolid while the Partidas of that quarter should
-harass the march of Leval from Madrid. Meanwhile the Spanish troops
-in Estremadura were to join those forces on the Agueda which were
-destined to force the passage of the Tormes. The Gallicians under
-Giron were to come down to the Esla, and unite with the corps
-destined to pass that river and turn the line of the Duero. Thus
-seventy thousand Portuguese and British, eight thousand Spaniards
-from Estremadura, and twelve thousand Gallicians, that is to say,
-ninety thousand fighting men would be suddenly placed on a new front,
-and marching abreast against the surprised and separated masses of
-the enemy would drive them refluent to the Pyrennees. A grand design
-and grandly it was executed! For high in heart and strong of hand
-Wellington’s veterans marched to the encounter, the glories of twelve
-victories played about their bayonets, and he the leader so proud
-and confident, that in passing the stream which marks the frontier
-of Spain, he rose in his stirrups and waving his hand cried out
-“Farewell Portugal!”
-
-But while straining every nerve, and eager to strike, as well to
-escape from the Portuguese politics as to keep pace with Napoleon’s
-efforts in Germany, the English general was mortified by having again
-to discuss the question of a descent on Italy. Lord William Bentinck
-had relinquished his views upon that country with great reluctance,
-and now, thinking affairs more favourable than ever, again proposed
-to land at Naples, and put forward the duke of Orleans or the
-arch-duke Francis. He urged in favour of this project the weak state
-of Murat’s kingdom, the favourable disposition of the inhabitants,
-the offer of fifteen thousand auxiliary Russians made by admiral
-Grieg, the shock which would be given to Napoleon’s power, and the
-more effectual diversion in favour of Spain. He supported his opinion
-by an intercepted letter of the queen of Naples to Napoleon, and by
-other authentic documents, and thus, at the moment of execution,
-Wellington’s vast plans were to be disarranged to meet a new scheme
-of war which he had already discussed and disapproved of, and which,
-however promising in itself, would inevitably divide the power of
-England and weaken the operations in both countries.
-
-His reply was decisive. His opinion on the state of affairs in
-Sicily was, he said, not changed, by the intercepted letters, as
-Murat evidently thought himself strong enough to attack the allies.
-Lord William Bentinck should not land in Italy with less than forty
-thousand men of all arms perfectly equipped, since that army would
-have to depend upon its own means and to overcome all opposition
-before it could expect the people to aid or even to cease to oppose
-it. The information stated that the people looked for protection from
-the French and they preferred England to Austria. There could be no
-doubt of this, the Austrians would demand provisions and money and
-would insist upon governing them in return, whereas the English would
-as elsewhere defray their own expenses and probably give a subsidy in
-addition. The south of Italy was possibly for many reasons the best
-place next to the Spanish Peninsula for the operations of a British
-army, and it remained for the government to choose whether they would
-adopt an attack on the former upon such a scale as he had alluded to.
-But of one thing they might be certain, that if it were commenced on
-a smaller scale, or with any other intention than to persevere to the
-last, and by raising, feeding, and clothing armies of the natives,
-the plan would fail and the troops would re-embark with loss and
-disgrace.
-
-[Sidenote: April.]
-
-This remonstrance at last fixed the wavering judgment of the
-ministers, and Wellington was enabled to proceed with his own plans.
-He designed to open the campaign in the beginning of May, and as the
-green forage was well advanced, on the 21st of April, he directed
-Murray, Del Parque, Elio, and Copons to commence their operations
-on the eastern coast; Abispal and Freire were already in march and
-expected at Almaraz on the 24th; the Spanish divisions of Estremadura
-had come up to the Coa, and the divisions of the Anglo-Portuguese
-force were gradually closing to the front. But heavy rains broke
-up the roads, and the cumbrous pontoon train being damaged, on its
-way from the interior, did not reach Sabugal before the 13th and
-was not repaired before the 15th. Thus the opening of the campaign
-was delayed, yet the check proved of little consequence, for on the
-French side nothing was prepared to meet the danger.
-
-[Sidenote: May.]
-
-Napoleon had urged the king to send his heavy baggage and stores to
-the rear and to fix his hospitals and dépôts at Burgos, Vittoria,
-Pampeluna, Tolosa, and San Sebastian. In neglect of this the
-impediments remained with the armies, the sick were poured along the
-communications, and in disorder thrown upon Clauzel at the moment
-when that general was scarcely able to make head against the northern
-insurrection.
-
-Napoleon had early and clearly fixed the king’s authority as
-generalissimo and forbad him to exercise his monarchical authority
-towards the French armies. Joseph was at this moment in high dispute
-with all his generals upon those very points.
-
-Napoleon had directed the king to enlarge and strengthen the works of
-Burgos castle and to form magazines in that place, and at Santona,
-for the use of the armies in the field. At this time no magazines
-had been formed at either place, and although a commencement had been
-made to strengthen the castle of Burgos, it was not yet capable of
-sustaining four hours’ bombardment and offered no support for the
-armies.
-
-Napoleon had desired that a more secure and shorter line of
-correspondence than that by Zaragoza should be established with
-Suchet; for his plan embraced though it did not prescribe the march
-of that general upon Zarogoza, and he had warned the king repeatedly
-how dangerous it would be to have Suchet isolated and unconnected
-with the northern operations. Nevertheless the line of correspondence
-remained the same and the allies possessed the means of excising
-Suchet’s army from the operations in the north.
-
-Napoleon had long and earnestly urged the king to put down the
-northern insurrection in time to make head against the allies on
-the Tormes. Now when the English general was ready to act, that
-insurrection was in full activity, and all the army of the north and
-the greatest part of the army of Portugal was employed to suppress it
-instead of being on the lower Duero.
-
-Napoleon had clearly explained to the king the necessity of keeping
-his troops concentrated towards the Tormes in an offensive position,
-and he had desired that Madrid might be held in such a manner that it
-could be abandoned in a moment. The campaign was now being opened,
-the French armies were scattered, Leval was encumbered at Madrid,
-with a part of the civil administration, with large stores and parcs
-of artillery, and with the care of families attached to Joseph’s
-court, while the other generals were stretching their imaginations
-to devise which of the several projects open to him Wellington
-would adopt. Would he force the passage of the Tormes and the Duero
-with his whole army, and thus turn the French right? Would he march
-straight upon Madrid either by the district of Avila or by the valley
-of the Tagus or by both; and would he then operate against the north,
-or upon Zaragoza, or towards the south in co-operation with the
-Anglo-Sicilians? Every thing was vague, uncertain, confused.
-
-The generals complained that the king’s conduct was not military, and
-Napoleon told him if he would command an army he must give himself
-up entirely to it, thinking of nothing else; but Joseph was always
-demanding gold when he should have trusted to iron. His skill was
-unequal to the arrangements and combinations for taking an initiatory
-and offensive position, and he could neither discover nor force his
-adversary to show his real design. Hence the French armies were
-thrown upon a timid defensive system, and every movement of the
-allies necessarily produced alarm, and the dislocation of troops
-without an object. The march of Del Parque’s army towards Alcaraz,
-and that of the Spanish divisions from Estremadura, towards the
-Agueda, in the latter end of April were judged to be the commencement
-of a general movement against Madrid, because the first was covered
-by the advance of some cavalry into La Mancha, and the second by the
-concentration of the Partidas, in the valley of the Tagus. Thus the
-whole French army was shaken by the demonstration of a few horsemen,
-for when Leval took the alarm, Gazan marched towards the Guadarama
-with three divisions, and D’Erlon gathered the army of the centre
-around Segovia.
-
-Early in May a fifth division of the army of Portugal was employed
-on the line of communication at Pampliega, Burgos, and Briviesca,
-and Reille remained at Valladolid with only one division of infantry
-and his guns, his cavalry being on the Esla. D’Erlon was then at
-Segovia and Gazan at Arevalo, Conroux’s division was at Avila, and
-Leval still at Madrid with outposts at Toledo. The king who was at
-Valladolid could not therefore concentrate more than thirty-five
-thousand infantry on the Duero. He had indeed nine thousand
-excellent cavalry and one hundred pieces of artillery, but with such
-dispositions to concentrate for a battle in advance was not to be
-thought of, and the first decided movement of the allies was sure to
-roll his scattered forces back in confusion. The lines of the Tormes
-and the Duero were effaced from the system of operations.
-
-About the middle of May, D’Armagnac’s division of the army of the
-centre came to Valladolid, Villatte’s division of the army of the
-south reinforced by some cavalry occupied the line of the Tormes from
-Alba to Ledesma. Daricau’s, Digeon’s, and D’Armagnac’s divisions were
-at Zamora, Toro, and other places on both sides of the Duero, and
-Reille’s cavalry was still on the Esla. The front of the French was
-thus defined by these rivers, for the left was covered by the Tormes,
-the centre by the Duero, the right by the Esla. Gazan’s head-quarters
-were at Arevalo, D’Erlon’s at Segovia, and the point of concentration
-was at Valladolid; but Conroux was at Avila, and Leval being still
-at Madrid was thrown entirely out of the circle of operations. At
-this moment Wellington entered upon what has been in England called,
-not very appropriately, the march to Vittoria. That march was but one
-portion of the action. The concentration of the army on the banks of
-the Duero was the commencement, the movement towards the Ebro and
-the passage of that river was the middle, the battle of Vittoria was
-the catastrophe, and the crowning of the Pyrennees the end of the
-splendid drama.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-
-[Sidenote: 1813.]
-
-In the latter part of April the Spanish troops from Estremadura being
-assembled on the Tormes near Almada, Carlos d’España’s division
-moved to Miranda del Castanar, and every thing was ready to open
-the campaign when an unexpected and formidable danger menacing ruin
-arose. Some specie sent from England had enabled the general to pay
-up the British soldiers’ arrears to November 1812, but the Portuguese
-troops were still neglected by their government, a whole year’s pay
-was due to them, a suspicion that a systematic difference in this
-respect was to be established, pervaded their minds, and at the same
-time many regiments which had been raised for a limited period and
-whose term of service was now expired, murmured for their discharge,
-which could not be legally refused. The moment was critical, but
-Wellington applied suitable remedies. He immediately threatened to
-intercept the British subsidy for the payment of the troops which
-brought the Portuguese regency to its senses, and he then made an
-appeal to the honour and patriotism of the Portuguese soldiers whose
-time had expired. Such an appeal is never made in vain to the poorer
-classes of any nation; one and all those brave men remained in the
-service notwithstanding the shameful treatment they had endured
-from their government. This noble emotion would seem to prove that
-Beresford, whose system of military reform was chiefly founded upon
-severity, might have better attained his object in another manner;
-but harshness is the essence of the aristocratic principle of
-government, and the marshal only moved in the straight path marked
-out for him by the policy of the day.
-
-[Sidenote: May.]
-
-[Sidenote: French correspondence, MSS.]
-
-When this dangerous affair was terminated Castaños returned to
-Gallicia, and the British cavalry, of the left wing, which had
-wintered about the Mondego crossed the Duero, some at Oporto some
-near Lamego, and entered the Tras os Montes. The Portuguese cavalry
-had been already quartered all the winter in that province, and the
-enemy supposed that Sylveira would as formerly advance from Braganza
-to connect the Gallicians with the allies. But Sylveira was then
-commanding an infantry division on the Agueda, and a very different
-power was menacing the French on the side of Braganza. For about
-the middle of May the cavalry were followed by many divisions of
-infantry, and by the pontoon equipage, thus forming with the horsemen
-and artillery a mass of more than forty thousand men under general
-Graham. The infantry and guns being rapidly placed on the right
-of the Duero by means of large boats assembled between Lamego and
-Castelo de Alva, near the mouth of the Agueda, marched in several
-columns towards the lower Esla; the cavalry moved down to the same
-point by Braganza.
-
-On the 20th Hill came to Bejar with the second division, and on
-the 22d of May, Graham being well advanced, Wellington quitted his
-head-quarters at Freneda and put his right wing in motion towards
-the Tormes. It consisted of five divisions of Anglo-Portuguese and
-Spanish infantry, and five brigades of cavalry, including Julian
-Sanchez’ horsemen, the whole forming with the artillery a mass of
-from twenty-five to thirty thousand men. The right under general
-Hill moved from Bejar upon Alba de Tormes, the left under Wellington
-himself by Matilla upon Salamanca.
-
-On the 24th Villatte withdrew his detachment from Ledesma, and on the
-26th at ten o’clock in the morning the heads of the allied columns
-with admirable concert appeared on all the different routes leading
-to the Tormes. Morillo’s and Long’s cavalry menaced Alba, Hill coming
-from Tamames bent towards the fords above Salamanca, and Wellington
-coming from Matilla marched straight against that city.
-
-Villatte, a good officer, barricaded the bridge and the streets,
-sent his baggage to the rear, called in his detachment from Alba,
-and being resolved to discover the real force of his enemy waited
-for their approaching masses on the heights above the ford of Santa
-Marta. Too long he waited, for the ground on the left side of the
-river had enabled Wellington to conceal the movements, and already
-Fane’s horsemen with six guns were passing the ford at Santa Marta in
-Villatte’s rear, while Victor Alten’s cavalry removed the barricades
-on the bridge and pushed through the town to attack him in front.
-The French general being thus suddenly pressed gained the heights of
-Cabrerizos, marching towards Babila Fuente, before Fane got over the
-river; but he had still to pass the defiles of Aldea Lengua and was
-overtaken by both columns of cavalry.
-
-The guns opening upon the French squares killed thirty or forty men,
-and the English horsemen charged, but horsemen are no match for such
-infantry whose courage and discipline nothing could quell; they fell
-before the round shot, and nearly one hundred died in the ranks
-without a wound, from the intolerable heat, yet the cavalry made no
-impression on those dauntless soldiers, and in the face of thirty
-thousand enemies they made their way to Babila Fuente where they were
-joined by general Lefol with the troops from Alba, and finally the
-whole disappeared from the sight of their admiring and applauding
-opponents. Nevertheless two hundred had sunk dead in the ranks, a
-like number unable to keep up were made prisoners, and a leading gun
-having been overturned in the defile of Aldea Lengua, six others were
-retarded and the whole fell in the allies’ hands together with their
-tumbrils.
-
-The line of the Tormes being thus gained the allied troops were on
-the 27th and 28th pushed forward with their left towards Miranda and
-Zamora, and their right towards Toro; so placed the latter covered
-the communications with Ciudad Rodrigo while the former approached
-the point on the Duero where it was proposed to throw the bridge for
-communication with Graham’s corps. This done Wellington left general
-Hill in command, and went off suddenly, for he was uneasy about his
-combinations on the Esla. On the 29th he passed the Duero at Miranda,
-by means of a basket slung on a rope which was stretched from rock
-to rock, the river foaming several hundred feet below. The 30th he
-reached Carvajales.
-
-Graham had met with many difficulties in his march through the
-rugged Tras os Montes, and though the troops were now close to the
-Esla stretching from Carvajales to Tabara, and their left was in
-communication with the Gallicians who were coming down to Benevente,
-the combination had been in some measure thwarted by the difficulty
-of crossing the Esla. The general combination required that river
-to be passed on the 29th, at which time the right wing, continuing
-its march from the Tormes without halting, could have been close to
-Zamora, and the passage of the Duero would have been insured. The
-French armies would then have been entirely surprised and separated,
-and some of their divisions overtaken and beaten. They were indeed
-still ignorant that a whole army was on the Esla, but the opposite
-bank of that river was watched by picquets of cavalry and infantry,
-the stream was full and rapid, the banks steep, the fords hard to
-find, difficult, and deep, with stony beds, and the alarm had spread
-from the Tormes through all the cantonments.
-
-At day-break on the 31st some squadrons of hussars, with infantry
-holding by their stirrups, entered the stream at the ford of
-Almendra, and at the same time Graham approached the right bank
-with all his forces. A French picquet of thirty men was surprised
-in the village of Villa Perdrices by the hussars, the pontoons were
-immediately laid down, and the columns commenced passing, but several
-men, even of the cavalry, had been drowned at the fords.
-
-[Sidenote: June.]
-
-On the 1st of June, while the rear was still on the Esla, the head
-of the allies entered Zamora which the French evacuated after
-destroying the bridge. They retired upon Toro, and the next day
-having destroyed the bridge there also, they again fell back, but
-their rear-guard was overtaken near the village of Morales by the
-hussar brigade under colonel Grant. Their horsemen immediately passed
-a bridge and swamp under a cannonade, and then facing about in two
-lines, gave battle, whereupon major Roberts with the tenth regiment,
-supported by the fifteenth, broke both the lines with one charge and
-pursued them for two miles, and they lost above two hundred men, but
-finally rallied on the infantry reserves.
-
-The junction of the allies’ wings on the Duero was now secure, for
-that river was fordable, and Wellington had also, in anticipation of
-failure on one point, made arrangements for forming a boat-bridge
-below the confluence of the Esla; and he could also throw his
-pontoons without difficulty at Toro, and even in advance, because
-Julian Sanchez had surprised a cavalry picquet at Castronuño on the
-left bank, and driven the French outposts from the fords of Pollos.
-But the enemy’s columns were concentrating, it might be for a battle,
-wherefore the English general halted the 3d to bring the Gallicians
-in conjunction on his left, and to close up his own rear which
-had been retarded by the difficulty of passing the Esla. The two
-divisions of his right wing, namely, the second and light division,
-passed the Duero on the morning of the 3rd, the artillery and baggage
-by a ford, the infantry at the bridge of Toro, which was ingeniously
-repaired by the lieutenant of engineers Pringle, who dropped ladders
-at each side of the broken arch, and then laid planks from one to the
-other just above the water level. Thus the English general mastered
-the line of the Duero, and those who understand war may say whether
-it was an effort worthy of the man and his army.
-
-Let them trace all the combinations, follow the movement of Graham’s
-columns, some of which marched one hundred and fifty, some more than
-two hundred and fifty miles, through the wild districts of the Tras
-os Montes. Through those regions, held to be nearly impracticable
-even for small corps, forty thousand men, infantry, cavalry,
-artillery, and pontoons, had been carried and placed as if by a
-supernatural power upon the Esla, before the enemy knew even that
-they were in movement! Was it fortune or skill that presided? Not
-fortune, for the difficulties were such that Graham arrived later
-on the Esla than Wellington intended, and yet so soon, that the
-enemy could make no advantage of the delay. For had the king even
-concentrated his troops behind the Esla on the 31st, the Gallicians
-would still have been at Benevente and reinforced by Penne Villemur’s
-cavalry which had marched with Graham’s corps, and the Asturians
-would have been at Leon on the Upper Esla which was fordable. Then
-the final passage of that river could have been effected by a
-repetition of the same combinations on a smaller scale, because the
-king’s army would not have been numerous enough to defend the Duero
-against Hill, the Lower Esla against Wellington, and the Upper Esla
-against the Spaniards at the same time. Wellington had also, as we
-have seen, prepared the means of bringing Hill’s corps or any part of
-it over the Duero below the confluence of the Esla, and all these
-combinations, these surprising exertions had been made merely to gain
-a fair field of battle.
-
-But if Napoleon’s instructions had been ably worked out by the king
-during the winter, this great movement could not have succeeded, for
-the insurrection in the north would have been crushed in time, or
-at least so far quelled, that sixty thousand French infantry, ten
-thousand cavalry, and one hundred pieces of artillery would have been
-disposable, and such a force held in an offensive position on the
-Tormes would probably have obliged Wellington to adopt a different
-plan of campaign. If concentrated between the Duero and the Esla it
-would have baffled him on that river, because operations which would
-have been effectual against thirty-five thousand infantry would have
-been powerless against sixty thousand. Joseph indeed complained
-that he could not put down the insurrection in the north, that he
-could not feed such large armies, that a thousand obstacles arose on
-every side which he could not overcome, in fine that he could not
-execute his brother’s instructions. They could have been executed
-notwithstanding. Activity, the taking time by the forelock, would
-have quelled the insurrection; and for the feeding of the troops,
-the boundless plains called the “_Tierras de Campos_,” where the
-armies were now operating, were covered with the ripening harvest;
-the only difficulty was to subsist that part of the French army not
-engaged in the northern provinces during the winter. Joseph could not
-find the means though Soult told him they were at hand, because the
-difficulties of his situation overpowered him; they would not have
-overpowered Napoleon, but the difference between a common general
-and a great captain is immense, the one is victorious when the other
-is defeated.
-
-The field was now clear for the shock of battle, but the forces on
-either side were unequally matched. Wellington had ninety thousand
-men, with more than one hundred pieces of artillery. Twelve thousand
-were cavalry, and the British and Portuguese present with the
-colours, were, including serjeants and drummers, above seventy
-thousand sabres and bayonets; the rest of the army was Spanish.
-Besides this mass there were the irregulars on the wings, Sanchez’
-horsemen, a thousand strong, on the right beyond the Duero; Porlier,
-Barceña, Salazar and Manzo on the left between the Upper Esla and the
-Carion. Saornil had moved upon Avila, the Empecinado was hovering
-about Leval. Finally the reserve of Andalusia had crossed the Tagus
-at Almaraz on the 30th, and numerous minor bands were swarming round
-as it advanced. On the other hand though the French could collect
-nine or ten thousand horsemen and one hundred guns, their infantry
-was less than half the number of the allies, being only thirty-five
-thousand strong exclusive of Leval. Hence the way to victory was
-open, and on the 4th Wellington marched forward with a conquering
-violence.
-
-[Sidenote: French Official correspondence, MSS.]
-
-The intrusive monarch was in no condition to stem or to evade a
-torrent of war, the depth and violence of which he was even now
-ignorant of, and a slight sketch of his previous operations will shew
-that all his dispositions were made in the dark and only calculated
-to bring him into trouble. Early in May he would have marched the
-army of the centre to the Upper Duero when Leval’s reports checked
-the movement. On the 15th of that month a spy sent to Bejar by
-D’Erlon, brought intelligence that a great number of country carts
-had been collected there and at Placentia, to follow the troops in
-a march upon Talavera, but after two days were sent back to their
-villages; that fifty mules had been purchased at Bejar and sent
-to Ciudad Rodrigo; that about the same time the first and fourth
-divisions and the German cavalry had moved from the interior towards
-the frontier, saying they were going, the first to Zamora, and the
-last to Fuente Guinaldo; that many troops were already gathered at
-Ciudad Rodrigo under Wellington and Castaños; that the divisions at
-Coria and Placentia were expected there, the reserves of Andalusia
-were in movement, and the pass of Baños which had been before
-retrenched and broken up was now repaired; that the English soldiers
-were paid their arrears, and every body said a grand movement would
-commence on the 12th. All this was extremely accurate, but with the
-exception of the march to Zamora, which seemed to be only a blind,
-the information obtained indicated the principal movement as against
-the Tormes, and threw no light upon the English general’s real design.
-
-On the other flank Reille’s cavalry under Boyer, having made an
-exploring sweep round by Astorga, La Baneza and Benevente, brought
-intelligence that a Gallician expedition was embarking for America,
-that another was to follow, and that several English divisions were
-also embarking in Portugal. The 23d of May a report from the same
-quarter gave notice that Salazar and Manzo were with seven hundred
-horsemen on the Upper Esla, that Porlier was coming from the Asturias
-to join them with two thousand five hundred men, and Giron with six
-thousand Gallicians had reached Astorga; but it was uncertain if
-Sylveira’s cavalry would come from Braganza to connect the left of
-the English with the Gallicians as it had done the year before.
-
-Thus on the 24th of May the French were still entirely in the dark
-with respect to Graham’s movement, and although it was known the
-26th at Valladolid, that Wellington had troops in the country beyond
-the Esla, it was not considered a decisive movement because the
-head-quarters were still at Freneda. However on the 29th Reille
-united his cavalry at Valderas, passed the Esla, entered Benevente
-and sent patroles towards Tobara and Carvajales; from their reports
-and other sources he understood the whole allied army was on the
-Esla, and as his detachments were closely followed by the British
-scouting parties, he recrossed the Esla and broke the bridge of
-Castro Gonzalo, leaving his light horsemen to watch it. But the delay
-in the passage of the Esla, after Graham had reached Carvajales, made
-Reille doubt both the strength of the allies and their inclination
-to cross that river. He expected the main attack on the Tormes,
-and proposed in conjunction with Daricau’s infantry, and Digeon’s
-dragoons, then at Toro and Zamora, to defend the Duero and the Lower
-Esla, leaving the Gallicians, whose force he despised, to pass the
-Upper Esla at their peril.
-
-D’Armagnac’s division was now at Rio Seco, and Maucune’s division,
-which had been spread along the road to Burgos, was ordered to
-concentrate at Palencia on the Carion, but meanwhile Gazan on the
-other flank of the French position was equally deceived by the
-movements of the English general. The 7th of May he heard from the
-Tormes that the allies’ preparations indicated a movement towards
-that river. Leval wrote from Madrid that he had abandoned Toledo
-because fifteen thousand English and ten thousand Spaniards were to
-advance by the valley of the Tagus, that rations had been ordered at
-Escalona for Long’s English cavalry, and that magazines were formed
-at Bejar. At the same time from a third quarter came news that three
-divisions would pass the Duero to join the Gallicians and march upon
-Valladolid.
-
-Gazan rightly judging that the magazines at Bejar were to supply
-Hill and the Spaniards, in their movement to join Wellington,
-expected at first that the whole would operate by the Esla, but on
-the 14th fresh reports changed this opinion; he then judged Hill
-would advance by the Puente Congosto upon Avila, to cut Leval off
-from the army, while Wellington attacked Salamanca. On the 24th
-however his doubts vanished. Villatte told him that Wellington was
-over the Agueda, Graham over the Lower Douro, and at the same time
-Daricau, writing from Zamora, told him that Graham’s cavalry had
-already reached Alcanizas, only one march from the Esla. Conroux was
-instantly directed to march from Avila to Arevalo, Tilly to move
-with the cavalry of the army of the south, from Madrigal towards the
-Trabancos, Daricau to send a brigade to Toro, and Leval to come over
-the Guadarama pass and join D’Erlon at Segovia.
-
-On the 26th, Gazan thinking Wellington slow and crediting a report
-that he was sick and travelling in a carriage, relapsed into doubt.
-He now judged the passage of the Agueda a feint, thought the allies’
-operations would be in mass towards the Esla, and was positively
-assured by his emissaries that Hill would move by the Puente Congosto
-against Segovia. However on the 27th he heard of the passage of
-the Tormes and of Villatte’s retreat, whereupon evacuating Arevalo
-he fixed his head-quarters at Rueda, and directed Conroux who was
-marching upon Arevalo, and so hastily that he left a moveable column
-behind him on the Upper Tormes, to come to the Trabancos.
-
-Gazan at first designed to take post behind that river but there was
-no good position there, and the 28th he rallied Conroux’s, Rey’s,
-and Villatte’s infantry and Tilly’s cavalry behind the Zapardiel.
-Daricau’s division was meanwhile concentrated at Toro, and Digeon’s
-at Zamora; a bridge-head was commenced at Tordesillas, which was
-the point of retreat, and guards were placed at Pollos where the
-fords of the Duero were very low though as yet impracticable. These
-movements were made in tranquillity, for Hill had no desire by
-driving the French over the Duero to increase the number of their
-troops on the Esla. However on the 30th Gazan, hearing that Hill was
-advancing and that the troops on the Esla were likely to attempt the
-passage of that river, crossed the Duero in the night and took post
-at Tordesillas, intending to concentrate the whole army of the south
-on the right of that river; but Leval, though he had quitted Madrid
-on the 27th, was not yet arrived and a large artillery convoy, the
-ministers and Spanish families, and the pictures from the palace of
-Madrid were likewise on the road from that capital by the Segovia
-passes.
-
-At this time the army of Portugal and D’Armagnac’s division was
-extended from the Esla to the Carion, the king’s guards were at
-Valladolid, and D’Erlon was in march to the Puente Duero, from
-Segovia and Sepulveda, yet slowly and apparently not aware of the
-crisis. Meanwhile the passage of the Esla had been effected, and
-hence if that river had been crossed at the time fore-calculated by
-Wellington, and a rapid push made upon Placentia and Valladolid,
-while Hill marched upon Rueda, the whole French army might have been
-caught in what Napoleon calls “_flagrante delicto_” and destroyed.
-And even now it would seem that Wellington could have profited more
-by marching, than by halting at Toro on the 3d, for though Leval’s
-troops and part of the army of the centre were then between the
-Puente Duero and Valladolid, D’Erlon had left a large division at
-Tudela de Duero to protect the arrival of the convoy from Madrid,
-which had not yet crossed the Duero; another great convoy was
-still on the left bank of the lower Pisuerga, and the parcs of the
-armies of Portugal and of the south were waiting on the right bank
-of that river, until the first convoy had passed over the Carion.
-Nevertheless it was prudent to gather well to a head first, and the
-general combinations had been so profoundly made that the evil day
-for the French was only deferred.
-
-On the 30th Joseph’s design was to oppose Wellington’s principal
-force with the army of the south, while the army of the centre held
-the rest in check, the army of Portugal to aid either as the case
-might be; and such was his infatuation as to his real position,
-that even now, from the Duero, he was pressing upon his brother the
-immediate establishment of a civil Spanish administration for the
-provinces behind the Ebro, as the only remedy for the insurrection,
-and for the rendering of the army of the north disposable. He even
-demanded an order from the emperor to draw Clauzel’s troops away from
-the Ebro, that he might drive the allies back to the Coa, and take
-the long-urged offensive position towards Portugal, Napoleon being
-then at Dresden and Wellington on the Duero!
-
-On the 2d when the allies had passed the Esla, the king, who
-expected them at Toro the 1st, became disturbed to find his front
-unmolested, and concluded, as he had received no letter from Reille,
-that Wellington had cut his communication, turned his right, and was
-marching towards the Carion. His alarm was considerable and with
-reason, but in the evening of the 2d he heard from Reille, who had
-retired unmolested to Rio Seco and there rallied D’Armagnac’s troops,
-but Maucune’s division was still in march from different parts to
-concentrate at Palencia. The halt of the 3d was therefore to the
-profit of the French, for during that time they received the Madrid
-convoy and insured the concentration of all their troops, recovering
-even Conroux’s moveable column which joined Leval near Olmedo. They
-also destroyed the bridges of Tudela and Puente Duero on the Duero,
-and that of Simancas and Cabeçon on the Pisuerga, and they passed
-their convoys over the Carion, directing them, under escort of Casa
-Palacios’ Spanish division, upon Burgos.
-
-The army of the south now moved upon Torrelobaton and Penaflor, the
-army of the centre upon Duenas, the army of Portugal upon Palencia;
-and the spirits of all were raised by intelligence of the emperor’s
-victory at Lutzen, and by a report that the Toulon fleet had made
-a successful descent on Sicily. It would appear that Napoleon
-certainly contemplated an attack upon that island, and lord William
-Bentinck thought it would be successful, but it was prevented by
-Murat’s discontent, who instead of attacking fell off from Napoleon
-and opened a negociation with the British.
-
-The 4th Wellington moved in advance, his bridge of communication
-was established at Pollos, and considerable stores of ammunition
-were formed at Valladolid; some had also been taken at Zamora, and
-the cavalry flankers captured large magazines of grain at Arevalo.
-Towards the Carion the allies marched rapidly by parallel roads, and
-in compact order, the Gallicians on the extreme left, Morillo and
-Julian Sanchez on the extreme right, and the English general expected
-the enemy would make a stand behind that river, but the report of the
-prisoners and the hasty movement of the French columns soon convinced
-him that they were in full retreat for Burgos. On the 6th all the
-French armies were over the Carion, Reille had even reached Palencia
-on the 4th and there rallied Maucune’s division, and a brigade of
-light cavalry which had been employed on the communications.
-
-Although the king’s force was now about fifty-five thousand fighting
-men, exclusive of his Spanish division, which was escorting the
-convoys and baggage, he did not judge the Carion a good position
-and retired behind the upper Pisuerga, desiring if possible to
-give battle there. He sent Jourdan to examine the state of Burgos
-castle, and expedited fresh letters, for he had already written from
-Valladolid on the 27th and 30th of May, to Foy, Sarrut, and Clauzel,
-calling them towards the plains of Burgos; and others to Suchet
-directing him to march immediately upon Zaragoza and hoping he was
-already on his way there; but Suchet was then engaged in Catalonia,
-Clauzel’s troops were on the borders of Aragon, Foy and Palombini’s
-Italians were on the coast of Guipuscoa, and Sarrut’s division was
-pursuing Longa in the Montaña.
-
-Joseph was still unacquainted with his enemy. Higher than seventy or
-eighty thousand he did not estimate the allied forces, and he was
-desirous of fighting them on the elevated plains of Burgos. But more
-than one hundred thousand men were before and around him. For all the
-Partidas of the Asturias and the Montaña were drawing together on
-his right, Julian Sanchez and the Partidas of Castile were closing
-on his left, and Abispal with the reserve and Frere’s cavalry had
-already passed the Gredos mountains and were in full march for
-Valladolid. Nevertheless the king was sanguine of success if he could
-rally Clauzel’s and Foy’s divisions in time, and his despatches
-to the former were frequent and urgent. Come with the infantry of
-the army of Portugal! Come with the army of the north and we shall
-drive the allies over the Duero! Such was his cry to Clauzel, and
-again he urged his political schemes upon his brother; but he was
-not a statesman to advise Napoleon nor a general to contend with
-Wellington, his was not the military genius, nor were his the
-arrangements that could recover the initiatory movement at such a
-crisis and against such an adversary.
-
-While the king was on the Pisuerga he received Jourdan’s report.
-The castle of Burgos was untenable, there were no magazines of
-provisions, the new works were quite unfinished, and they commanded
-the old which were unable to hold out a day; of Clauzel’s and Foy’s
-divisions nothing had been heard. It was resolved to retire behind
-the Ebro. All the French outposts in the Bureba and Montaña were
-immediately withdrawn, and the great dépôt of Burgos was evacuated
-upon Vittoria, which was thus encumbered with the artillery dépôts of
-Madrid, of Valladolid, and of Burgos, and with the baggage and stores
-of so many armies and so many fugitive families; and at this moment
-also arrived from France a convoy of treasure which had long waited
-for escort at Bayonne.
-
-Meanwhile the tide of war flowed onwards with terrible power. The
-allies had crossed the Carion on the 7th, and Joseph quitting
-Torquemada had retired by the high road to Burgos with his left wing
-composed of the army of the south and centre, while Reille with
-that of Portugal forming the right wing moved by Castro Xerez. But
-Wellington following hard, and conducting his operations continually
-on the same principle, pushed his left wing and the Gallicians along
-bye-roads, and passed the upper Pisuerga on the 8th, 9th, and 10th.
-Having thus turned the line of the Pisuerga entirely, and outflanked
-Reille, he made a short journey the 11th and halted the 12th with his
-left wing, for he had outmarched his supplies, and had to arrange
-the farther feeding of his troops in a country wide of his line of
-communication. Nevertheless he pushed his right wing under general
-Hill along the main road to Burgos, resolved to make the French
-yield the castle or fight for the possession, and meanwhile Julian
-Sanchez acting beyond the Arlanzan cut off small posts and straggling
-detachments.
-
-Reille had regained the great road to Burgos on the 9th, and was
-strongly posted behind the Hormaza stream, his right near Hormillas,
-his left on the Arlanzan, barring the way to Burgos; the other two
-armies were in reserve behind Estepar, and in this situation they had
-remained for three days and were again cheered by intelligence of
-Napoleon’s victory at Bautzen and the consequent armistice. But on
-the 12th Wellington’s columns came up and the light division preceded
-by Grant’s hussars and Ponsonby’s dragoons, immediately turned the
-French right, while the rest of the troops attacked the whole range
-of heights from Hormillas to Estepar. Reille, whose object was to
-make the allies shew their force, seeing their horsemen in rear of
-his right flank while his front was so strongly menaced, made for the
-bridge of Baniel on the Arlanzan; then Gardiner’s horse artillery
-raked his columns, and captain Milles of the fourteenth dragoons
-charging, took some prisoners and one of his guns which had been
-disabled. Meanwhile the right of the allies pressing forward towards
-the bridge of Baniel endeavoured to cut off the retreat, but the
-French repelled the minor attacks with the utmost firmness, bore the
-fire of the artillery without shrinking, and evading the serious
-attacks by their rapid yet orderly movement, finally passed the river
-with a loss of only thirty men killed and a few taken.
-
-The three French armies being now covered by the Urbel and Arlanzan
-rivers, which were swelled by the rain, could not be easily attacked,
-and the stores of Burgos were removed; but in the night Joseph
-again retreated along the high road by Briviesca to Pancorbo, into
-which place he threw a garrison of six hundred men. The castle of
-Burgos was prepared also for destruction, and whether from hurry, or
-negligence, or want of skill, the mines exploded outwards, and at the
-very moment when a column of infantry was defiling under the castle.
-Several streets were laid in ruins, thousands of shells and other
-combustibles which had been left in the place were ignited and driven
-upwards with a horrible crash, the hills rocked above the devoted
-column, and a shower of iron, timber, and stony fragments falling on
-it, in an instant destroyed more than three hundred men! Fewer deaths
-might have sufficed to determine the crisis of a great battle!
-
-But such an art is war! So fearful is the consequence of error, so
-terrible the responsibility of a general. Strongly and wisely did
-Napoleon speak when he told Joseph, that if he would command, he must
-give himself up entirely to the business, labouring day and night,
-thinking of nothing else. Here was a noble army driven like sheep
-before prowling wolves, yet in every action the inferior generals had
-been prompt and skilful, the soldiers brave, ready and daring, firm
-and obedient in the most trying circumstances of battle. Infantry,
-artillery, and cavalry, all were excellent and numerous, and the
-country strong and favourable for defence; but that soul of armies,
-the mind of a great commander was wanting, and the Esla, the Tormes,
-the Duero, the Carion, the Pisuerga, the Arlanzan, seemed to be
-dried up, the rocks, the mountains, the deep ravines to be levelled.
-Clauzel’s strong positions, Dubreton’s thundering castle, had
-disappeared like a dream, and sixty thousand veteran soldiers though
-willing to fight at every step, were hurried with all the tumult and
-confusion of defeat across the Ebro. Nor was that barrier found of
-more avail to mitigate the rushing violence of their formidable enemy.
-
-Joseph having possession of the impregnable rocks, and the defile
-and forts of Pancorbo, now thought he could safely await for his
-reinforcements, and extended his wings for the sake of subsistence.
-On the 16th D’Erlon marched to Aro on the left, leaving small
-posts of communication between that place and Miranda, and sending
-detachments towards Domingo Calçada to watch the road leading from
-Burgos to Logroño. Gazan remained in the centre with a strong
-advanced guard beyond Pancorbo, for as the king’s hope was to retake
-the offensive, he retained the power of issuing beyond the defiles,
-and his scouting parties were pushed forward towards Briviesca in
-front, to Zerezo on the left and to Poya do Sal on the right. The
-rest of the army of the south was cantoned by divisions as far as
-Armiñion behind the Ebro, and Reille, who had occupied Busto marched
-to Espejo, also behind the Ebro and on the great road to Bilbao.
-There being joined by Sarrut’s division from Orduña he took post,
-placing Maucune at Frias, Sarrut at Osma, and La Martiniere at
-Espejo; guarding also the Puente Lara, and sending strong scouting
-parties towards Medina de Pomar and Villarcayo on one side and
-towards Orduña on the other.
-
-While these movements were in progress, all the encumbrances of
-the armies were assembled in the basin of Vittoria, and many small
-garrisons of the army of the north came in; for Clauzel having
-received the king’s first letter on the 15th of June had stopped the
-pursuit of Mina, and proceeded to gather up his scattered columns,
-intending to move by the way of Logroño to the Ebro. He had with
-him Taupin’s and Barbout’s divisions of the army of Portugal, but
-after providing for his garrisons, only five thousand men of the
-army of the north were disposable, so that he could not bring more
-than fourteen thousand men to aid the king; nevertheless the latter
-confident in the strength of his front was still buoyant with the
-hope of assembling an army powerful enough to retake the offensive.
-His dream was short-lived.
-
-The 13th, while the echoes of the explosion at Burgos were still
-ringing in the hills, Wellington’s whole army was in motion by
-its left towards the country about the sources of the Ebro. The
-Gallicians moved from Aguilar de Campo high up on the Pisuerga,
-Graham with the British left wing moved from Villa Diego, and in
-one march reaching the river, passed it on the 14th at the bridges
-of Rocamunde and San Martin. The centre of the army followed on the
-15th, and the same day the right wing under Hill marched through the
-Bureba and crossed at the Puente Arenas. This general movement was
-masked by the cavalry and by the Spanish irregulars who infested the
-rear of the French on the roads to Briviesca and Domingo Calçada,
-and the allies being thus suddenly placed between the sources of the
-Ebro and the great mountains of Reynosa, cut the French entirely
-off from the sea-coast. All the ports except Santona and Bilbao,
-were immediately evacuated by the enemy; Santona was invested
-by Mendizabel, Porlier, Barceña, and Campillo, and the English
-vessels entered Sant Andero, where a dépôt and hospital station was
-established, because the royal road from thence through Reynosa to
-Burgos furnished a free communication with the army. This single
-blow severed the connection of the English force with Portugal. That
-country was cast off by the army as a heavy tender is cast from its
-towing rope, and all the British military establishments were broken
-up and transferred by sea to the coast of Biscay.
-
-The English general had now his choice of two modes of action. The
-one to march bodily down the left bank of the Ebro, and fall upon the
-enemy wherever he could meet with them; the other to advance, still
-turning the king’s right, and by entering Guipuscoa, to place the
-army on the great communication with France, while the fleet keeping
-pace with this movement furnished fresh dépôts at Bilbao and other
-ports. The first plan was a delicate and uncertain operation, because
-of the many narrow and dangerous defiles which were to be passed,
-but the second which could scarcely be contravened, was secure even
-if the first should fail; both were compatible to a certain point,
-inasmuch as to gain the great road leading from Burgos by Orduña to
-Bilbao, was a good step for either, and failing in that the road
-leading by Valmaceda to Bilbao was still in reserve. Wherefore with
-an eagle’s sweep Wellington brought his left wing round, and pouring
-his numerous columns through all the deep narrow valleys and rugged
-defiles descended towards the great road of Bilbao between Frias
-and Orduña. At Modina de Pomar a central point, he left the sixth
-division to guard his stores and supplies, but the march of the
-other divisions was unmitigated; neither the winter gullies nor the
-ravines, nor the precipitate passes amongst the rocks, retarded the
-march even of the artillery; where horses could not draw men hauled,
-and when the wheels would not roll the guns were let down or lifted
-up with ropes; and strongly did the rough veteran infantry work their
-way through those wild but beautiful regions; six days they toiled
-unceasingly; on the seventh, swelled by the junction of Longa’s
-division and all the smaller bands which came trickling from the
-mountains, they burst like raging streams from every defile, and went
-foaming into the basin of Vittoria.
-
-[Sidenote: General Thouvenot’s Correspondence, MSS.]
-
-[Sidenote: Marshal Jourdan’s correspondence, MSS.]
-
-During this time many reports reached the French, some absurdly
-exaggerated, as that Wellington had one hundred and ninety thousand
-men, but all indicating more or less distinctly the true line and
-direction of his march. As early as the 15th Jourdan had warned
-Joseph that the allies would probably turn his right, and as the
-reports of Maucune’s scouts told of the presence of English troops,
-that day, on the side of Puente Arenas, he pressed the king to send
-the army of Portugal to Valmaceda, and to close the other armies
-towards the same quarter. Joseph yielded so far, that Reille was
-ordered to concentrate his troops at Osma on the morning of the
-18th, with the view of gaining Valmaceda by Orduña, if it was still
-possible; if not he was to descend rapidly from Lodio upon Bilbao,
-and to rally Foy’s division and the garrisons of Biscay upon the army
-of Portugal. At the same time Gazan was directed to send a division
-of infantry and a regiment of dragoons from the army of the south, to
-relieve Reille’s troops at Puente Lara and Espejo, but no general and
-decided dispositions were made.
-
-[Sidenote: Official Journal of the chief of the staff, General Boyer,
-MSS.]
-
-Reille immediately ordered Maucune to quit Frias, and join him at
-Osma with his division, yet having some fears for his safety gave
-him the choice of coming by the direct road across the hills, or
-by the circuitous route of Puente Lara. Maucune started late in
-the night of the 17th by the direct road, and when Reille himself
-reached Osma, with La Martiniere’s and Sarrut’s divisions, on the
-morning of the 18th, he found a strong English column issuing from
-the defiles in his front, and the head of it was already at Barbarena
-in possession of the high road to Orduña. This was general Graham
-with the first, third, and fifth divisions, and a considerable body
-of cavalry. The French general who had about eight thousand infantry
-and fourteen guns, at first made a demonstration with Sarrut’s
-division in the view of forcing the British to shew their whole
-force, and a sharp skirmish and heavy cannonade ensued, wherein
-fifty men fell on the side of the allies, above a hundred on that of
-the enemy. But at half-past two o’clock, Maucune had not arrived,
-and beyond the mountains, on the left of the French, the sound of a
-battle arose which seemed to advance along the valley of Boveda into
-the rear of Osma; Reille, suspecting what had happened, instantly
-retired fighting, towards Espejo, where the mouths of the valleys
-opened on each other, and from that of Boveda, and the hills on the
-left, Maucune’s troops rushed forth begrimed with dust and powder,
-breathless, and broken into confused masses.
-
-That general, proverbially daring, marched over the Araçena ridge
-instead of going by the Puente Lara, and his leading brigade, after
-clearing the defiles, had halted on the bank of a rivulet near the
-village of San Millan in the valley of Boveda. In this situation,
-without planting picquets, they were waiting for their other brigade
-and the baggage, when suddenly the light division which had been
-moving by a line parallel with Graham’s march, appeared on some
-rising ground in their front; the surprise was equal on both sides,
-but the British riflemen instantly dashed down the hill with loud
-cries and a bickering fire, the fifty-second followed in support,
-and the French retreated fighting as they best could. The rest of
-the English regiments having remained in reserve, were watching this
-combat and thinking all their enemies were before them, when the
-second French brigade, followed by the baggage, came hastily out from
-a narrow cleft in some perpendicular rocks on the right hand. A very
-confused action now commenced, for the reserve scrambled over some
-rough intervening ground to attack this new enemy, and the French to
-avoid them made for a hill a little way in their front, whereupon the
-fifty-second, whose rear was thus menaced, wheeled round and running
-at full speed up the hill met them on the summit. However, the French
-soldiers without losing their presence of mind threw off their
-packs, and half flying, half fighting, escaped along the side of the
-mountains towards Miranda, while the first brigade still retreating
-on the road towards Espejo were pursued by the riflemen. Meanwhile
-the sumpter animals being affrighted, run wildly about the rocks with
-a wonderful clamour, and though the escort huddled together fought
-desperately, all the baggage became the spoil of the victors, and
-four hundred of the French fell or were taken; the rest, thanks to
-their unyielding resolution and activity, escaped, though pursued
-through the mountains by some Spanish irregulars, and Reille being
-still pressed by Graham then retreated behind Salinas de Añara.
-
-A knowledge of these events reached the king that night, yet neither
-Reille nor the few prisoners he had made could account for more than
-six Anglo-Portuguese divisions at the defiles; hence as no troops
-had been felt on the great road from Burgos, it was judged that Hill
-was marching with the others by Valmaceda into Guipuscoa, to menace
-the great communication with France. However it was clear that six
-divisions were concentrated on the right and rear of the French
-armies, and no time was to be lost in extricating the latter from
-its critical situation; wherefore Gazan and D’Erlon marched in the
-night to unite at Armiñon, a central point behind the Zadora river,
-up the left bank of which it was necessary to file in order to gain
-the basin of Vittoria. But the latter could only be entered, at that
-side, through the pass of Puebla de Arganzan which was two miles
-long, and so narrow as scarcely to furnish room for the great road;
-Reille therefore, to cover this dangerous movement, fell back during
-the night to Subijana Morillas, on the Bayas river. His orders were
-to dispute the ground vigorously, for by that route Wellington could
-enter the basin before Gazan, and D’Erlon could thread the pass of
-Puebla; he could also send a corps from Frias to attack their rear on
-the Miranda side, while they were engaged in the defile. One of these
-things by all means he should have endeavoured to accomplish, but
-the troops had made very long marches on the 18th, and it was dark
-before the fourth division had reached Espejo. D’Erlon and Gazan,
-therefore, united at Armiñon without difficulty about ten o’clock in
-the morning of the 19th, and immediately commenced the passage of the
-defile of Puebla, and the head of their column appeared on the other
-side at the moment when Wellington was driving Reille back upon the
-Zadora.
-
-The allies had reached Bayas before mid-day of the 19th, and if they
-could have forced the passage at once, the armies of the centre and
-of the south would have been cut off from Vittoria and destroyed;
-but the army of Portugal was strongly posted, the front covered by
-the river, the right by the village of Subijana de Morillas, which
-was occupied as a bridge-head, and the left secured by some very
-rugged heights opposite the village of Pobes. This position was
-turned by the light division while the fourth division attacked it
-in front, and after a skirmish in which about eighty of the French
-fell, Reille was forced over the Zadora; but the army of the centre
-had then passed the defile of Puebla and was in position behind that
-river, the army of the south was coming rapidly into second line, the
-crisis had passed, the combat ceased, and the allies pitched their
-tents on the Bayas. The French armies now formed three lines behind
-the Zadora, and the king hearing that Clauzel was at Logroño, eleven
-leagues distant, expedited orders to him to march upon Vittoria;
-general Foy also, who was in march for Bilbao, was directed to halt
-at Durango, to rally all the garrisons of Biscay and Guipuscoa there,
-and then to come down on Vittoria. These orders were received too
-late.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
-
-[Sidenote: 1813. June.]
-
-The basin into which the king had now poured all his troops, his
-parcs, convoys, and encumbrances of every kind, was about eight
-miles broad by ten in length, Vittoria being at the further end.
-The river Zadora, narrow and with rugged banks, after passing very
-near that town, runs towards the Ebro with many windings and divides
-the basin unequally, the largest portion being on the right bank. A
-traveller coming from Miranda by the royal Madrid road, would enter
-the basin by the pass of Puebla, through which the Zadora flows
-between two very high and rough mountain ridges, the one on his right
-hand being called the heights of Puebla, that on his left hand the
-heights of Morillas. The road leads up the left bank of the river,
-and on emerging from the pass, on the left hand at the distance of
-about six miles would be seen the village of Subijana de Morillas,
-furnishing that opening into the basin which Reille defended while
-the other armies passed the defile of Puebla. The spires of Vittoria
-would appear about eight miles distant, and from that town the road
-to Logroño goes off on the right hand, the road to Bilbao by Murgia
-and Orduña on the left hand crossing the Zadora at a bridge near the
-village of Ariaga; further on, the roads to Estella and to Pampeluna
-branch off on the right, a road to Durango on the left, and between
-them the royal causeway leads over the great Arlaban ridge into the
-mountains of Guipuscoa by the formidable defiles of Salinas. But of
-all these roads, though several were practicable for guns, especially
-that to Pampeluna, the royal causeway alone could suffice for the
-retreat of such an encumbered army. And as the allies were behind the
-hills forming the basin on the right bank of the Zadora, their line
-being parallel to the great causeway, it followed that by prolonging
-their left they would infallibly cut off the French from that route.
-
-Joseph felt the danger and his first thought was to march by Salinas
-to Durango, with a view to cover his communications with France, and
-to rally Foy’s troops and the garrisons of Guipuscoa and Biscay.
-But in that rough country, neither his artillery nor his cavalry,
-on which he greatly depended, though the cavalry and artillery of
-the allies were scarcely less powerful, could act or subsist, and he
-would have to send them into France; and if pressed by Wellington
-in front and surrounded by all the bands in a mountainous region,
-favourable for those irregulars, he could not long remain in Spain.
-It was then proposed if forced from the basin of Vittoria, to retire
-by Salvatierra to Pampeluna and bring Suchet’s army up to Zaragoza;
-but Joseph feared thus to lose the great communication with France,
-because the Spanish regular army, aided by all the bands, could
-seize Tolosa while Wellington operated against him on the side of
-Navarre. It was replied that troops detached from the army of the
-north and from that of Portugal might oppose them; still the king
-hesitated, for though the road to Pampeluna was called practicable
-for wheels, it required something more for the enormous mass of guns
-and carriages of all kinds now heaped around Vittoria.
-
-One large convoy had already marched on the 19th by the royal
-causeway for France, another, still larger was to move on the 21st
-under escort of Maucune’s division; the fighting men in front of the
-enemy were thus diminished and yet the plain was still covered with
-artillery parcs and equipages of all kinds, and Joseph shut up in the
-basin of Vittoria, vacillating and infirm of purpose, continued to
-waste time in vain conjectures about his adversary’s movements. Hence
-on the 19th nothing was done, but the 20th some infantry and cavalry
-of the army of Portugal passed the Zadora to feel for the allies
-towards Murguia, and being encountered by Longa’s Spaniards at the
-distance of six miles, after some successful skirmishing recrossed
-the Zadora with the loss of twenty men. On the 21st at three o’clock
-in the morning Maucune’s division, more than three thousand good
-soldiers, marched with the second convoy, and the king took up a new
-line of battle.
-
-[Sidenote: See plan 8.]
-
-Reille’s army reinforced by a Franco-Spanish brigade of infantry,
-and by Digeon’s division of dragoons from the army of the south,
-now formed the extreme right, having to defend the passage of the
-Zadora, where the Bilbao and Durango roads crossed it by the bridges
-of Gamara Mayor and Ariaga. The French division defended the bridge;
-the Franco-Spanish brigade was pushed forward to Durana on the royal
-road, and was supported by a French battalion and a brigade of light
-horsemen; Digeon’s dragoons and a second brigade of light cavalry
-were in reserve behind the Zadora, near Zuazo de Alava and Hermandad.
-The centre of the king’s army, distant six or eight miles from
-Gamara, following the course of the Zadora, was on another front,
-because the stream, turning suddenly to the left round the heights of
-Margarita descends to the defile of Puebla, nearly at right angles
-with its previous course. Here covered by the river and on an easy
-open range of heights, for the basin of Vittoria is broken by a
-variety of ground, Gazan’s right extended from the royal road to an
-isolated hill in front of the village of Margarita. His centre was
-astride the royal road, in front of the village of Arinez; his left
-occupied more rugged ground, being placed behind Subijana de Alava
-on the roots of the Puebla mountain facing the defile of that name,
-and to cover this wing a brigade under general Maransin was posted on
-the Puebla mountain. D’Erlon’s army was in second line. The principal
-mass of the cavalry with many guns, and the king’s guards formed a
-reserve, behind the centre, about the village of Gomecha, and fifty
-pieces of artillery were massed in the front, pointing to the bridges
-of Mendoza, Tres Puentes, Villodas, and Nanclares.
-
-While the king was making conjectures, Wellington was making various
-dispositions for the different operations which might occur. He knew
-that the Andalusian reserve would be at Burgos in a few days, and
-thinking that Joseph would not fight on the Zadora, detached Giron
-with the Gallicians on the 19th to seize Orduña. Graham’s corps was
-at first destined to follow Giron but finally penetrated through
-difficult mountain ways to Murguia, thus cutting the enemy off from
-Bilbao and menacing his communications with France. However the rear
-of the army had been so much scattered in the previous marches that
-Wellington halted on the 20th to rally his columns, and taking that
-opportunity to examine the position of the French armies, observed
-that they seemed steadfast to fight; whereupon immediately changing
-his own dispositions, he gave Graham fresh orders and hastily
-recalled Giron from Orduña.
-
-The long expected battle was now at hand, and on neither side were
-the numbers and courage of the troops of mean account. The allies had
-lost about two hundred killed and wounded in the previous operations,
-and the sixth division, six thousand five hundred strong, was left
-at Medina de Pomar; hence only sixty thousand Anglo-Portuguese
-sabres and bayonets, with ninety pieces of cannon, were actually
-in the field, but the Spanish auxiliaries were above twenty
-thousand, and the whole army, including serjeants and artillery-men,
-exceeded eighty thousand combatants. For the French side, as the
-regular muster-roll of their troops was lost with the battle, an
-approximation to their strength must suffice. The number killed and
-taken in different combats, from the Esla and Tormes to the Zadora,
-was about two thousand men, and some five thousand had marched to
-France with the two convoys. On the other hand Sarrut’s division,
-the garrison of Vittoria, and the many smaller posts relinquished by
-the army of the north, had increased the king’s forces, and hence,
-by a comparison with former returns, it would appear, that in the
-gross, about seventy thousand men were present. Wherefore deducting
-the officers, the artillery-men, sappers, miners, and non-combatants,
-which are always borne on the French muster-rolls, the sabres and
-bayonets would scarcely reach sixty thousand, but in the number and
-size of their guns the French had the advantage.
-
-The defects of the king’s position were apparent both in the general
-arrangement and in the details. His best line of retreat was on the
-prolongation of his right flank, which being at Gamara Mayor, close
-to Vittoria, was too distant to be supported by the main body of the
-army; and yet the safety of the latter depended upon the preservation
-of Reille’s position. Instead of having the rear clear, and the field
-of battle free, many thousand carriages and impediments of all kinds
-were heaped about Vittoria, blocking all the roads, and creating
-confusion amongst the artillery parcs. Maransin’s brigade placed
-on the heights above Puebla was isolated and too weak to hold that
-ground. The centre indeed occupied an easy range of hills, its front
-was open, with a slope to the river, and powerful batteries seemed to
-bar all access by the bridges; nevertheless many of the guns being
-pushed with an advanced post into a deep loop of the Zadora, were
-within musket-shot of a wood on the right bank, which was steep and
-rugged, so that the allies found good cover close to the river.
-
-There were seven bridges within the scheme of the operations, namely,
-the bridge of La Puebla on the French left beyond the defile; the
-bridge of Nanclares, facing Subijana de Alava and the French end of
-the defile of Puebla; then three bridges which, placed around the
-deep loop of the river before mentioned, opened altogether upon the
-right of the French centre, that of Mendoza being highest up the
-stream, that of Vellodas lowest down the stream, and that of Tres
-Puentes in the centre; lastly the bridges of Gamara Mayor and Ariaga
-on the Upper Zadora, opposite Vittoria, which were guarded by Reille,
-completed the number, and none of the seven were either broken or
-entrenched.
-
-Wellington having well observed these things formed his army for
-three distinct battles.
-
-Sir Thomas Graham moving from Murguia, by the Bilbao road, was to
-fall on Reille, and if possible to force the passage of the river
-at Gamara Mayor and Ariaga; by this movement the French would be
-completely turned and the greatest part of their forces shut up
-between the Puebla mountains on one side and the Zadora on the other.
-The first and fifth Anglo-Portuguese divisions, Bradford’s and
-Pack’s independent Portuguese brigades, Longa’s Spanish division,
-and Anson’s and Bock’s cavalry, in all near twenty thousand men
-with eighteen pieces of cannon, were destined for this attack, and
-Giron’s Gallicians, recalled from Orduña, came up by a forced march
-in support.
-
-Sir Rowland Hill was to attack the enemy’s left, and his corps, also
-about twenty thousand strong, was composed of Morillo’s Spaniards,
-Sylveira’s Portuguese, and the second British division together with
-some cavalry and guns. It was collected on the southern slope of the
-ridge of Morillas, between the Bayas and the Lower Zadora, pointing
-to the village of Puebla, and was destined to force the passage of
-the river at that point, to assail the French troops on the heights
-beyond, to thread the defile of La Puebla and to enter the basin of
-Vittoria, thus turning and menacing all the French left and securing
-the passage of the Zadora at the bridge of Nanclares.
-
-The centre attack, directed by Wellington in person, consisted
-of the third, fourth, seventh, and light divisions of infantry,
-the great mass of the artillery, the heavy cavalry and D’Urban’s
-Portuguese horsemen, in all nearly thirty thousand combatants. They
-were encamped along the Bayas from Subijana Morillas to Ulivarre,
-and had only to march across the ridges which formed the basin of
-Vittoria on that side, to come down to their different points of
-attack on the Zadora, that is to say, the bridges of Mendoza, Tres
-Puentes, Villodas and Nanclares. But so rugged was the country and
-the communications between the different columns so difficult, that
-no exact concert could be expected and each general of division was
-in some degree master of his movements.
-
-
-BATTLE OF VITTORIA.
-
-At day-break on the 21st the weather being rainy, with a thick
-vapour, the troops moved from their camps on the Bayas, and the
-centre of the army, advancing by columns from the right and left
-of the line, passed the ridges in front, and entering the basin of
-Vittoria slowly approached the Zadora. The left-hand column pointed
-to Mendoza, the right-hand column skirted the ridge of Morillas on
-the other side of which Hill was marching, and that general, having
-seized the village of Puebla about ten o’clock, commenced passing the
-river there. Morillo’s Spaniards led and their first brigade moving
-on a bye way assailed the mountain to the right of the great road;
-the ascent was so steep that the soldiers appeared to climb rather
-than to walk up, and the second Spanish brigade, being to connect
-the first with the British troops below, ascended only half-way;
-little or no opposition was made until the first brigade was near
-the summit when a sharp skirmishing commenced, and Morillo was
-wounded but would not quit the field; his second brigade joined him,
-and the French, feeling the importance of the height, reinforced
-Maransin with a fresh regiment. Then Hill succoured Morillo with the
-seventy-first regiment, and a battalion of light infantry, both under
-colonel Cadogan, yet the fight was doubtful, for though the British
-secured the summit, and gained ground along the side of the mountain,
-Cadogan, a brave officer and of high promise, fell, and Gazan calling
-Villatte’s division from behind Ariñez, sent it to the succour of
-his side; and so strongly did these troops fight that the battle
-remained stationary, the allies being scarcely able to hold their
-ground. Hill however again sent fresh troops to their assistance,
-and with the remainder of his corps passing the Zadora, threaded the
-long defile of Puebla and fiercely issuing forth on the other side
-won the village of Subijana de Alava in front of Gazan’s line; he
-thus connected his own right with the troops on the mountain, and
-maintained this forward position in despite of the enemy’s vigorous
-efforts to dislodge him.
-
-Meanwhile Wellington had brought the fourth and light divisions, the
-heavy cavalry, the hussars and D’Urban’s Portuguese horsemen, from
-Subijana Morillas, and Montevite, down by Olabarre to the Zadora.
-The fourth division was placed opposite the bridge of Nanclares, the
-light division opposite the bridge of Villodas, both well covered by
-rugged ground and woods; and the light division was so close to the
-water, that their skirmishers could with ease have killed the French
-gunners of the advanced post in the loop of the river at Villodas.
-The weather had cleared up, and when Hill’s battle began, the
-riflemen of the light division, spreading along the bank, exchanged a
-biting fire with the enemy’s skirmishers, but no serious effort was
-made, because the third and seventh divisions, meeting with rough
-ground, had not reached their point of attack; and it would have been
-imprudent to push the fourth division and the cavalry over the bridge
-of Nanclares, and thus crowd a great body of troops in front of the
-Puebla defile before the other divisions were ready to attack the
-right and centre of the enemy.
-
-While thus waiting, a Spanish peasant told Wellington that the bridge
-of Tres Puentes on the left of the light division, was unguarded,
-and offered to guide the troops over it. Kempt’s brigade of the
-light division was instantly directed towards this point, and being
-concealed by some rocks from the French, and well led by the brave
-peasant, they passed the narrow bridge at a running pace, mounted a
-steep curving rise of ground, and halted close under the crest on
-the enemy’s side of the river, being then actually behind the king’s
-advanced post, and within a few hundred yards of his line of battle.
-Some French cavalry immediately approached and two round shots were
-fired by the enemy, one of which killed the poor peasant to whose
-courage and intelligence the allies were so much indebted; but as
-no movement of attack was made, Kempt called the fifteenth hussars
-over the river, and they came at a gallop, crossing the narrow bridge
-one by one, horseman after horseman, and still the French remained
-torpid, shewing that there was an army there but no general.
-
-It was now one o’clock, Hill’s assault on the village of Subijana
-de Alava was developed, and a curling smoke, faintly seen far up
-the Zadora on the enemy’s extreme right, being followed by the dull
-sound of distant guns shewed that Graham’s attack had also commenced.
-Then the king finding both his flanks in danger caused his reserve
-about Gomecha to file off towards Vittoria, and gave Gazan orders to
-retire by successive masses with the army of the south. But at that
-moment the third and seventh divisions having reached their ground
-were seen moving rapidly down to the bridge of Mendoza, the enemy’s
-artillery opened upon them, a body of cavalry drew near the bridge,
-and the French light troops which were very strong there commenced
-a vigorous musketry. Some British guns replied to the French cannon
-from the opposite bank, and the value of Kempt’s forward position
-was instantly made manifest; for colonel Andrew Barnard springing
-forward, led the riflemen of the light division, in the most daring
-manner, between the French cavalry and the river, taking their light
-troops and gunners in flank, and engaging them so closely that the
-English artillery-men, thinking his darkly clothed troops were
-enemies, played upon both alike.
-
-This singular attack enabled a brigade of the third division to pass
-the bridge of Mendoza without opposition; the other brigade forded
-the river higher up, and the seventh division and Vandeleur’s brigade
-of the light division followed. The French advanced post immediately
-abandoned the ground in front of Villodas, and the battle which had
-before somewhat slackened revived with extreme violence. Hill pressed
-the enemy harder, the fourth division passed the bridge of Nanclares,
-the smoke and sound of Graham’s attack became more distinct, and
-the banks of the Zadora presented a continuous line of fire. However
-the French, weakened in the centre by the draft made of Villatte’s
-division and having their confidence shaken by the king’s order
-to retreat, were in evident perplexity, and no regular retrograde
-movement could be made, the allies were too close.
-
-The seventh division, and Colville’s brigade of the third division
-which had forded the river, formed the left of the British, and they
-were immediately engaged with the French right in front of Margarita
-and Hermandad. Almost at the same time lord Wellington, seeing the
-hill in front of Arinez nearly denuded of troops by the withdrawal of
-Villatte’s troops, carried Picton and the rest of the third division
-in close columns of regiments at a running pace diagonally across
-the front of both armies towards that central point; this attack
-was headed by Barnard’s riflemen, and followed by the remainder of
-Kempt’s brigade and the hussars, but the other brigade of the light
-division acted in support of the seventh division. At the same time
-general Cole advanced with the fourth division from the bridge of
-Nanclares, and the heavy cavalry, a splendid body, also passing the
-river, galloped up, squadron after squadron, into the plain ground
-between Cole’s right and Hill’s left.
-
-The French thus caught in the midst of their dispositions for
-retreat, threw out a prodigious number of skirmishers, and fifty
-pieces of artillery played with astonishing activity. To answer this
-fire Wellington brought over several brigades of British guns, and
-both sides were shrouded by a dense cloud of smoke and dust, under
-cover of which the French retired by degrees to the second range of
-heights, in front of Gomecha, on which their reserve had been posted,
-but they still held the village of Arinez on the main road. Picton’s
-troops headed by the riflemen, plunged into that village amidst a
-heavy fire of muskets and artillery, and in an instant three guns
-were captured; but the post was important, fresh French troops came
-down, and for some time the smoke and dust and clamour, the flashing
-of the fire-arms, and the shouts and cries of the combatants, mixed
-with the thundering of the guns, were terrible, yet finally the
-British troops issued forth victorious on the other side. During this
-conflict the seventh division, reinforced by Vandeleur’s brigade of
-the light division, was heavily raked by a battery at the village of
-Margarita, until the fifty-second regiment, led by colonel Gibbs,
-with an impetuous charge drove the French guns away and carried the
-village, and at the same time the eighty-seventh under colonel Gough
-won the village of Hermandad. Then the whole advanced fighting on
-the left of Picton’s attack, and on the right hand of that general
-the fourth division also made way, though more slowly because of the
-rugged ground.
-
-When Picton and Kempt’s brigades had carried the village of Arinez
-and gained the main road, the French troops near Subijana de Alava
-were turned, and being hard-pressed on their front, and on their
-left flank by the troops on the summit of the mountain, fell back
-for two miles in a disordered mass, striving to regain the great
-line of retreat to Vittoria. It was thought that some cavalry
-launched against them at the moment would have totally disorganized
-the whole French battle and secured several thousand prisoners,
-but this was not done, the confused multitude shooting ahead of
-the advancing British lines recovered order, and as the ground was
-exceedingly diversified, being in some places wooded, in others open,
-here covered with high corn, there broken by ditches vineyards and
-hamlets, the action for six miles resolved itself into a running
-fight and cannonade, the dust and smoke and tumult of which filled
-all the basin, passing onwards towards Vittoria.
-
-Many guns were taken as the army advanced, and at six o’clock
-the French reached the last defensible height, one mile in front
-of Vittoria. Behind them was the plain in which the city stood,
-and beyond the city, thousands of carriages and animals and
-non-combatants, men women and children, were crowding together, in
-all the madness of terror, and as the English shot went booming over
-head the vast crowd started and swerved with a convulsive movement,
-while a dull and horrid sound of distress arose; but there was no
-hope, no stay for army or multitude. It was the wreck of a nation.
-However the courage of the French soldier was not yet quelled,
-Reille on whom every thing now depended, maintained his post on the
-Upper Zadora, and the armies of the south and centre drawing up on
-their last heights, between the villages of Ali and Armentia, made
-their muskets flash like lightning, while more than eighty pieces
-of artillery, massed together, pealed with such a horrid uproar,
-that the hills laboured and shook, and streamed with fire and smoke,
-amidst which the dark figures of the French gunners were seen,
-bounding with a frantic energy.
-
-This terrible cannonade and musketry kept the allies in check, and
-scarcely could the third division, which was still the foremost and
-bore the brunt of this storm, maintain its advanced position. Again
-the battle became stationary, and the French generals had commenced
-drawing off their infantry in succession from the right wing, when
-suddenly the fourth division rushing forward carried the hill on
-the French left, and the heights were at once abandoned. It was at
-this very moment that Joseph, finding the royal road so completely
-blocked by carriages that the artillery could not pass, indicated
-the road of Salvatierra as the line of retreat, and the army went
-off in a confused yet compact body on that side, leaving Vittoria on
-its left. The British infantry followed hard, and the light cavalry
-galloped through the town to intercept the new line of retreat, which
-was through a marsh, but this road also was choked with carriages
-and fugitive people, while on each side there were deep drains. Thus
-all became disorder and mischief, the guns were left on the edge
-of the marsh, the artillery-men and drivers fled with the horses,
-and, breaking through the miserable multitude, the vanquished troops
-went off by Metauco towards Salvatierra; however their cavalry still
-covered the retreat with some vigour, and many of those generous
-horsemen were seen taking up children and women to carry off from the
-dreadful scene.
-
-The result of the last attack had placed Reille, of whose battle it
-is now time to treat, in great danger. His advanced troops under
-Sarrut had been placed at the village of Aranguis, and they also
-occupied some heights on their right which covered both the bridges
-of Ariaga and Gamara Mayor, but they had been driven from both the
-village and the height a little after twelve o’clock, by general
-Oswald, who commanded the head of Graham’s column, consisting of the
-fifth division, Longa’s Spaniards, and Pack’s Portuguese. Longa then
-seized Gamara Menor on the Durango road, while another detachment
-gained the royal road still further on the left, and forced the
-Franco-Spaniards to retire from Durana. Thus the first blow on this
-side had deprived the king of his best line of retreat and confined
-him to the road of Pampeluna. However Sarrut recrossed the river in
-good order and a new disposition was made by Reille. One of Sarrut’s
-brigades defended the bridge of Ariaga and the village of Abechuco
-beyond it; the other was in reserve, equally supporting Sarrut and La
-Martiniere who defended the bridge of Gamara Mayor and the village
-of that name beyond the river. Digeon’s dragoons were formed behind
-the village of Ariaga, and Reille’s own dragoons being called up from
-Hermandad and Zuazo, took post behind the bridge of Gamara; a brigade
-of light cavalry was placed on the extreme right to sustain the
-Franco-Spanish troops, which were now on the Upper Zadora in front of
-Betonio, and the remainder of the light cavalry under general Curto
-was on the French left extending down the Zadora between Ariaga and
-Govea.
-
-Oswald commenced the attack at Gamara with some guns and Robinson’s
-brigade of the fifth division. Longa’s Spaniards were to have led and
-at an early hour when Gamara was feebly occupied, but they did not
-stir, and the village was meanwhile reinforced. However Robinson’s
-brigade being formed in three columns made the assault at a running
-pace. At first the fire of artillery and musketry was so heavy that
-the British troops stopped and commenced firing also, and the
-three columns got intermixed, yet encouraged by their officers,
-and especially by the example of general Robinson an inexperienced
-man but of a high and daring spirit, they renewed the charge,
-broke through the village and even crossed the bridge. One gun was
-captured, and the passage seemed to be won, when Reille suddenly
-turned twelve pieces upon the village, and La Martiniere rallying his
-division under cover of this cannonade, retook the bridge; it was
-with difficulty the allied troops could even hold the village until
-they were reinforced. Then a second British brigade came down, and,
-the royals leading, the bridge was again carried, but again these
-new troops were driven back in the same manner as the others had
-been. Thus the bridge remained forbidden ground. Graham had meanwhile
-attacked the village of Abechuco which covered the bridge of Ariaga,
-and it was carried at once by colonel Halkett’s Germans, who were
-supported by Bradford’s Portuguese and by the fire of twelve guns;
-yet here as at Gamara the French maintained the bridge, and at both
-places the troops on each side remained stationary under a reciprocal
-fire of artillery and small arms.
-
-Reille, though considerably inferior in numbers, continued to
-interdict the passage of the river, until the tumult of Wellington’s
-battle, coming up the Zadora, reached Vittoria itself, and a part
-of the British horsemen rode out of that city upon Sarrut’s rear.
-Digeon’s dragoons kept this cavalry in check for the moment, and some
-time before, Reille, seeing the retrograde movement of the king,
-had formed a reserve of infantry under general Fririon at Betonia
-which now proved his safety. For Sarrut was killed at the bridge
-of Ariaga, and general Menne the next in command, could scarcely
-draw off his troops while Digeon’s dragoons held the British cavalry
-at point, but with the aid of Fririon’s reserve Reille covered the
-movement and rallied all his troops at Betonio. He had now to make
-head on several sides, because the allies were coming down from
-Ariaga from Durana and from Vittoria, yet he fought his way to
-Metauco on the Salvatierra road covering the general retreat with
-some degree of order. Vehemently and closely did the British pursue,
-and neither the resolute demeanour of the French cavalry, which
-was covered on the flanks by some light troops and made several
-vigorous charges, nor the night, which now fell, could stop their
-victorious career until the flying masses of the enemy had cleared
-all obstacles, and passing Metauco got beyond the reach of further
-injury. Thus ended the battle of Vittoria; the French escaped indeed
-with comparatively little loss of men, but to use Gazan’s words,
-“they lost all their equipages, all their guns, all their treasure,
-all their stores, all their papers, so that no man could prove how
-much pay was due to him; generals and subordinate officers alike
-were reduced to the clothes on their backs, and most of them were
-barefooted.”
-
-Never was an army more hardly used by its commander, for the soldiers
-were not half beaten, and never was a victory more complete. The
-trophies were innumerable. The French carried off but two pieces
-of artillery from the battle. Jourdan’s baton of command, a stand
-of colours, one hundred and forty-three brass pieces, one hundred
-of which had been used in the fight, all the parcs and dépôts from
-Madrid, Valladolid, and Burgos, carriages, ammunition, treasure,
-every thing fell into the hands of the victors. The loss in men
-did not however exceed six thousand, exclusive of some hundreds of
-prisoners; the loss of the allies was nearly as great, the gross
-numbers being five thousand one hundred and seventy-six, killed
-wounded and missing. Of these one thousand and forty-nine were
-Portuguese and five hundred and fifty-three were Spanish; hence the
-loss of the English was more than double that of the Portuguese and
-Spaniards together, and yet both fought well, and especially the
-Portuguese, but British troops are the soldiers of battle. Marshal
-Jourdan’s baton was taken by the eighty-seventh regiment, and the
-spoil was immense; but to such extent was plunder carried principally
-by the followers and non-combatants, for with some exceptions the
-fighting troops may be said to have marched upon gold and silver
-without stooping to pick it up, that of five millions and a half of
-dollars indicated by the French accounts to be in the money-chests,
-not one dollar came to the public, and Wellington sent fifteen
-officers with power to stop and examine all loaded animals passing
-the Ebro and the Duero in hopes to recover the sums so shamefully
-carried off. Neither was this disgraceful conduct confined to
-ignorant and vulgar people. Some officers were seen mixed up with the
-mob and contending for the disgraceful gain.
-
-[Sidenote: Jones’s Sieges.]
-
-On the 22d the allies followed the retreating enemy, and Giron and
-Longa entered Guipuscoa, by the royal road, in pursuit of the convoy
-which had moved under Maucune on the morning of the battle; the heavy
-cavalry and D’Urban’s Portuguese remained at Vittoria, and general
-Pakenham with the sixth division came up from Medina Pomar; the
-remainder of the army pursued Joseph towards Pampeluna, for he had
-continued his retreat up the Borundia and Araquil valleys all night.
-The weather was rainy, the roads heavy, and the French rear-guard
-having neither time nor materials to destroy the bridges set fire to
-the villages behind them to delay the pursuit. At five o’clock in
-the morning of the 22d Reille had rallied his two divisions and all
-his cavalry in front of Salvatierra, where he halted until he was
-assured that all the French had passed, and then continued his march
-to Huerta in the valley of Araquil, thirty miles from the field of
-battle. Joseph was that day at Yrursun, a town, situated behind one
-of the sources of the Arga, and from which roads branched off to
-Pampeluna on one side, and to Tolosa and St. Esteban on the other.
-At this place he remained all the 23d sending orders to different
-points on the French frontier to prepare provisions and succours for
-his suffering army, and he directed Reille to proceed rapidly by
-St. Estevan to the Bidassoa with the infantry, six hundred select
-cavalry, the artillery-men and horses of the army of Portugal;
-meanwhile Gazan’s and D’Erlon’s army marched upon Pampeluna intending
-to cross the frontier at St. Jean Pied de Port. Joseph reached
-Pampeluna the 24th, but the army bivouacked on the glacis of the
-fortress, and in such a state of destitution and insubordination that
-the governor would not suffer them to enter the town. The magazines
-were indeed reduced very low by Mina’s long blockade, and some
-writers assert that it was even proposed to blow up the works and
-abandon the place; however by great exertions additional provisions
-were obtained from the vicinity, the garrison was encreased to
-three thousand men, and the army marched towards France leaving a
-rear-guard at a strong pass about two leagues off.
-
-The 23d Wellington having detached Graham’s corps to Guipuscoa by the
-pass of Adrian, left the fifth division at Salvatierra, and pursued
-the king with the rest of the army.
-
-On the 24th the light division and Victor Alten’s cavalry came
-up with the French rear-guard; two battalions of the riflemen
-immediately pushed the infantry back though the pass, and then Ross’s
-horse artillery galloping forward, killed several men and dismounted
-one of the only two pieces of cannon carried off from Vittoria.
-
-The 25th the enemy covered by the fortress of Pampeluna went up the
-valley of Roncevalles. He was followed by the light division which
-turned the town as far as Vilalba, and he was harassed by the Spanish
-irregular troops now swarming on every side.
-
-Meanwhile Foy and Clauzel were placed in very difficult positions.
-The former had reached Bergara the 21st, and the garrison of Bilbao
-and the Italian division of St. Paul, formerly Palombini’s, had
-reached Durango; the first convoy from Vittoria was that day at
-Bergara, and Maucune was with the second at Montdragon. The 22d the
-garrison of Castro went off to Santona; the same day the fugitives
-from the battle spread such an alarm through the country that the
-forts of Arlaban, Montdragon, and Salinas, which commanded the passes
-into Guipuscoa were abandoned, and Longa and Giron penetrated them
-without hindrance.
-
-Foy who had only one battalion of his division in hand, immediately
-rallied the fugitive garrisons, and marching upon Montdragon, made
-some prisoners and acquired exact intelligence of the battle. Then he
-ordered the convoy to move day and night, towards France; the troops
-at Durango to march upon Bergara, and the troops from all the other
-posts to unite at Tolosa, to which place the artillery, baggage,
-and sick men were now hastening from every side; and to cover their
-concentration Foy, reinforcing himself with Maucune’s troops, gave
-battle to Giron and Longa, though three times his numbers, at
-Montdragon; the Spaniards had the advantage and the French fell back,
-yet slowly and fighting, to Bergara, but they lost two hundred and
-fifty men and six guns.
-
-[Sidenote: Graham’s despatch.]
-
-[Sidenote: General Boyer’s official Journal, MSS.]
-
-On the 23d Foy marched to Villa Real de Guipuscoa, and that evening
-the head of Graham’s column having crossed the Mutiol mountain by
-the pass of Adrian, descended upon Segura. It was then as near to
-Tolosa as Foy was, and the latter’s situation became critical; yet
-such were the difficulties of passing the mountain, that it was late
-on the 24th ere Graham, who had then only collected Anson’s light
-cavalry, two Portuguese brigades of infantry, and Halket’s Germans,
-could move towards Villa Franca. The Italians and Maucune’s divisions
-which composed the French rear, were just entering Villa Franca as
-Graham came in sight, and to cover that town they took post at the
-village of Veasaya on the right bank of the Orio river. Halket’s
-Germans, aided by Pack’s Portuguese, immediately drove Maucune’s
-people from the village with the loss of two hundred men, and
-Bradford’s brigade having engaged the Italians on the French right,
-killed or wounded eighty, yet the Italians claimed the advantage; and
-the whole position was so strong, that Graham had recourse to flank
-operations, whereupon Foy retired to Tolosa. Giron and Longa now came
-up by the great road, and Mendizabel, having quitted the blockade of
-Santona, arrived at Aspeytia on the Deba.
-
-The 25th Foy again offered battle in front of Tolosa, but Graham
-turned his left with Longa’s division and Mendizabel turned his right
-from Aspeytia; while they were in march, colonel Williams, with
-the grenadiers of the first regiment and three companies of Pack’s
-Portuguese, dislodged him from an advantageous hill in front, and the
-fight was then purposely prolonged by skirmishing, until six o’clock
-in the evening, when the Spaniards having reached their destination
-on the flanks, a general attack was made on all sides. The French
-being cannonaded on the causeway, and strongly pushed by the infantry
-in front, while Longa with equal vigour drove their left from the
-heights, were soon forced beyond Tolosa on the flanks; but that town
-was strongly entrenched as a field-post and they maintained it until
-Graham brought up his guns and bursting one of the gates opened a
-passage for his troops; nevertheless Foy profiting from the darkness
-made his retreat good with a loss of only four hundred men killed and
-wounded, and some prisoners who were taken by Mendizabel and Longa.
-These actions were very severe; the loss of the Spaniards was not
-known, but the Anglo-Portuguese had more than four hundred killed and
-wounded in the two days’ operations, and Graham himself was hurt.
-
-The 26th and 27th the allies halted to hear of lord Wellington’s
-progress, the enemy’s convoys entered France in safety, and Foy
-occupied a position between Tolosa and Ernani behind the Anezo. His
-force was now encreased by the successive arrival of the smaller
-garrisons to sixteen thousand bayonets, four hundred sabres, and ten
-pieces of artillery, and the 28th he threw a garrison of two thousand
-six hundred good troops into St. Sebastian and passed the Urumia.
-The 29th he passed the Oyarsun, and halted the 30th, leaving a small
-garrison at Passages, which however surrendered the next day to Longa.
-
-On the 1st of July the garrison of Gueteria escaped by sea to St.
-Sebastian, and Foy passed the Bidassoa, his rear-guard fighting with
-Giron’s Gallicians; but Reille’s troops were now at Vera and Viriatu,
-they had received ammunition and artillery from Bayonne, and thus
-twenty-five thousand men of the army of Portugal occupied a defensive
-line from Vera to the bridge of Behobie, the approaches to which
-last were defended by a block-house. Graham immediately invested St.
-Sebastian, and Giron concentrating the fire of his own artillery and
-that of a British battery upon the block-house of Behobie obliged the
-French to blow it up and destroy the bridge.
-
-While these events were passing in Guipuscoa, Clauzel was in more
-imminent danger. On the evening of the 22d he had approached the
-field of battle at the head of fourteen thousand men, by a way which
-falls into the Estella road, at Aracete and not far from Salvatierra.
-Pakenham with the sixth division was then at Vittoria, and the French
-general, learning the state of affairs soon retired to Logroño, where
-he halted until the evening of the 25th. This delay was like to have
-proved fatal, for on that day, Wellington who before thought he was
-at Tudela, discovered his real position, and leaving general Hill
-with the second division to form the siege of Pampeluna, marched
-himself by Tafalla with two brigades of light cavalry and the third,
-fourth, seventh, and light divisions of infantry. The fifth and sixth
-divisions and the heavy cavalry and D’Urban’s Portuguese marched
-at the same time from Salvatierra and Vittoria upon Logroño; and
-Mina also, who had now collected all his scattered battalions near
-Estella, and was there joined by Julian Sanchez’ cavalry, followed
-hard on Clauzel’s rear.
-
-[Sidenote: July.]
-
-The French general moving by Calahorra, reached Tudela on the evening
-of the 27th, and thinking that by this forced march of sixty miles in
-forty hours with scarcely a halt, he had outstripped all pursuers,
-would have made for France by Olite and Tafalla. Wellington was
-already in possession of those places expecting him, but an alcalde
-gave Clauzel notice of the danger, whereupon recrossing the Ebro he
-marched upon Zaragoza in all haste, and arriving the 1st of July,
-took post on the Gallego, gave out that he would there wait until
-Suchet, or the king, if the latter retook the offensive, should come
-up. Wellington immediately made a flank movement to his own left as
-far as Caseda, and could still with an exertion have intercepted
-Clauzel by the route of Jacca, but he feared to drive him back upon
-Suchet and contented himself with letting Mina press the French
-general. That chief acted with great ability; for he took three
-hundred prisoners, and having every where declared that the whole
-allied army were close at hand in pursuit he imposed upon Clauzel,
-who, being thus deceived, destroyed some of his artillery and heavy
-baggage, and leaving the rest at Zaragoza retired to Jacca.
-
-During this time Joseph, not being pressed, had sent the army of the
-south again into Spain to take possession of the valley of Bastan,
-which was very fertile and full of strong positions. But O’Donnel,
-count of Abispal, had now reduced the forts at Pancorbo, partly by
-capitulation, partly by force, and was marching towards Pampeluna;
-wherefore general Hill, without abandoning the siege of that place,
-moved two British and two Portuguese brigades into the valley of
-Bastan, and on the 4th, 5th, 6th, and 7th, vigorously driving Gazan
-from all his positions, cleared the valley with a loss of only one
-hundred and twenty men. The whole line of the Spanish frontier from
-Ronscevalles to the mouth of the Bidassoa river was thus occupied by
-the victorious allies, and Pampeluna and St. Sebastian were invested.
-Joseph’s reign was over, the crown had fallen from his head, and
-after years of toils, and combats which had been rather admired than
-understood, the English general, emerging from the chaos of the
-Peninsula struggle, stood on the summit of the Pyrennees a recognised
-conqueror. On those lofty pinnacles the clangor of his trumpets
-pealed clear and loud, and the splendour of his genius appeared as a
-flaming beacon to warring nations.
-
-
-OBSERVATIONS.
-
-[Sidenote: King’s correspondence, MSS.]
-
-1º. In this campaign of six weeks, Wellington, with one hundred
-thousand men, marched six hundred miles, passed six great rivers,
-gained one decisive battle, invested two fortresses, and drove a
-hundred and twenty thousand veteran troops from Spain. This immense
-result could not have been attained if Joseph had followed Napoleon’s
-instructions; Wellington could not then have turned the line of
-the Duero. It could not have been attained if Joseph had acted
-with ordinary skill after the line of the Duero was passed. Time
-was to him most precious, yet when contrary to his expectations he
-had concentrated his scattered armies behind the Carion, he made
-no effort to delay his enemy on that river. He judged it an unfit
-position, that is, unfit for a great battle; but he could have
-obliged Wellington to lose a day there, perhaps two or three, and
-behind the Upper Pisuerga he might have saved a day or two more.
-Reille who was with the army of Portugal on the right of the king’s
-line complained that he could find no officers of that army who
-knew the Pisuerga sufficiently to place the troops in position; the
-king then had cause to remember Napoleon’s dictum, namely, that “to
-command an army well a general must think of nothing else.” For why
-was the course of the Pisuerga unknown when the king’s head-quarters
-had been for several months within a day’s journey of it?
-
-2º. The Carion and the Pisuerga being given up, the country about the
-Hormaza was occupied and the three French armies were in mass between
-that stream and Burgos; yet Wellington’s right wing only, that is
-to say, only twenty-three thousand infantry, and three brigades of
-cavalry, drove Reille’s troops over the Arlanzan, and the castle of
-Burgos was abandoned. This was on the 12th, the three French armies,
-not less than fifty thousand fighting men, had been in position
-since the 9th, and the king’s letters prove that he desired to
-fight in that country, which was favourable for all arms. Nothing
-then could be more opportune than Wellington’s advance on the 12th,
-because a retrograde defensive system is unsuited to French soldiers,
-whose impatient courage leads them always to attack, and the news
-of Napoleon’s victory at Bautzen had just arrived to excite their
-ardour. Wherefore Joseph should have retaken the offensive on the
-12th at the moment when Wellington approached the Hormaza, and as the
-left and centre of the allies were at Villa Diego and Castroxerez,
-the greatest part at the former, that is to say, one march distant,
-the twenty-six thousand men immediately under Wellington, would
-probably have been forced back over the Pisuerga, and the king would
-have gained time for Sarrut, Foy and Clauzel to join him. Did the
-English general then owe his success to fortune, to his adversary’s
-fault rather than to his own skill? Not so. He had judged the
-king’s military capacity, he had seen the haste, the confusion, the
-trouble of the enemy, and knowing well the moral power of rapidity
-and boldness in such circumstances, had acted, daringly indeed, but
-wisely, for such daring is admirable, it is the highest part of war.
-
-3º. The manner in which Wellington turned the line of the Ebro was a
-fine strategic illustration. It was by no means certain of success,
-yet failure would have still left great advantages. He was certain of
-gaining Santander and fixing a new base of operations on the coast,
-and he would still have had the power of continually turning the
-king’s right by operating between him and the coast; the errors of
-his adversary only gave him additional advantages which he expected,
-and seized with promptness. But if Joseph, instead of spreading his
-army from Espejo on his right to the Logroño road on his left, had
-kept only cavalry on the latter route and on the main road in front
-of Pancorbo; if he had massed his army to his right pivoting upon
-Miranda, or Frias, and had scoured all the roads towards the sources
-of the Ebro with the utmost diligence, the allies could never have
-passed the defiles and descended upon Vittoria. They would have
-marched then by Valmaceda upon Bilbao, but Joseph could by the road
-of Orduña have met them there, and with his force increased by Foy’s
-and Sarrut’s divisions and the Italians. Meanwhile Clauzel would have
-come down to Vittoria, and the heaped convoys could have made their
-way to France in safety.
-
-4º. Having finally resolved to fight at Vittoria, the king should,
-on the 19th and 20th, have broken some of the bridges on the Zadora,
-and covered others with field-works to enable him to sally forth upon
-the attacking army; he should have entrenched the defile of Puebla,
-and occupied the heights above in strength; his position on the Lower
-Zadora would then have been formidable. But his greatest fault was
-in the choice of his line of operation. His reasons for avoiding
-Guipuscoa were valid, his true line was on the other side, down the
-Ebro. Zaragoza should have been his base, since Aragon was fertile
-and more friendly than any other province of Spain. It is true that
-by taking this new line of operations he would have abandoned Foy;
-but that general, reinforced with the reserve from Bayonne, would
-have had twenty thousand men and the fortress of St. Sebastian as a
-support, and Wellington must have left a strong corps of observation
-to watch him. The king’s army would have been immediately increased
-by Clauzel’s troops, and ultimately by Suchet’s, which would have
-given him one hundred thousand men to oppose the allied army,
-weakened as that would have been by the detachment left to watch
-Foy. And there were political reasons, to be told hereafter, for the
-reader must not imagine Wellington had got thus far without such
-trammels, which would have probably rendered this plan so efficacious
-as to oblige the British army to abandon Spain altogether. Then new
-combinations would have been made all over Europe which it is useless
-to speculate upon.
-
-5º. In the battle the operations of the French, with the exception of
-Reille’s defence of the bridges of Gamara and Ariaga, were a series
-of errors, the most extraordinary being the suffering Kempt’s brigade
-of the light division, and the hussars, to pass the bridge of Tres
-Puentes and establish themselves close to the king’s line of battle,
-and upon the flank of his advanced posts at the bridges of Mendoza
-and Villodas. It is quite clear from this alone that he decided upon
-retreating the moment Graham’s attack commenced against his right
-flank, and his position was therefore in his own view untenable.
-The fitting thing then was to have occupied the heights of Puebla
-strongly, but to have placed the bulk of his infantry by corps, in
-succession, the right refused, towards Vittoria, while his cavalry
-and guns watched the bridges and the mouth of the Puebla defile; in
-this situation he could have succoured Reille, or marched to his
-front, according to circumstances, and his retreat would have been
-secure.
-
-[Sidenote: See Wellington’s despatch.]
-
-6º. The enormous fault of heaping up the baggage and convoys and
-parcs behind Vittoria requires no comment, but the king added another
-and more extraordinary error, namely the remaining to the last moment
-undecided as to his line of retreat. Nothing but misfortunes could
-attend upon such bad dispositions; and that the catastrophe was
-not more terrible is owing entirely to an error which Wellington
-and Graham seem alike to have fallen into, namely, that Reille had
-two divisions in reserve behind the bridges on the Upper Zadora.
-They knew not that Maucune’s division had marched with the convoy,
-and thought Clauzel had only one division of the army of Portugal
-with him, whereas he had two, Taupin’s and Barbout’s. Reille’s
-reserves were composed not of divisions but of brigades drawn from
-La Martiniere’s and Sarrut’s divisions, which were defending the
-bridges; and his whole force, including the French-Spaniards who were
-driven back from Durana, did not exceed ten thousand infantry and two
-thousand five hundred cavalry. Now Graham had, exclusive of Giron’s
-Gallicians, nearly twenty thousand of all arms, and it is said that
-the river might have been passed both above and below the points of
-attack; it is certain also that Longa’s delay gave the French time
-to occupy Gamara Mayor in force, which was not the case at first.
-Had the passage been won in time, very few of the French army could
-have escaped from the field; but the truth is Reille fought most
-vigorously.
-
-[Sidenote: Despatch.]
-
-7º. As the third and seventh divisions did not come to the point
-of attack at the time calculated upon, the battle was probably not
-fought after the original conception of lord Wellington; it is likely
-that his first project was to force the passage of the bridges, to
-break the right centre of the enemy from Arinez to Margarita, and
-then to envelope the left centre with the second, fourth, and light
-divisions and the cavalry, while the third and seventh divisions
-pursued the others. But notwithstanding the unavoidable delay, which
-gave the French time to commence their retreat, it is not easy to
-understand how Gazan’s left escaped from Subijana de Alava, seeing
-that when Picton broke the centre at Arinez, he was considerably
-nearer to Vittoria than the French left, which was cut off from the
-main road and assailed in front by Hill and Cole. The having no
-cavalry in hand to launch at this time and point of the battle has
-been already noticed; lord Wellington says, that the country was
-generally unfavourable for the action of that arm, and it is certain
-that neither side used it with much effect at any period of the
-battle; nevertheless there are always some suitable openings, some
-happy moments to make a charge, and this seems to have been one which
-was neglected.
-
-8º. Picton’s sudden rush from the bridge of Tres Puentes to the
-village of Arinez, with one brigade, has been much praised, and
-certainly nothing could be more prompt and daring, but the merit of
-the conception belongs to the general in chief, who directed it in
-person. It was suggested to him by the denuded state of the hill in
-front of that village, and viewed as a stroke for the occasion it is
-to be admired. Yet it had its disadvantages. For the brigade which
-thus crossed a part of the front of both armies to place itself in
-advance, not only drew a flank fire from the enemy, but was exposed
-if the French cavalry had been prompt and daring, to a charge in
-flank; it also prevented the advance of the other troops in their
-proper arrangement, and thus crowded the centre for the rest of the
-action. However these sudden movements cannot be judged by rules,
-they are good or bad according to the result. This was entirely
-successful, and the hill thus carried was called the Englishmen’s
-hill, not, as some recent writers have supposed, in commemoration
-of a victory gained by the Black Prince, but because of a disaster
-which there befel a part of his army. His battle was fought between
-Navarrette and Najera, many leagues from Vittoria, and beyond the
-Ebro; but on this hill the two gallant knights sir Thomas and sir
-William Felton took post with two hundred companions, and being
-surrounded by Don Tello with six thousand, all died or were taken
-after a long, desperate, and heroic resistance.
-
-9º. It has been observed by French writers, and the opinion has been
-also entertained by many English officers, that after the battle
-Wellington should have passed the frontier in mass, and marched upon
-Bayonne instead of chasing Clauzel and Foy on the right and left;
-and if, as the same authors assert, Bayonne was not in a state of
-defence and must have fallen, there can be little question that the
-criticism is just, because the fugitive French army having lost
-all its guns and being without musket ammunition, could not have
-faced its pursuers for a moment. But if Bayonne had resisted, and
-it was impossible for Wellington to suspect its real condition,
-much mischief might have accrued from such a hasty advance. Foy and
-Clauzel coming down upon the field of Vittoria would have driven away
-if they did not destroy the sixth division; they would have recovered
-all the trophies; the king’s army returning by Jacca into Aragon,
-would have reorganized itself from Suchet’s dépôts, and that marshal
-was actually coming up with his army from Valencia; little would then
-have been gained by the battle. This question can however be more
-profitably discussed when the great events which followed the battle
-of Vittoria have been described.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: Vol. 5. Nº. 1.
-
- Explanatory Sketch
- _of the_
- SURPRISE OF ALMARAZ.
- May 1812.
- _The Scene of Action Enlarged._]
-
-[Illustration: _Vol. 5. Nº. 2._
-
- _Explanatory_
- Sketch
- _of the_
- Sieges of the Fort
- _and_ Operations, _round_
- SALAMANCA.
- 1812.]
-
-[Illustration: Vol. 5. Nº. 3.
-
- Battle of
- SALAMANCA,
- with
- SKETCH of OPERATIONS
- before and after the
- Action.]
-
-[Illustration: Vol. 5. Nº. 4.
-
- _Explanatory_
- Sketch
- _of the_
- SIEGE OF BURGOS.
- 1812.]
-
-[Illustration: Vol. 5. Nº. 5.
-
- Sketch of the Retreat
- _from_ Madrid _and_
- Burgos.
- 1812.]
-
-[Illustration: Vol. 5. Nº. 6.
-
- Explanatory Sketch
- _of the_
- POSITION OF THE PARTIDAS.
- And of Lord Wellington’s March from the
- AGUEDA to the PYRENEES.
- 1813.]
-
-[Illustration: Vol. 5. Nº. 7.
-
- Battle of Castalla
- _and operations_
- before the Action.]
-
-[Illustration: Vol. 5. Nº. 8.
-
- Battle of
- VITTORIA,
- _with the_
- Operations
- _before and after_
- The Action.]
-
-
-
-
-APPENDIX.
-
-
-
-
-APPENDIX.
-
-
-No. I.
-
-The following extracts of letters are published to avoid any future
-cavils upon the points they refer to, and also to shew how difficult
-it is for the historian to obtain certain and accurate details, when
-eye-witnesses, having no wish to mislead, differ so much.
-
-
-BATTLE OF SALAMANCA.
-
-_Extract of a memoir by sir Charles Dalbiac, who was one of Le
-Marchant’s brigade of heavy cavalry._
-
-“Throughout these charges upon the enemy, _the heavy brigade was
-unsupported by any other portion of the cavalry whatever_; but was
-followed, as rapidly as it was possible for infantry to follow, by
-the third division which had so gloriously led the attack in the
-first instance and had so effectually turned the enemy’s extreme
-left.”
-
-
-_Extract from a memoir by colonel Money, who was one of general
-Anson’s brigade of light cavalry._
-
-“The third division moved to the right, and _the cavalry, Le
-Marchand’s and Anson’s_, were ordered to charge as soon as the
-tirailleurs of the third division began to ascend the right flank
-of the hill.”—“The rapid movement of the cavalry which now began
-to gallop, and the third division pressing them (the French), they
-run into the wood, which separated them from the army; _we_ (Anson’s
-light cavalry) _charged them under a heavy fire of musketry and
-artillery from another height_; near two thousand threw down their
-arms in different parts of the wood, and we continued our charge
-through the wood until our brigade came into an open plain of
-ploughed fields, where the dust was so great we could see nothing,
-and halted; when it cleared away, we found ourselves within three
-hundred yards of a large body of French infantry and artillery,
-formed on the declivity of a hill. A tremendous battle was heard on
-the other side, which prevented the enemy from perceiving us. At last
-they opened a fire of musketry and grape-shot, and we retired in good
-order and without any loss.”
-
-
-_Extract of a letter from sir Henry Watson, commanding the first
-regiment of Portuguese cavalry under general D’Urban._
-
-“When Marmont, at the battle of Salamanca, advanced his left, lord
-Wellington ordered down the reserve, of which the first and tenth
-Portuguese cavalry and two squadrons of the British cavalry under
-captain Townsend, now lieutenant-colonel Townsend, formed a part
-under sir B. D’Urban. The cavalry was pushed forward in contiguous
-columns, and were protected from the enemy by a small rising ground,
-which, as soon as I had passed, I was ordered to wheel up, and
-charge the front in line. _The enemy had formed a square_, and gave
-us a volley as we advanced, the eleventh and fourteenth remained en
-potence. _In this charge we completely succeeded_, and the enemy
-appeared panic-struck, and made no attempt to prevent our cutting
-and thrusting at them in all directions until the moment I was about
-to withdraw; then a soldier, at not more than six or eight paces,
-levelled his musquet at me, and shot me through the shoulder, which
-knocked me off my horse, where I continued to lie till the whole of
-our infantry had passed over.”
-
-
-_Extract from a letter of colonel Townsend, 14th Dragoons._
-
-“At the battle of Salamanca I perfectly recollect seeing D’Urban’s
-cavalry advance up the hill, and charge the French infantry. _They
-were repulsed_, and left Watson (now sir Henry), who led his
-regiment, the first Portuguese, badly wounded on the field.”—“_I am
-almost positive the French were not in square, but in line, waiting
-to receive the attack of the leading brigade of the third division_,
-which gallantly carried every thing before it.”
-
-
-No. II.
-
-_Copies de deux dépêches de l’empereur au ministre de la guerre
-relatives au duc de Raguse._
-
- _Dresde, le 28 Mai, 1812._
-
- MONSIEUR LE DUC DE FELTRE,
-
-Je vous renvois la correspondance d’Espagne. Ecrivez au duc de Raguse
-que c’est le roi qui doit lui donner des directions, que je suppose
-qu’il s’est retiré devant lord Wellington selon les règles de la
-guerre, en l’obligéant à se masser, et non en se reployant devant sa
-cavalerie légère; qu’il aura conservé des têtes de pont sur l’Agueda,
-ce qui peut seul lui permettre d’avoir des nouvelles de l’ennemi tous
-les jours, et de le tenir en respect. Que si au contraire il a mis
-trente lieues d’intervalle entre lui et l’ennemi, comme il l’a déjà
-fait deux fois contre tous les principes de la guerre, il laisse le
-général Anglais maître de se porter où il veut, il perd constamment
-l’initiative, et n’est plus d’aucun poids dans les affaires
-d’Espagne, que la Biscaye et le nord sont dans des dispositions
-facheuses par les suites de l’évacuation des Asturias par la division
-Bonnet, que la réoccupation de cette province n’a pas encore eu lieu,
-que le nord est exposé à de grands malheurs, que Santona et St.
-Sebastian sont compromis, que les libres communications des guerillas
-avec la Galice et les Asturies par la mer les rendront formidables,
-que s’il ne fait pas réoccuper promptement les Asturies, sa position
-ne peut s’ameliorer.
-
-Recommandez au général Caffarelli de réunir davantage ses troupes, et
-d’avoir toujours une colonne dans la main.
-
-Ecrivez au général L’Huillier d’avoir l’œil sur St. Sebastian, et
-d’avoir toujours 3000 hommes dans la main pour les diriger sur cette
-place si elle avoit besoin d’être secourue.
-
-En général pour parer à la mauvaise manœuvre et à la mauvaise
-direction que le duc de Raguse donne à nos affaires il est nécessaire
-d’avoir beaucoup de monde à Bayonne. Activez la marche du 3^e et du
-106^{me} et de la 5^e demi brigade provisoire sur cette place. Tenez
-y deux généraux de brigade afin que le général L’Huillier puisse
-toujours disposer des forces pour être en mesure d’agir selon les
-circonstances.
-
-Réunissez un millier d’hommes des dépôts de cavalerie de l’armée
-d’Espagne, et dirigez les en régimens de marche sur Bayonne.
-
-Prescrivez au général L’Huillier de tenir ses troupes dans la vallée
-de Bastan, à Bayonne, St. Jean de Luz, et Irun, en les munissant
-bien, les barraquant, les exerçant, et les formant. Ce sera au moyen
-de cette ressource que si le due de Raguse continue à faire des
-bévues on pourra empêcher le mal de devenir extrême.
-
- Sur ce, je prie Dieu, &c.
- (Signé) NAPOLEON.
-
-[_For second despatch, see_ Appendix No. VII.]
-
-
-No. III.
-
-_Lettre de M. le duc de Dalmatie au roi._
-
- _Seville, 12 Août, 1812._
-
-Je n’avais reçu aucune nouvelle de V. M. depuis les lettres qu’elle
-m’a fait l’honneur m’écrire des 6 et 7 Juillet dernier. Enfin
-je viens de récevoir celle datée de Segovie le 29 du même mois.
-Les rapports publiés par les ennemis m’avaient déjà instruit des
-évènemens survenus en Castille lesquels étaient naturellement
-exagérés; V. M. a bien voulu en quelque sorte fixer à ce sujet mes
-idées. Je déplore les pertes que l’armée de Portugal a éprouvées.
-Dans l’etât ou étaient les affaires d’Espagne une bataille ne devait
-se donner qu’à la dernière extrémité, mais tout n’est pas perdu. V.
-M. après m’avoir communiqué les dispositions qu’elle a faites depuis
-le 6 (date de la dernière lettre) au 19 Juillet m’ordonne comme une
-ressource d’évacuer l’Andalousie et de me diriger sur Tolêde. Je ne
-puis dissimuler que cette disposition me parait fort extraordinaire.
-J’étais loin de penser que V. M. s’y serait déterminée. Le sort de
-l’Espagne est-il done décidé? V. M. veut elle sacrifier le royaume
-à la capitale? et a-t-elle la certitude de la conserver en prenant
-ce parti? Enfin l’évacuation de l’Andalousie et ma marche sur Tolêde
-sont elles l’unique ressource qui nous reste? Je vais me préparer
-à cette disposition que je regarde comme des plus funestes pour
-l’honneur des armes impériales, le bien du service de l’empereur
-et l’intérêt de V. M. dans l’espoir qu’avant qu’elle s’exécute V.
-M. l’aura changée ou modifiée suivant les propositions que j’ai eu
-l’honneur de lui faire le 19 Juillet, le 8 de ce mois, et par M. le
-colonel Desprez.
-
-J’ai l’honneur d’adresser à votre Majesté triplicata de ma lettre du
-8 de ce mois. En me référant aux observations et propositions qu’elle
-renferme, si V. M. ne prend pas des dispositions en conséquence,
-je considére que l’évacuation de toute l’Espagne est decidée, car
-il faut que V. M. se persuade que du moment que mon mouvement sera
-commencé je serai suivi par soixante mille ennemis lesquels ne me
-donneront pas le tems ni la liberté de prendre la direction que V.
-M. m’indique et qui se réuniront à ceux qui ont penétré en Castille
-et m’empécheront de séjourner sur le Tage encore moins d’arriver à
-Madrid. Il n’y a qu’un moyen pour rétablir les affaires: que V. M.
-vienne en Andalousie et qu’elle y améne toutes les troupes de l’armée
-du centre, de l’armée de Portugal, de l’armée d’Arragon auxquelles
-ses ordres pourront parvenir, quand bien même tout le royaume de
-Valence devrait être évacué. Qu’importe à V. M. de conserver Madrid
-si elle perd le royaume? Philippe V. en sortit trois fois et y rentra
-en souverain. Du moment que nous aurons 70 ou 80 mille Français
-réunis dans le midi de l’Espagne, le théâtre de la guerre est changé;
-l’armée de Portugal se trouve dégagée et elle peut se reporter
-successivement jusqu’au Tage. D’ailleurs ce serait sans inconvénient
-qu’elle gardât Burgos et la rive gauche de l’Ebre et que tout
-l’espace compris entre elle et le Sierra Morena fut à la disposition
-des ennemis jusqu’à ce que des renforts vinssent de France et que
-l’empereur eût pu prendre des dispositions. Le sacrifice une fois
-fait il n’y a plus de moyen d’y remédier. Les armées impériales en
-Espagne repassent l’Ebre d’ou peut-être la famine les chassera,
-les affaires de l’empereur dans le nord de l’Europe peuvent s’en
-ressentir, l’Amerique qui vient de déclarer la guerre à l’Angleterre
-fera peut-être la paix. V. M. a sans doute refléchi à toutes les
-conséquences d’un pareil changement; la perte momentanée de Madrid et
-des Castilles est nulle pour la politique de l’empereur, elle peut
-se réparer en plus ou moins de tems. La perte d’une bataille par
-l’armée de Portugal n’est qu’un grand duel qui se répare également,
-mais la perte de l’Andalousie et la levée du siége de Cadiz sont des
-évènemens dont les effets seront ressentis dans toute l’Europe et
-dans le nouveau monde. Enfin en fidèle sujet de l’empereur je dois
-déclarer à V. M. que je ne crois pas les affaires d’Espagne assez
-désespérées pour prendre un parti aussi violent. J’entrevois encore
-du remède si V. M. veut prendre les dispositions que j’ai proposées;
-tout en me préparant à l’exécution de ses ordres je me permets de lui
-demander de nouvelles instructions. J’ai surtout l’honneur de prier
-V. M. d’ordonner que les communications de l’Andalousie avec Toléde
-soient rétablies et quelque évènement qui survienne de vouloir bien
-faire prendre à l’armée du centre, la direction de Despeña Perros
-ou d’Almaden pour se joindre à l’armée du midi. Alors je reponds de
-tout, et j’exécuterai les dispositions que j’ai enoncées dans ma
-lettre du 8 de ce mois.
-
- Je, &c. &c. &c.
-
-
-No. IV.
-
-_Lettre de M. le maréchal due de Dalmatie à M. le Ministre de la
-guerre à Paris._
-
- MONSIEUR LE DUC,
-
-Toute communication de l’Andalousie avec la France étant interrompue
-et n’ayant rien réçu depuis les premiers jours de Mai; depuis un mois
-le roi ayant même retiré les troupes qui étoient dans la Manche et
-ne pouvant communiquer avec Madrid, j’entreprens de faire parvenir
-mes rapports à votre excellence par la voie de mer. Si le bâtiment
-que je fais à cet effet partir de Malaga peut arriver à Marseille,
-l’empereur sera plutôt instruit de ce qui se passe dans le midi de
-l’Espagne et de la position de son armée.
-
-A ce sujet j’ai l’honneur d’adresser à votre excellence copie des
-derniers rapports que j’ai faits au roi, lesquels contiennent les
-représentations que j’ai cru devoir soumettre à sa majesté pour le
-bien du service de l’empereur, la conservation des conquêtes et
-l’honneur des armées impériales.
-
-Je ne suis instruit des malheurs que l’armée de Portugal a éprouvés
-que par les bruits populaires et les rapports de l’ennemi; car le
-roi en m’écrivant le 29 Juillet de Ségovie ne m’en a donné aucun
-détail. Je dois donc m’imaginer que les pertes que nous avons faites
-en Castile sont beaucoup exagérées et j’en tire la conséquence que
-les affaires de l’empereur en Espagne ne sont pas aussi desespérées
-que le roi parait en être persuadé. Cependant sa majesté après être
-resté 23 jours sans m’écrire, lorsque les ennemis étoient on plein
-mouvement et que sa majesté se portoit avec 14,000 hommes de l’armée
-du centre à la rencontre du duc de Raguse qui sans l’attendre s’etoit
-engagé precipitamment et éprouvait une défaite; le roi dis-je en
-me faisant part le 29 Juillet de ses mouvemens me donna l’ordre
-formel d’évacuer l’Andalousie et me diriger sur Tolede, et il me dit
-expressément que c’est l’unique ressource qui nous reste.
-
-Je suis loin de partager l’avis de sa majesté, je crois fermement
-qu’il est possible de mieux faire et que tout peut s’arranger en
-attendant que d’après les ordres de l’empereur V. E. ait pû mettre
-les armées qui sont dans le nord de l’Espagne à même de reprendre les
-opérations, ainsi que j’en fais la proposition à sa majesté dans les
-lettres dont je mets ci-joint copies. Mais mon devoir est d’obéïr
-et je me chargerais d’une trop grande responsibilité si j’éludais
-l’exécution de l’ordre formel d’évacuer que le roi m’a donné.
-
-Je vais donc me préparer à exécuter cette disposition que je regarde
-comme funeste, puisqu’elle me force à livrer aux ennemis des places
-de guerre susceptibles d’une bonne défense tout aprovisionnées, les
-établissemens et un matériel d’artillerie immense et de laisser dans
-les hôpitaux beaucoup de malades que leur situation et le manque de
-transport ne permettent point d’emmener. Je ne ferai cependant mon
-mouvement que progressivement et je ne négligerai aucun soin pour
-qu’il ne reste en arrière rien de ce qui peut être utile à l’armée.
-
-Je ne puis encore assurer que je ne ferai ce mouvement par Tolede,
-car du moment qu’il sera entrepris je serai suivi par 60,000 ennemis
-qui se joindront aux divisions que lord Wellington aura déjà portées
-sur le Tage. Ainsi il est possible que je me dirige par Murcie sur
-Valence suivant ce que j’apprendrai ou les nouveaux ordres que je
-recevrai du roi.
-
-Dans cet état de choses, je ne puis dissimuler à V. E. que je regarde
-l’évacuation de l’Espagne au moins jusqu’à l’Ebre comme décidée du
-moment que le roi m’ordonna d’évacuer l’Andalousie et de me diriger
-sur Toléde, car il est bien certain qu’il ne sera pas possible de
-rester en position sur le Tage ni dans les Castilles et que dès-lors
-les conquêtes des armes impériales en Espagne dont l’empereur avait
-ordonné la conservation, sont sacrifiées.
-
-A ce sujet je ne puis me défendre de réflechir sur d’autres évènemens
-qui se passent. J’ai lu dans les journaux de Cadiz, que l’ambassadeur
-du roi en Russie avait joint l’armée Russe, que le roi avait fait
-des insinuations au gouvernement insurgent de Cadiz, que la Suéde
-avait fait un traité avec l’Angleterre, et que le prince héréditaire
-avait demandé à la regence de Cadiz 250 Espagnols pour sa garde
-personelle. (Avant hier un parlementaire que le général Semélé avait
-envoyé à l’escadre Anglaise pour réclamer des prisonniers resta
-pendant quelques instans à bord de l’amiral, lequel lui montra une
-frégate, qui, dit il, est destinée a porter en Angleterre et ensuite
-en Suéde les 250 Espagnols que le prince Bernadotte demande pour sa
-garde personelle.) Enfin j’ai vu dans les mêmes journaux que Moreau
-et Blucher étaient arrivés à Stockholm, et que Rapatel, aide-de-camp
-de Moreau, était à Londres. Je ne tire aucune conséquence de tous
-ces faits, mais j’en serai plus attentif. Cependant j’ai cru devoir
-déposer mes craintes entre les mains de six généraux de l’armée,
-après avoir exigé d’eux le serment qu’ils ne révéleront ce que je
-leur ai dit qu’à l’empereur lui-même ou aux personnes que S. M. aura
-specialement déléguées pour en reçevoir la déclaration, si auparavant
-je ne puis moi-même en rendre compte. Il est pourtant de mon devoir
-de manifester à V. E. que je crains que le bût de toutes les fausses
-dispositions que l’on a prises et celui des intrigues qui ont lieu ne
-soient de forcer les armées impériales qui sont en Espagne à repasser
-au moins l’Ebre et ensuite de présenter cet évènement comme l’unique
-ressource (expression du roi, lettre du 20 Juillet) dans l’espérance
-d’en profiter par quelque arrangement.
-
-Mes craintes sont peut-être mal fondées, mais en pareille situation
-il vaut mieux les pousser à l’extremité que d’être négligent,
-d’autant plus que ces craintes et ma sollicitude tournent au bien du
-service de l’empereur et à la sureté de l’armée dont le commandement
-m’est confié.
-
-J’ai l’honneur de prier V. E. de vouloir bien si ma lettre lui
-parvient, la mettre le plutôt possible sous les yeux de l’empereur et
-d’assurer S. M. que moi et son armée du midi serons toujours dignes
-de sa suprême confiance. Je désire bien vivement que V. E. puisse me
-faire savoir que mes dépêches lui sont parvenues et surtout recevoir
-par elle les ordres de sa majesté.
-
- J’ai l’honneur, &c.
- (Signé) DALMATIE.
-
-_Seville, 12 Août, 1812._
-
-
-No. V.
-
- SIRE,
-
-Je suis arrivé à Paris hier 21 du courant. Je me suis sur le champ
-présenté chez le ministre de la guerre et je lui ai remis la lettre
-de V. M. ainsi que celles de M. le maréchal Jourdan. S. E. m’a
-questionné sur les affaires d’Espagne, mais sans me demander mes
-dépêches pour l’empereur. Elle m’a, suivant les intentions de V. M.,
-pourvu des ordres dont j’ai besoin pour poursuivre ma route avec
-célérité.
-
-Ce matin le ministre m’a fait appeler et j’ai eu avec lui une longue
-conférence. Il m’a pressé de m’expliquer avec franchise sur ce que
-j’avais pu remarquer pendant mon séjour en Andalousie, m’a témoigné
-quelque inquiétude sur l’influence que pouvoit exercer le maréchal
-tant sur l’armée que sur les autorités civiles. Il a rappelé les
-intrigues de Portugal et a conclu en me disant qu’il dépouillait
-devant moi le caractère de ministre pour causer avec un homme de
-votre confiance, et que les services que vous lui aviez rendus à
-l’époque de sa disgrâce devaient être pour V. M. une garantie du
-désir qu’il avait d’agir suivant ses intentions. Quelque franches
-que m’aient parus ces ouvertures, je n’ai pas cru devoir parler de
-la partie la plus délicate de ma mission. J’ai seulement répondu que
-l’armée du midi serait toujours celle de l’empereur, que lorsque S.
-M. enverrait ses ordres déterminés, elle serait obéie, et que tout
-ce que j’avais entendu en Andalousie ne me laissait à ce sujet aucun
-doute. Au reste ma conversation avec le duc de Feltre m’a prouvé
-qu’aucune lettre de la nature de celle dont je suis porteur ne lui
-etait encore parvenue et cela est pour ma mission une circonstance
-favorable.
-
-J’ai causé avec S. E. de la résistance que les chefs de l’armée
-française en Espagne avaient toujours opposée aux ordres de V.
-M. Il a declaré que tous avaient été mis sous vos ordres et sans
-aucune restriction, qu’avant son départ l’empereur avait témoigné
-son étonnement sur les doutes que manifestaient à cet égard les
-lettres de V. M. et qu’il avait ordonné que l’on fit connaître ses
-intentions d’une manière encore plus positive. J’ai cité la lettre ou
-le maréchal Suchet s’autorise d’une phrase du Prince de Neufchatel,
-celles du général Dorsenne et du général Caffarelli, il parait que
-tous les obstacles qui pouvaient entraver l’exécution de vos ordres
-ont été levés par des instructions adressées postérieurement aux
-généraux en chef. Quant à la désobeissance formelle du maréchal
-Soult S. E. a dit d’abord que V. M. avait le droit de lui ôter
-le commandement, mais elle est convenue ensuite qu’une démarche
-semblable ne pouvait être faite que par l’ordre exprès de l’empereur.
-
-Le ministre est aussi entré dans quelques détails sur les affaires
-militaires, les ordres donnés par V. M. et par le maréchal Jourdan
-aux diverses époques de la campagne, ont eu, m’a-t-il dit,
-l’approbation générale et ce qu’a écrit l’empereur depuis qu’il a
-appris la bataille de Salamanque prouve qu’il donne entièrement droit
-à V. M. l’opinion publique à cet égard est encore plus prononcée que
-celle des hommes en place, et je ne puis exprimer à V. M. avec quelle
-rigueur sont jugés en France les maréchaux Soult et Marmont.
-
-Le duc de Feltre m’a parlé du mouvement sur Blasco Sancho. Peut-être
-a-t-il dit, l’empereur reprochera un peu d’hésitation; exécuté deux
-jours plutôt il aurait produit les plus heureux effets. V. M. se
-rappelle que j’avais prévu cette objection et je ne serai point
-embarrassé pour y répondre.
-
-S. E. a cru que j’allais auprès de l’empereur pour solliciter de
-nouveaux renforts; elle m’a dit que la guerre de Russie avait jusqu’à
-présent absorbé tous les moyens, qu’il était loin de pouvoir envoyer
-les troupes sur lesquelles paraissait compter M. le maréchal Jourdan,
-que l’on pourrait seulement pourvoir à la perte matérielle faite par
-l’armée de Portugal, il parait que les nouvelles troupes envoyées en
-Espagne ne s’élélvent pas au-delà de vingt mille hommes, au reste la
-grande victoire remportée par l’empereur fera probablement prendre
-des dispositions plus favorables aux affaires de la Peninsule.
-
-Le duc de Feltre à reçu des nouvelles du général Clauzel. Ce général
-annonce que l’armée anglaise marche vers le nord, que lord Wellington
-s’est de sa personne porté vers le Duero, que l’armée de Portugal
-s’est ralliée, que ses pertes sont beaucoup moindres qu’on ne l’avait
-cru, que le général Foy avait fait un mouvement pour délivrer Astorga
-et Tordesillas, mais que déja ces deux places s’étaient rendues
-que l’on pourrait accuser de faiblesse les deux gouverneurs et que
-peut-être la conduite de celui de Tordesillas devait être jugée plus
-sévèrement encore.
-
-J’ai parlé au ministre de la position embarrassante dans laquelle
-me mettait le décret du 26 Août, il a répondu que je pouvais sans
-inconvénient me présenter à l’empereur avec les décorations du grade
-que m’a donné V. M. que ce n’était point contre les officiers à
-votre service que le décret avait été dirigé et qu’il serait modifié
-en leur faveur.
-
-J’ai l’honneur de prévenir V. M. que je partirai ce soir de Paris,
-je poursuivrai sans m’arrêter ma route jusqu’au quartier général de
-l’empereur.
-
-J’ai l’honneur de mettre aux pieds de V. M. l’hommage de mon profond
-respect et de mon entier dévouement.
-
- (Signé) LE COLONEL DESPRES.
-
-_Paris, 22 Septembre, 1812._
-
-
-No. VI. A.
-
-_Lettre confidentielle écrite au roi par monsieur le duc de Feltre._
-
- _Paris, 10 Novembre, 1812._
-
- SIRE,
-
-La lettre chiffrée que V. M. m’a écrite de Requeña le 18 Octobre,
-m’est parvenue il y a quelques jours, et je l’ai sur le champ
-transmise à l’empereur qui ne la recevra toute fois que 19 jours
-après le départ de cette même lettre de Paris. A la distance ou
-l’empereur se trouve de sa capitale, il est des choses sur lesquelles
-la politique force à fermer les yeux: du moins momentanement. Si la
-conduite de monsieur le marechal duc de Dalmatie est équivoque et
-cauteleuse; si ses démarches présentent le même aspect que celles
-qu’il paroît avoir faites et qui ont précédé l’abandon du Portugal
-après la prise d’Oporto, il viendra un moment ou l’empereur pourra
-l’en punir s’il le juge convenable, et peut-être est-il moins
-dangereux où il est qu’il ne le serait ici où quelques factieux ont
-pu du sein même des prisons qui les renfermaient méditer en l’absence
-de l’empereur, une révolution contre l’empereur et sa dynastie,
-et presque l’exécuter, le 2 et 3 Octobre dernier. Je pense donc,
-sire, qu’il est prudent de ne pas pousser à bout le maréchal duc de
-Dalmatie tout en contrariant sous main les démarches ambitieuses
-qu’il pourrait tenter, et en s’assurant de la fidelité des principaux
-officiers de l’armée du midi envers l’empereur et même de celle des
-Espagnols qu’il traine à sa suite. L’arme du ridicule qu’il est
-facile de manier en cette occasion suffira, ce me semble, pour
-déjouer ses coupables projets s’ils existent, et le ramener à son
-devoir, sauf à faire prendre par la suite des précautions pour qu’il
-ne s’en écarte jamais.
-
-Quoiqu’il en soit je suis incontestablement dans la nécessité
-d’attendre les ordres de l’empereur sur le contenu de la lettre de
-V. M. datée de Requeña le 18 Oct. Elle voit par la présente que je
-partage ses sentimens sur l’objet dont elle traite; je viens d’être
-assez heureux pour donner à l’empereur et a sa famille de nouvelles
-preuves de ma fidelité et de mon attachement, et je suis assuré que
-si V. M. connaît les détails de ma conduite le 2 et 3 Octobre, elle
-la trouvera conforme aux sentimens que je me suis fait un plaisir de
-lui exprimer en faveur de l’empereur et de sa famille au moment ou
-j’ai pris congé de V. M. à Luneville il y a quelques années, &c. &c.
-
-
-_Note._—It is only necessary to add to this letter that
-notwithstanding the duke of Feltre’s professions of attachment he was
-soon afterwards one of the most zealous courtiers of the Bourbons and
-the most bitter enemy of the emperor.
-
-The constancy with which the duke of Dalmatia served that great man
-is well known.
-
-
-No. VI. B.
-
-_Colonel Desprez to the King._
-
- _Paris, 3 Janvier, 1813._
-
- SIRE,
-
-J’ai eu l’honneur d’annoncer à V. M. mon arrivée à Paris. Mais
-j’ai dû en me servant de la voie de l’estafette user d’une extrême
-discrétion. La reine m’ayant conseillé de vous écrire avec quelque
-détail et ayant daigné m’offrir de faire partir ma lettre par le
-premier courier qu’elle expédierait, j’en profite pour rendre
-compte à V. M. de ma mission et lui faire connaître une partie des
-évènements dont j’ai été témoin.
-
-Je suis arrivé à Moscou le 18 Octobre au soir. L’empereur venait
-d’apprendre que l’avant garde commandée par le roi de Naples
-avait été attaquée et forcée à la retraite avec une partie de son
-artillerie. Déja le départ était résolu et les troupes se mettaient
-en mouvement. On m’annonça à S. M. qui répondit d’abord d’une manière
-peu favorable. Cependant au milieu de la nuit on me fit appeler. Je
-remis à l’empereur les dépêches dont V. M. m’avait chargé, et sans
-les ouvrir, il me questionna sur leur contenu. Puis il fit sur les
-opérations de la campagne une partie des objections qu’avait prévues
-V. M.
-
-Il dit que le mouvement en faveur de l’armée de Portugal avait été
-commencé trop tard, qu’il aurait pu être fait un mois plutôt, que
-lui-même avait daté la conduite à tenir dans cette circonstance
-lorsqu’en 1808 il avait sans hésiter quitté Madrid pour marcher aux
-Anglais qui s’étaient avancés jusqu’à Valladolid. Je répondis que V.
-M. s’était mise en marche peu d’heures après la division Palombini,
-qu’elle avait dû attendre cette division pour conduire vers l’armée
-de Portugal un renfort tel que le succès ne pût être douteux; qu’elle
-avait d’autant moins cru devoir précipiter son mouvement, que M. le
-maréchal Marmont avait écrit plusieurs fois qu’il se croyait trop
-faible pour lutter seul contre l’armée Anglaise, que ce maréchal
-avait été maître du tems, qu’il n’avait point été battu dans sa
-position sur le Duero, mais bien sur un champ de bataille dans lequel
-rien ne l’avait forcé de s’engager. L’empereur prétendit ensuite que
-V. M. après avoir appris la perte de la bataille de Salamanque aurait
-dû se porter sur le Duero et rallier l’armée de Portugal. Je rappelai
-alors le mouvement fait du Guadarama vers Ségovie et la position
-critique dans laquelle vous avez laissé la duc de Raguse qui avait
-lui-même propose ce mouvement. L’empereur dit qu’il connaissait très
-bien tous les reproches qu’à cet égard on pouvait faire au maréchal
-Marmont. Il ajouta que l’armée du centre ayant fait sa retraite sur
-Madrid elle aurait du garder plus longtems les défilés du Guadarama,
-qu’on avait trop tôt passé le Tage, que du moins ce mouvement ayant
-été resolu, il fallait ne point laisser de garnison au Retiro,
-briser tous les affuts, emporter les aigles et bruler les effets
-d’habillement; qu’il n’avait jamais considéré ce poste que comme
-propre à contenir la population de Madrid, que l’ennemi étant maître
-de la campagne, on devait l’abandonner et que de toutes les fautes de
-la campagne c’était celle qu’il avait le moins conçue. Je répondis à
-cette objection ainsi que j’en étais convenu avec V. M. L’empereur
-en venant ensuite à la lettre du duc de Dalmatie me dit qu’elle
-lui était déja parvenue par une autre voie, mais qu’il n’y avait
-attaché aucune importance; que le maréchal Soult s’était trompé,
-qu’il ne pouvait s’occuper de semblables _pauvretés_ dans un moment
-où il _était à la tête de cinq cent mille hommes et faisait des
-choses immenses_. Ce sont ses expressions, qu’au reste les soupçons
-du duc de Dalmatie ne l’étonnaient que faiblement; que beaucoup de
-généraux de l’armée d’Espagne les partageaient et pensaient que
-V. M. préférait l’Espagne à la France; qu’il savait parfaitement
-qu’elle avait le cœur françois mais que ceux qui la jugeaient par
-ses discours devaient avoir une autre opinion. Il ajouta que le
-maréchal Soult était la seule tête militaire qu’il eut en Espagne,
-qu’il ne pouvait l’en retirer sans compromettre l’armée, que
-d’ailleurs il devait être parfaitement tranquille sur ses intentions
-puisqu’il venait d’apprendre par les journaux anglais qu’il évacuait
-l’Andalousie et se réunissait aux armées du centre et d’Aragon, que
-cette réunion opérée on devait être assez en force pour reprendre
-l’offensive; que d’ailleurs il n’avait point d’ordres à envoyer,
-qu’il ne savait point en donner de si loin, qu’il ne se dissimulait
-point l’étendue du mal et qu’il regrettait plus que jamais que V.
-M. n’ait point suivi le conseil qu’il lui avait donné de ne pas
-retourner en Espagne; qu’il était inutile que je repartisse, que
-je resterai à l’armée ou l’on m’emploieroit. J’insistai alors pour
-être renvoyé à V. M. d’une manière qui parut faire sur l’empereur
-quelque impression, et il finit par me dire que je serai expédié mais
-que je ne pouvais l’être dans ce moment, qu’ayant besoin de repos
-je resterais à Moscou, et que puisque j’étais officier du génie,
-je serais chargé de diriger sous les ordres du duc de Trevise les
-travaux et la défense du Kremlin. Je reçus en consequence un ordre
-écrit du Prince de Neufchatel. Lorsqu’après l’entière évacuation de
-Moscou le corps de M. le M. Mortier eut rejoint l’armée, je demandai
-et j’obtins d’y rester attaché jusqu’à ce que je fusse expédié. Je
-craignais que si je restais au quartier général on ne m’y désignât
-des fonctions qui seraient un nouvel obstacle à mon retour. Je
-pensai que peut-être on éviterait d’envoyer à V. M. un témoin des
-évènements qui se passaient, et je préférai attendre qu’une occasion
-favorable se présentât. Etant arrivé à Wilna peu de tems après
-le départ de l’empereur, je demandai au duc de Bassano, et il me
-donna l’autorisation de venir attendre des ordres à Paris. J’ai eu
-l’honneur d’annoncer à V. M. dans un autre lettre que l’altération de
-ma santé me forçait à suspendre mon retour en Espagne.
-
-L’armée au moment où je la quittai était dans la plus affreuse
-détresse. Depuis longtems déjà la désorganisation et les pertes
-étaient effrayantes, l’artillerie et la cavalerie n’existaient plus.
-Tous les corps étaient confondus. Les soldats marchaient pêle-mêle
-et ne songaient qu’à prolonger machinalement leur existence; quoique
-l’ennemi fut sur nos flancs, chaque jour des milliers d’hommes isolés
-se répandaient dans les villages voisins de la route et tombaient
-dans les mains des Cosaques. Cependant quelque grand que soit le
-nombre des prisonniers, celui des morts l’est incomparablement
-davantage. Il est impossible de peindre jusqu’à quel point la
-disette s’est fait sentir pendant plus d’un mois; il n’y eut point
-de distributions; les chevaux morts étaient la seule ressource, et
-bien souvent les maréchaux mêmes manquaient de pain. La rigueur
-du climat rendait la disette plus meurtrière, chaque nuit nous
-laissions au bivouac plusieurs centaines de morts. Je crois pouvoir
-sans exagérer porter à cent mille le nombre qu’on a perdu ainsi,
-et peindre avec assez de vérité la situation des choses en disant
-que l’armée est morte: la jeune garde qui faisait partie du corps
-auquel j’étais attaché était forte de 8000 hommes lorsque nous avons
-quitté Moscou, à Wilna elle en comptait à peine quatre cents. Tous
-les autres corps d’armée sont réduits dans la même proportion, et la
-retraite ayant dû se prolonger au-delà du Niemen, je suis convaincu
-que vingt mille hommes n’auront pas atteints la Vistule. On croyait
-à l’armée que beaucoup de soldats avaient pris les devants et qu’ils
-se rallieraient lorsqu’on pourrait suspendre le mouvement rétrograde.
-Je me suis assuré du contraire; à cinq lieues du quartier général,
-je ne rencontrai plus d’hommes isolés et je connus bien alors la
-profondeur de la plaie. Une phrase pourrait donner à V. M. une idée
-de l’état des choses, depuis le passage du Niemen un corps de 800
-Napolitains, le seul corps qui eût conservé quelque consistance,
-faisait l’arrière garde d’une armée française, forte naguère de trois
-cents mille hommes. Il est impossible d’exprimer jusqu’à quel point
-le désordre était contagieux; les corps réunis des ducs de Bellune et
-de Reggio comptaient 30,000 hommes au passage de la Beresina, deux
-jours après ils étaient dissous comme le reste de l’armée. Envoyer
-des renforts c’était augmenter les pertes et l’on reconnut enfin
-qu’il fallait empêcher les troupes neuves de se mettre en contact
-avec cette multitude en désordre à laquelle on ne peut plus donner
-le nom d’armée. Le roi de Naples disait hautement qu’en lui laissant
-le commandement l’empereur avait exigé le plus grand sacrifice qu’il
-pût attendre de son dévouement. Les forces physiques et morales du
-prince de Neufchâtel étaient entièrement épuisées. Si maintenant
-V. M. me demandait quel doit être le terme du mouvement rétrograde,
-je lui répondrais que l’ennemi est maître de le fixer. Je ne crois
-pas que les Prussiens fassent de grands efforts pour défendre
-leur territoire. M. de Narbonne que j’ai vu à Berlin et qui était
-chargé de lettres de l’empereur pour le roi de Prusse, m’a dit que
-les dispositions de ce prince et de son premier ministre étaient
-favorables, mais il ne se dissimulait pas que celles de la nation ne
-sont pas les mêmes. Déjà plusieurs rixes s’étaient engagées entre les
-habitans de Berlin et des soldats de la garnison française; et en
-traversant la Prusse j’ai eu lieu de m’assurer que l’on ne pouvait
-guère compter sur cette alliée de nouvelle date.
-
-Il parait aussi que dans l’armée autrichienne les officiers
-déclamaient publiquement contre la guerre.
-
-Quel triste que soit ce tableau, je crois l’avoir peint sans
-exagération et l’avoir observé de sang froid. Mon opinion sur
-l’étendue du mal est la même que lorsque j’étais plus voisin du
-théâtre.
-
-
-No. VII.
-
- _Ghiart, le 2 Septembre, 1812._
-
- MONSIEUR LE DUC DE FELTRE,
-
-J’ai reçu le rapport du duc de Raguse sur la bataille du 22. Il
-est impossible de rien lire de plus insignifiant: il y a plus de
-fatras et plus de rouages que dans une horloge, et pas un mot qui
-fasse connaître l’état réel des choses. Voici ma manière de voir sur
-cette affaire, et la conduite que vous devez tenir. Vous attendrez
-que le duc de Raguse soit arrivé, qu’il soit remis de sa blessure,
-et à-peu-près entièrement rétabli. Vous lui demanderez alors de
-répondre catégoriquement à ces questions. Pourquoi a-t-il livré
-bataille sans les ordres de son général-en-chef? Pourquoi n’a-t-il
-pas pris des ordres sur le parti qu’il devoit suivre, subordonné
-au systême général sur mes armées d’Espagne? Il y a là _un crime
-d’insubordination_ qui est la cause de tous les malheurs de cette
-affaire, et quand même il n’eut pas été dans l’obligation de se
-mettre en communication avec son général-en-chef pour exécuter les
-ordres qu’il en recevrait, comment a-t-il pu sortir de sa défensive
-sur le Duero, lorsque, sans un grand effort d’imagination, il étoit
-facile de concevoir qu’il pouvoit être secourn par l’arrivée de
-la division de dragons, d’une trentaine de pièces de canon, et de
-plus de 15 mille hommes de troupes Françaises que le roi avoit dans
-la main? Et comment pouvoit il sortir de la défensive pour prendre
-l’offensive sans attendre la réunion et le secours d’un corps de 15 à
-17 mille hommes?
-
-Le roi avoit ordonné à l’armée du nord d’envoyer sa cavalerie à son
-secours; elle étoit en marche. Le duc de Raguse ne pouvoit l’ignorer,
-puisque cette cavalerie est arrivée le soir de la bataille. De
-Salamanque à Burgos il y a bien des marches. Pourquoi n’a-t-il pas
-retardé de deux jours pour avoir le secours de cette cavalerie,
-qui lui étoit si importante? Il faudroit avoir une explication sur
-les raisons qui ont porté le duc de Raguse à ne pas attendre les
-ordres de son général-en-chef pour livrer bataille sans attendre les
-renforts que le roi, comme commandant supérieur de mes armées en
-Espagne, pouvoit retirer de l’armée du centre, de l’armée de Valence
-et de l’Andalousie. Le seul fonds de l’armée du centre fournissoit
-15 mille hommes de pied, et 2500 chevaux, lesquels pouvoient être
-rendus dans le même temps que le duc de Raguse faisoit battre son
-corps, et en prenant dans ses deux armées, le roi pouvoit lui amener
-40 mille hommes. Enfin le duc de Raguse sachant que 1500 chevaux
-étoient partis de Burgos pour le rejoindre, comment ne les a-t-il pas
-attendus?
-
-En faisant coincider ces deux circonstances d’avoir pris l’offensive
-sans l’ordre de son général-en-chef et de ne pas avoir retardé
-la bataille de deux jours pour ne pas recevoir 15,000 hommes
-d’infanterie que lui amenoit le roi, et 1500 chevaux de l’armée du
-nord, on est fondé à penser que ce maréchal a craint que le roi ne
-participe au succès de la bataille, et qu’il a sacrifié à la vanité
-la gloire de la patrie et l’avantage de mon service.
-
-Donnez ordre aux généraux divisionnaires d’envoyer les états de leurs
-pertes. Il est intolérable qu’on rende des comptes faux et qu’on me
-dissimule la vérité.
-
-Prescrivez au général Clausel, qui commande l’armée, d’envoyer la
-situation avant et après la bataille. Demandez également aux chefs de
-corps des situations exactes. Finalement, vous ferez connoître au duc
-de Raguse en temps opportun combien je suis indigné de la conduite
-inexplicable qu’il a tenue, en n’attendant pas deux jours que les
-secours de l’armée du centre et de l’armée du nord le rejoignissent.
-J’attends avec impatience l’arrivée du général aide-de-camp du roi
-pour avoir des renseignemens précis. Ce qu’il a écrit no signifie pas
-grande chose.
-
- (Signé) NAPOLEON.
-
-
-No. VIII. A.
-
-_Extract from general Souham’s despatch to the minister of war,
-Briviesca, 2d October, 1812._
-
-Par votre lettre du 6 Octobre vous m’annoncez que le duc de Dalmatie
-venait de réunir son armée à Grenade et à Jaen, et que le roi alloit
-se mettre incessamment en communication avec ce maréchal pour marcher
-de concert sur Madrid. En consequence de ces mouvemens je resolus
-de marcher à la rencontre de l’ennemi, et de le forcer à lever le
-siège de Burgos. Le 18 toute mon armée se mit en mouvement sur trois
-colonnes, et le 19 elle occupait les positions ainsi qu’il suit.
-La droite à Termino, le centre sur les hauteurs de Monasterio, et
-la gauche à Villa Escuso la Solano et Villa Escuso la Sombria.
-La journée du 20 devait être celle du combat, lorsque je reçus à
-l’instant, à deux heures du matin, par un aide-de-camp, une lettre
-de S. M. C. qui m’ordonne de ne point engager d’affaire générale, et
-d’attendre que par ses manœuvres lord Wellington soit forcé d’évacuer
-sa position de Burgos; ainsi il me faut renoncer à tous mes projets,
-et non sans un violent chagrin, car je puis assurer V. E. que mon
-armée était parfaitement disposée, et que j’aurais pu combattre
-l’ennemi avec avantage. Cependant l’armée n’a des vivres que pour
-quatre jours, et à cette epoque, si lord Wellington n’est point en
-retraite, je serai forcé de l’attaquer. J’entrevois moins de peril de
-marcher en avant que de rétrograder. Dans un instant où le moral du
-soldat commence à se raffermir tout mouvement en arrière produit le
-plus mauvais effet.
-
- (Signé) COMTE SOUHAM.
-
-
-No. VIII. B.
-
-_Extracts from two letters written by the duke of Feltre to King
-Joseph, dated Paris, 8th Oct. and 19th Nov., 1812._
-
-On one of the letters is the following note, in pencil, by the duke
-of Wellington. “_Advantage of English newspapers._”
-
-
-“Sire,—J’ai l’honneur d’adresser ci-joint à votre majesté quelques
-extraits des journaux Anglais les plus récents dont j’ai choisi ce
-qui pourrait être de quelque intérêt dans les circonstances actuels.”
-
-
-“Sire,—J’ai l’honneur d’adresser ci-joint à V. M. plusieurs extraits
-des journaux Anglais contenant quelques faits utiles ou intéressans à
-connaître.”
-
-
-These extracts taken from the Courier, Morning Post, Times, Alfred,
-Statesman, and Morning Chronicle, contained minute details upon
-the numbers, situation, and destination of the Sicilian, Spanish,
-and Anglo-Portuguese armies, and the most exact account of the
-reinforcements sent from England. In fine a complete system of
-intelligence for the enemy.
-
-
-No. IX.
-
-_Extract of a letter from marshal Jourdan to colonel Napier._
-
- _Soisy sous Etiole, 14 Janvier, 1829._
-
-Le 10 Novembre, 1812. Les armées du midi, du Portugal, et du centre
-se trouvaient réunies sur la Tormes. Vous connaissez la position
-qu’occupait l’armée des alliés. Cette position ayant été bien
-reconnue, dans la journée du 11, par le roi, accompagné du duc de
-Dalmatie, de plusieurs généraux, et de moi, je proposai de passer la
-Tormes, guéable prèsque partout entre Villa-Gonzala et Huerta, et de
-nous porter rapidement sur Calvarissa de Ariba, qui se trouvait au
-centre de la ligne des ennemis. J’esperais que lord Wellington ne
-pourrait éviter la bataille; et j’étais d’avis que nous devions faire
-tous nos efforts pour le forcer à l’accepter; me flattant qu’avec une
-armée de 80 milles hommes, dont 10 milles de cavalerie et 120 pièces
-de canon,[2] nous étions en état de remporter un brilliant succès,
-sur le même champ de bataille où quelques mois avant nous avions
-essuyé un revers.
-
-Le duc de Dalmatie, n’étant pas de mon avis, proposa d’aller passer
-la Tormes, à des guès qu’il avait reconnus à deux lieues au-dessus
-d’Alba; ce parti était sans doute plus prudent; mais il avoit,
-suivant moi, l’inconvenient que je voulais éviter, c’est-à-dire,
-qu’il laissait à nos adversaires la facilité de se retirer sans
-combattre. Cependant comme je n’étais revêtu d’aucun commandement,
-tandis que le duc de Dalmatie avait sous ses ordres les deux tiers
-de l’armée, le roi jugea convenable d’adopter son plan, et lui en
-confia l’exécution; vous en connaissez le résultat: il fut tel que je
-l’avais prévu.
-
-Permettez moi, Monsieur, d’ajouter une reflexion; Il me semble que
-lord Wellington decidé à battre en retraite, aurait dû commencer
-à l’opérer le 14ème jour, où nous franchîmes la Tormes. En ne se
-mettant en mouvement que le 15, il se trouva dans la nécessité de
-défiler devant nous pendant une partie de la journée; et sans les
-mauvais tems, et surtout sans beaucoup trop de circonspection de
-notre côté il eût peut-être couru quelque danger.
-
-On a publié que pendant leur retraite les alliés ne perdirent que 50
-ou 60 tués, 150 blessés, 170 prisonniers. Il est, cependant, certain
-que le nombre de prisonniers Anglais, Portugais, et Espagnols,
-conduits au quartier général à Salamanque, étoit, le 20 Novembre, de
-3520.
-
-
-The justice of the marshal’s opinion as to lord Wellington having
-staid too long on the Tormes is confirmed by the following note of a
-conversation held with the duke of Wellington on the subject.
-
-“Lord Wellington would have fought the French on the old position of
-the Arapiles in 1812 notwithstanding their superior numbers, but he
-staid too long at Salamanca.”
-
-
-No. X.
-
-_The duke of Feltre, minister of war, to the king of Spain._
-
- _Paris, le 29 Janvier, 1813._
-
- SIRE,
-
-J’ai eu l’honneur d’écrire à V. M. le 4 de ce mois pour lui faire
-connaître les intentions de l’empereur au sujet des affaires
-d’Espagne, et la necessité de transporter le quartier général de
-Madrid à Valladolid. Cette dépêche a été expédiée par duplicate et
-triplicate, et j’ignore encore si elle est parvenue à V. M. Depuis
-sa dépêche de Madrid du 4 Decembre je suis privé de ses lettres,
-et ce long silence me prouve que les communications de Madrid à
-Vittoria restent constamment _interceptées_. Il est vrai que les
-opérations du général Caffarelli qui s’est porté avec toutes ses
-troupes disponsibles sur la côte de Biscaye pour dégager Santona
-fortement menacé par l’ennemi et parcourir la côte, a donné aux
-bandes de la Castille une facilité entière d’intercepter la route
-de Burgos à Vittoria. Les dernières nouvelles que je reçois à
-l’instant de l’armée de Portugal sont du 5 Janvier. A cette époque
-tout y était tranquille, mais je vois toujours la même difficulté
-pour communiquer. Cet état de choses rend toujours plus nécessaire
-de s’occuper très sérieusement et très instamment de balayer les
-provinces du nord, et de les délivrer enfin de ces bandes qui
-ont augmentés en forces et en consistance à un point qui exige
-indispensablement toute notre attention et tous nos efforts. Cette
-pensée a tellement attire l’attention de l’empereur que S. M. I. m’a
-réitéré quatre fois successivement l’ordre exprès de renouveller
-encore l’expression de ses intentions que j’ai déjà adressée à V. M.
-par ma lettre du 4 Janvier pour l’engager à revenir à Valladolid, à
-garder Madrid par une division seulement, et à concentrer ses forces
-de manière à pouvoir envoyer des troupes de l’armée de Portugal vers
-le nord, en Navarre, et en Biscaye, afin de délivrer ces provinces,
-et d’y rétablir la tranquillité. Le général Reille également frappé
-de l’état des choses dans le nord de l’Espagne a bien compris la
-nécessité de prendre un parti decisif à cet égard. Il m’a transmis
-à cette occasion la lettre qu’il a eu l’honneur d’écrire à V. M.
-le 13 Octobre dernier, et j’ai vu qu’il lui a présenté un tableau
-frappant et vrai de la situation des affaires qui vient entièrement à
-l’appui de ma dépêche du 4 courant. Quant à l’occupation de Madrid,
-l’empereur m’ordonne de mettre sous les yeux de V. M. le danger
-qu’il y aurait dans l’état actuel des affaires de vouloir occuper
-cette capitale comme point central, et d’y avoir encore des hôpitaux
-et établissemens qu’il faudrait abandonner à l’ennemi au premier
-mouvement prononcé qu’il ferait vers le nord. Cette considération
-seule doit l’emporter sur toute autre, et je n’y ajouterai que
-le dernier mot de l’empereur à ce sujet; c’est que toutes les
-convenances dans la position de l’Europe veulent que V. M. occupe
-Valladolid, et pacifie le nord. Le premier objet rempli facilitera
-beaucoup le second, et pour y contribuer par tous les moyens comme
-pour économiser un tems précieux, et mettre à profit l’inaction des
-Anglais, je transmets directement aux généraux commandant en chef
-les armées du nord et de Portugal, les ordres de l’Empereur pour que
-leur exécution ne souffre aucun retard, et que ceux de V. M. pour
-appuyer et consolider leurs opérations n’éprouvent ni lenteur ni
-difficulté lorsqu’ils parviendront à ces généraux. Je joins ici copie
-de mes lettres, sur lesquelles j’ai toujours reservé les ordres que
-V. M. jugera à-propos de donner pour l’entière exécution de ceux de
-l’empereur. Ma lettre était terminée lorsqu’un aide-de-camp de M. le
-maréchal Jourdan est arrivé avec plusieurs dépêches, dont la dernière
-est du 24 Decembre. J’ai eu soin de les mettre sous les yeux de
-l’empereur, mais leur contenu ne saurait rien changer aux intentions
-de S. M. I. et ne peut que confirmer les observations qui se trouvent
-dans ma lettre. J’aurai l’honneur d’écrire encore à V. M. par le
-retour de l’officier porteur des dépêches de M. le maréchal Jourdan.
-Je suis avec respect, Sire, de votre majesté, le très humble et très
-obéïssant serviteur,
-
- Le ministre de la guerre,
- DUC DE FELTRE.
-
-
-No. XI.
-
-_The duke of Feltre to the king of Spain._
-
- SIRE,
-
-Depuis la lettre que j’ai eu l’honneur d’écrire à votre majesté le
-29 Janvier, l’empereur, après avoir pris connoissance des dépêches
-apportées par l’aide-de-camp de monsieur le maréchal Jourdan, me
-charge encore de réitérer son intention formelle et déjà deux fois
-transmise à votre majesté, qu’elle porte son quartier général à
-Valladolid afin de pouvoir s’occuper efficacement de soumettre et
-pacifier le nord; par une conséquence nécessaire de ce changement,
-Madrid ne doit être occupé que par l’extremité de la gauche de
-manière à ne plus faire partie essentielle de la position générale
-et à pouvoir être abandonné sans inconvénient, au cas qu’il
-soit nécessaire de se réunir sur un autre point. Cette nouvelle
-disposition procure à votre majesté les moyens de faire réfluer
-des forces considérables dans le nord et jusqu’à l’Arragon pour
-y détruire les rassemblemens qui existent, occuper en force tous
-les points importans, interdire l’accès des côtes aux Anglais, et
-opérer la soumission entière du pays. Il est donc d’une importance
-extrême pour parvenir à ce bût, de profiter de l’inaction des
-Anglais, qui permet en ce moment l’emploi de tous nos moyens contre
-les insurgés et doit amener promptement leur entière destruction,
-si les opérations entreprises pour cette effet sont conduites avec
-l’activité, l’energie et la suite qu’elles exigent. Votre majesté
-a pu se convaincre par la longue et constante interruption des
-communications autant que par les rapports qui lui sont parvenus de
-toute l’étendue du mal, et de la nécessité d’y porter remède. On ne
-peut donc mettre en doute son empressement à remplir les intentions
-de l’empereur sur ces points importans des changemens, qui ont eu
-lieu pour le commandement en chef des armées du midi, du nord, et
-de Portugal, me font espérer que votre majesté n’éprouvera plus de
-difficultés pour l’exécution de ses ordres et que tout marchera
-au même bût sans contradiction, et sans obstacle. Ces nouvelles
-dispositions me dispensent de répondre à différentes observations
-contenues dans les lettres de votre majesté, et m’engagent à attendre
-qu’elle me fasse connoître les résultats des changemens ordonnés par
-l’empereur. Je ne dois pas oublier de prévenir votre majesté d’un
-ordre que sa majesté impériale m’a chargé de transmettre directement
-à monsieur le général Reille pour lui faire envoyer une division
-de son armée en Navarre dont la situation exige impérieusement des
-secours prompts et efficaces. Cette disposition ne peut contrarier
-aucune de celles que votre majesté sera dans le cas d’ordonner
-à l’armée de Portugal pour concourir au même bût et amener la
-soumission des provinces du nord de l’Espagne.
-
- Je suis avec respect, Sire, de votre majesté
- Le très humble et très obéïssant serviteur
- Le Ministre de la Guerre,
- DUC DE FELTRE.
-
-
-No. XII.
-
-_Duke of Feltre to the king of Spain._
-
- _Paris, le 12 Fevrier, (No. 2.) 1813._
-
- SIRE,
-
-Par ma lettre de ce jour No. 1, j’ai eu l’honneur de faire connaître
-à V. M. les intentions de l’empereur sur les opérations à suivre en
-Espagne. La présente aura pour bût de répondre plus particulièrement
-à la lettre dont V. M. m’a honoré en date du 8 Janvier et que j’ai
-eu soin de mettre sous les yeux de l’empereur. Les plaintes qu’elle
-contient sur la conduite du maréchal duc de Dalmatie et du général
-Caffarelli deviennent aujourd’hui sans objet par l’éloignement de
-ces deux généraux en chef. Je dois cependant prévenir V. M. qu’ayant
-fait connaître au général Caffarelli qu’on se plaignait à Madrid de
-ne point recevoir de comptes de l’armée du nord, ce général me répond
-sous la date du 27 Janvier qu’il a eu l’honneur de rendre à V. M.
-des comptes extrêmement frequens, qu’il lui a envoyé la situation de
-l’armée et des doubles des rapports qui me sont adressés. La général
-Caffarelli ajoute qu’il avait demandé à V. M. d’ordonner que deux
-divisions de l’armée de Portugal vinssent appuyer les opérations
-de l’armée du nord, et il pense que ces lettres se seront croisées
-avec les dépêches de Madrid parceque les courriers out éprouvé
-beaucoup de retard, mais il y a lieu de présumer que tout ce qui a
-été adressé de l’armée du nord a du parvenir à Madrid avant la fin
-de Janvier. V. M. réitère dans sa lettre du 8 Janvier ses demandes
-relativement aux besoins de l’armée. Toutes ont été mises sous les
-yeux de l’empereur. S. M. I. m’ordonne de répondre au sujet des fonds
-dont la demande se retrouve dans plusieurs dépêches précédentes que
-l’argent nécessaire aux armées d’Espagne se serait trouvé dans ces
-riches et fertiles provinces dévastées par les bandes et par les
-juntes insurrectionelles, qu’en s’occupant avec l’activité et la
-vigueur convenables pour rétablir l’ordre et la tranquillité, on y
-gagnera toutes les ressources qu’elles peuvent encore offrir, et que
-le tems ramènera dans toute leur étendue. C’est donc un motif de
-plus pour V. M. d’employer tous les moyens dont elle dispose pour
-mettre fin à cette guerre interne qui trouble le repos des habitans
-paisibles, ruine le pays, fatigue nos armées et les prive de tous les
-avantages qu’elles trouveraient dans l’occupation tranquille de ces
-belles contrées. L’Arragon et la Navarre aujourd’hui sous les loix de
-Mina alimentent de leurs productions et de leur revenus cette lutte
-désastreuse, il est tems de mettre un terme à cet état de choses
-et de faire rentrer dans les mains du gouvernement légitime les
-ressources d’un pays florissant lorsqu’il est paisible, mais qui ne
-servent aujourd’hui qu’à son détriment.
-
-Je suis avec respect, Sire, de votre majesté, le très humble et très
-obéïssant serviteur,
-
- Le ministre de la guerre,
- DUC DE FELTRE.
-
-
-No. XIII.
-
-_The duke of Feltre to the king of Spain._
-
- _Paris, le 12 Fevrier, 1813._
-
- SIRE,
-
-J’ai eu l’honneur d’écrire trois fois à V. M. dans le courant de
-Janvier, pour lui transmettre les intentions de l’empereur sur la
-conduite des affaires en Espagne, et j’ai eu soin de faire expedier
-toutes mes dépêches au moins par triplicata, tellement que je puis et
-dois espérer aujourd’hui qu’elles sont parvenues à leur destination.
-Je reçois en ce moment le dup^{ta} d’une lettre de V. M. en date du 8
-Janvier, dont le primata n’est point arrivé et j’y vois une nouvelle
-preuve de la difficulté toujours subsistante de communication, les
-inconveniens de cet état de choses deviennent plus sensibles dans
-les circonstances actuelles, où il étoit d’une haute importance que
-les ordres de l’empereur reçussent une prompte exécution. S. M. I.
-pénétrée de cette idée, attend avec une véritable impatience de
-savoir ce qui s’est opéré à Madrid, d’après ses instructions, et
-cette attente, journellement deçue lui fait craindre qu’on n’ait
-perdu un temps précieux, les Anglais étant depuis plus de deux mois
-dans l’impuissance de rien faire. L’empereur espère du moins que
-lorsque V. M. aura eu connaisance du 29^{me} bulletin, elle aura été
-frappée de la nécessité de se mettre promptement en communication
-avec la France et de l’assurer par tous les moyens possibles. On
-ne peut parvenir à ce bût qu’en faisant refluer successivement les
-forces dont V. M. peut disposer sur la ligne de communication de
-Valladolid à Bayonne, et en portant en outre des forces suffisantes
-en Navarre et en Aragon pour combattre avec avantage et détruire les
-bandes qui dévastent ces provinces.
-
-L’armée de Portugal combinée avec celle du nord est bien suffisante
-pour remplir cet objet tandis que les armées du centre et du midi,
-occupant Salamanque et Valladolid, présentent assez de forces pour
-tenir les Anglais en échec en attendant les évènements. L’empereur
-m’ordonne de réitérer à V. M. que l’occupation de _Valladolid_ comme
-quartier général et résidence pour la personne, est un préliminaire
-indispensable, à toute operation. C’est de-là qu’il faut diriger sur
-la route de Burgos et successivement sur tous les points convenables
-les forces disponibles qui doivent renforcer ou seconder l’armée
-du nord. Madrid et même Valence ne peuvent être considérés dans ce
-systême que comme des points à occuper par l’extremité gauche de
-la ligne, et nullement comme lieux à maintenir exclusivement par
-une concentration de forces. Valladolid et Salamanque deviennent
-aujourd’hui les points essentiels entre lesquels doivent être
-réparties des forces prêtes à prendre l’offensive contre les Anglais
-et à faire échouer leurs projets. L’empereur est instruit qu’ils se
-renforcent en Portugal, et qu’ils paraissent avoir le double projet
-ou de pousser en Espagne ou de partir du port de Lisbonne pour faire
-une expédition de 25 mille hommes, partie Anglais partie Espagnols,
-sur un point quelconque des côtes de France pendant que la lutte
-sera engagée dans le nord. Pour empêcher l’exécution de ce plan il
-faut être toujours en mésure de se porter en avant et ménacer de
-marcher sur Lisbonne ou de conquerir le Portugal. En même tems il
-faut conserver des communications aussi sûres que faciles avec la
-France pour être promptement instruits de tout ce qui s’y passe, et
-le seul moyen d’y parvenir est d’employer le tems ou les Anglais
-sont dans l’inaction pour pacifier la Biscaye et la Navarre comme
-j’ai eu soin de le faire connaître à V. M. dans mes précédentes. La
-sollicitude de l’empereur pour les affaires d’Espagne lui ayant fait
-réitérer à plusieurs reprises et reproduire sous toutes les formes
-ses intentions à cet égard je ne puis achever mieux de les remplir
-qu’en récapitulant les idées principales que j’ai eu l’ordre de faire
-connaître à V. M. Occuper Valladolid et Salamanque, employer avec la
-plus grande activité possible tous les moyens de pacifier la Navarre
-et l’Aragon, maintenir des communications très rapides et très sûres
-avec la France, rester toujours en mésure de prendre l’offensive au
-besoin, voilà ce que l’empereur me prescrit de faire considérer à V.
-M. comme instruction générale pour toute la campagne et qui doit
-faire la base de ses operations. J’ai à peine besoin d’ajouter que
-si les armées Françaises en Espagne restaient oisives et laissaient
-les Anglais maîtres de faire des expeditions sur nos côtes, la
-tranquillité de la France serait compromise et la décadence de nos
-affaires en Espagne en serait l’infaillible résultat, Je suis avec
-respect,
-
- Sire, de votre majesté,
- le très humble et très obéïssant serviteur
- Le Ministre de la Guerre,
- DUC DE FELTRE.
-
-
-No. XIV.
-
-_The duke of Feltre to the king of Spain._
-
- _Paris, le 12 Mars, 1813._
-
- SIRE,
-
-La difficulté toujours subsistante des communications a apporté
-dans ma correspondance avec V. M. des retards considérables et de
-longues interruptions dont les résultats ne peuvent être que très
-préjudiciables au service de l’empereur. Depuis plus de deux mois
-j’expédie sans cesse et par tous les moyens possibles ordre sur
-ordre pour faire exécuter les dispositions prescrites par S. M. I.
-et je n’ai aucune certitude que ces ordres soient parvenus à leur
-destination. L’empereur extrêmement mécontent de cet état de choses
-renouvelle sans cesse l’injonction la plus précise de le faire
-cesser, et j’ignore encore en ce moment si les mouvemens prescrits
-se préparent ou s’exécutent, mais je vois toujours d’avantage que
-si des ordres relatifs à cette mesure doivent partir de Madrid cela
-entrainerait une grande perte de tems. L’empereur en a été frappé,
-Il devient donc tout-à-fait indispensable de s’écarter un moment de
-la voie ordinaire et des dispositions par lesquelles tout devroit
-emaner de V. M. au moins pour ce qui concerne le nord et l’armée de
-Portugal. Je prends pour cet effet le parti d’adresser directement
-aux généraux commandant de ces armées les ordres d’exécution qui
-dans d’autres circonstances devraient leur parvenir de Madrid, et
-j’ai l’honneur d’adresser ci-joint à V. M. copies des lettres que
-j’ai écrites au général Reille et au général Clauzel pour déterminer
-enfin l’arrivée des renforts absolument nécessaires pour soumettre
-l’Aragon, la Navarre et la Biscaye; les details contenus dans ma
-lettre au général Clauzel me dispensent de m’étendre d’avantage
-sur cet objet important. V. M. y verra surtout qu’en prescrivant
-l’exécution prompte et entière des ordres de l’empereur j’ai toujours
-reservé l’exercise de l’autorité supérieure remise entre les mains
-de V. M. et qu’elle conserve également la direction ultérieure des
-opérations des qu’elle pourra les conduire par elle-même.
-
-Toutes mes précédentes dépêches sont d’allieurs assez précises sur ce
-point pour ne de laisser pas doute à cet egard.
-
-
-_The duke of Feltre to the king._
-
- _Paris, 18 Mars, 1813._
-
- SIRE,
-
-Parmi les lettres dont V.M. m’a honoré, la plus récente de celles
-qui me sont parvenues jusqu’à ce jour est du 1 Fevrier, et je vois
-qu’à cette epoque V. M. n’avait point encore reçu celle que j’ai
-eu l’honneur de lui adresser par ordre de l’empereur le 4 Janvier
-pour l’engager à transferer son quartier général à Valladolid. Cette
-disposition a été renouvellée dans toutes mes dépêches postérieures
-sous les dates de 14, 29 Janvier, 3, 12, 25 Fevrier, 1, 11 et 12
-Mars, sans avoir eu jusqu’à present de certitude que mes lettres
-fussent arrivées à leur destination. Enfin une lettre de M. le
-duc d’Albufera en date 4 Mars me transmit copie de celle que V.
-M. lui a adressée le 23 Fevrier pour le prevenir que ma lettre du
-4 Janvier est arrivée à Madrid, et qu’on s’y préparait à exécuter
-les dispositions prescrites par l’empereur. Ainsi c’est de Valence
-que j’ai reçu la première nouvelle positive à cet égard, et cette
-circonstance qui dévoile entièrement nôtre situation dans le nord
-d’Espagne est une nouvelle preuve de l’extrême urgence des mesures
-prescrites par l’empereur et de tout le mal que d’inexplicables
-retards ont causé. S. M. I. vient à cette occasion de me réitérer
-l’injonction de faire sentir à V. M. la fausse direction qu’ont prise
-les affaires d’Espagne par le peu de soin qu’on a apporté à maintenir
-les communications avec les frontières. L’empereur est etonné qu’on
-ait si peu compris à Madrid l’extrême importance de conserver des
-communications sûres et rapides avec la France. Le defaut constant
-de nouvelles était un avertissement assez clair et assez positif de
-l’impuissance ou se trouvait l’armée du nord de proteger la route de
-Madrid à Bayonne. L’état des affaires dans le nord de l’Europe devait
-plus que jamais faire sentir la nécessité de recevoir des nouvelles
-de Paris et de prendre enfin des mesures décisives pour ne pas rester
-si longuement dans un état d’isolement et d’ignorance absolu sur les
-vues et l’intention de l’empereur. V. M. avoit trois armées à sa
-disposition pour rétablir les communications avec l’armée du nord, et
-l’on ne voit pas un mouvement de l’armée de Portugal ou de celle du
-centre qui soit approprié aux circonstances, tandis que l’inaction
-des Anglais permettait de profiter de notre supériorité pour chasser
-les bandes, nettoyer la route, assurer la tranquillité dans le pays.
-L’empereur m’a ordonné de faire connaître sa façon de penser sur cet
-objet au général Reille, auquel j’ai adressé directement les ordres
-de S. M. I. pour les forces qu’il a dû mettre sans retard sous les
-ordres du général Clauzel ainsi que j’ai eu l’honneur d’en prévenir
-V. M. par mes lettres du 29 Janvier, 3 Fevrier et 12 Mars. En effet
-les circonstances rendent cette mesure d’une extrême urgence.
-L’inaction où l’on est resté pendant l’hiver a encouragé et propagé
-l’insurrection. Elle s’etend maintenant de la Biscaye, en Catalogne,
-et l’Aragon exige, pour ainsi dire, le même emploi des forces pour
-la pacifier, que la Biscaye et la Navarre. Il est donc de la plus
-haute importance que V. M. etende ses soins sur l’Aragon comme sur
-les autres provinces du nord de l’Espagne, et les évènemens qui se
-préparent rendront ce soin toujours plus nécessaire. D’un côte toutes
-les bandes chassées de la Biscaye et de la Navarre se trouveront
-bientôt forcées à refluer dans l’Aragon, et d’autre part l’évacuation
-de Cuenca, par résultat du mouvement général des armées du centre et
-du midi priverait le général Suchet de toute communication avec V. M.
-dans un moment ou les ennemis se renforcent devant lui d’une manière
-assez _inquiétante_. Il est donc très important de se procurer une
-autre ligne de communication avec Valence et cette ligne ne peut
-s’établir que par l’Aragon. C’est à votre majesté qu’il appartient
-de donner à cet égard les ordres nécessaires. Il suffira sans doute
-de lui avoir fait connaître l’état de choses et la position du
-maréchal Suchet pour lui faire prendre les déterminations que les
-circonstances rendraient les plus convenables. Il me tarde beaucoup
-d’apprendre enfin de V. M. elle-même l’exécution des ordres de
-l’empereur et de pouvoir satisfaire sur ce point la juste impatience
-de S. M. I.
-
-
-No. XV.
-
-_Joseph O’Donnel to general Donkin._
-
- _Malaga, the 6th December, 1812._
-
- DEAR SIR,
-
-The letter you did me the honour to adress to me on the 6th of
-September has been mislaid all this long time on account of my being
-separated from the armie since the moment I gave up the command
-of it, and it was only last night I had the pleasure of receiving
-it. I feel a great comfort in seingh an officer of your reputation
-affected so kindly with the sorrows which so unlucky as undeservedly
-(I believe) fell upon me as a consequence of my shamefull defaite
-at Castalla. But I beg to be excused if I continue this letter in
-French. I kno you understand it very well and I can not explain
-my toughts so well in English. Je crois, M. le général, que tout
-militaire, instruit des faits, et à la vue du malheureux champ de
-bataille de Castalla, ou du plan qui le représente, doit faire le
-même raisonement que vous avez fait, à moins qu’il ne soit épris
-des petites passions et des prejugés qui ne dominent que trop
-souvent les hommes. Je crois l’avoir demontré à l’evidence dans mon
-rapport officiel au gouvernement (que vous devez avoir vu imprimmé)
-accompagné de la carte des environs et des copies de toutes les
-ordres que je donnai la veille du combat. J’aurois certainement été
-vainquer si l’officier qui commandoit les 760 chevaux, avec deux
-pièces de 8 à mon aile gauche eut obéi mes ordres, on eut seulement
-tâché de se laisser voir de loin par la cavallerie enemie, qui au
-nombre de 400 chevaux étoit stationée dans le village de Viar;
-mais point du tout, cet officier, au lieu de se trouver sur Viar
-au point du jour de la bataille, pour tenir en échec la cavallerie
-ennemie, pour la battre s’il en trouvoit une occasion probable, ou
-pour la suivre en tout cas, et l’empêcher de tomber sur Castalla
-impunément, comme il lui était très expressément ordonné par des
-ordres écrites qu’il avoue, cet officier alla se cacher derriére
-Villena, et quoiqu’il entendit le canon de Castalla, et qu’il fut
-instruit de la marche des dragons de Viar par la route d’Onil, il
-resta tranquilement en position de l’autre côté de Villena jusqu’à
-passé huit heures du matin. Nous étions déjà battus, et trois
-malheureux bataillons hachés en pièces (quoi-qu’ayant repoussé la
-première charge) quand M. le brigadier Santistevan se mit en marche
-de Villena pour venir à mon secours. Jugez done, Mons. le général, si
-j’ay pû empêcher ce désastre. Cependant, le public, qui ne peut juger
-que par les resultats, se dechaina d’abord contre moi, et je ne m’en
-plains pas, car cela étoit fort naturel; c’est un malheur attaché
-à notre profession, et que les généraux Espagnols doivent resentir
-sur touts les autres, puisqu’ils font la guerre sans resources, et
-manquant de tout contre un ennimi aguerri qui ne manque de rien; mais
-je me plains des _Cortes_ de la nation, je me plains de ces pères
-de la patrie, qui sachant que j’avois demandé moimême à être jugé
-par un conseille de guerre, out cependant donné le ton à l’opinion
-publique se rependant en invectives contre moi, et même contre mon
-frère le régent, avant de scavoir si je suis en effet coupable. Après
-un pareile traitement, et dans l’etât de misère et de détresse où
-se trouvent nos armées, ou trouvera t’on de généraux qui veuillent
-exposer leur honneur, et en accepter le commandement? Quant à moi je
-servirai ma patrie par devoir et par inclination jusqu’au dernier
-soupir, mais je n’accepterai jamais aucun commandement, supposant
-qu’il me fut offert. Les informations que l’on prend relativement
-à l’affaire en question ne sont pas encore finies, car tout va
-doucement chez nous. J’en attends le resultat ici avec l’aveu du
-gouvernement, et aussitôt que l’on aura prononcé en justice j’irai
-me présenter comme simple volontaire dans une de nos armées si l’on
-ne veut pas m’employer dans ma calité de général subalterne. Je vous
-ay trop ennuyé de mes peines; c’est que j’en ay le cœur navré, et
-que votre bonté m’a excité à m’en soulager en vous les racontant.
-Il me reste encore un espoir flatteur, c’est le jugement de touts
-mes camarades qui out vû de près mes dispositions à l’affaire de
-Castalla, et les efforts que j’avois fait pendant sept mois, luttant
-toujours contre la detresse et le désordre, pour préparer à la
-victoire une armée qui étoit tout-à-fait nulle quand je fus obligé
-a en prendre, malgré moi, le commandement. Je m’estimerai heureux,
-Monsieur le général, de mériter aussi le sufrage d’un officier aussi
-distingué que vous l’êtes, et je vous prie d’agréer le temoignage du
-sincère attachement de votre très humble et très obéissant serviteur,
-
- JOSEF O’DONELL.
-
- _Monsieur le général Donkin_,
- &c. &c.
-
-
-No. XVI.
-
- _Freneda, February 15th, 1813._
-
- SIR,
-
-I have received your letter of the 12th instant, regarding the
-conduct of the second Italian regiment, and I entirely concur in all
-the measures you have adopted, and applaud the decision and firmness
-of your conduct. I am prepared likewise to approve of whatever you
-shall determine upon deliberation regarding the future state of the
-men of the regiment, whether to be formed into a regiment again, or
-not; or if so formed, whether to be kept as part of the army or sent
-back to Sicily.
-
-The foreign troops are so much addicted to desertion that they are
-very unfit for our armies, of which they necessarily form too large
-a proportion to the native troops. The evil is aggravated by the
-practice which prevails of enlisting prisoners as well as deserters,
-and Frenchmen as well as other foreigners, notwithstanding the
-repeated orders of government upon the subject. The consequence is
-therefore that a foreign regiment cannot be placed in a situation
-in which the soldiers can desert from it, that they do not go off
-in hundreds; and in the Peninsula they convey to the enemy the only
-intelligence which he can acquire.
-
-With this knowledge I seldom if ever use the foreign British troops
-of this army on the duty of outposts; and whatever you may determine
-regarding the second Italian regiment, I recommend the same practice
-to your consideration.
-
-There is nothing new on this side of the Peninsula. The armies are
-nearly in the stations which they took up in the end of November.
-
- I have the honour to be,
- Sir,
- Your most obedient Servant,
- WELLINGTON.
-
- _Major-General Campbell,
- &c. &c. &c._
-
-
-No. XVII.
-
-_Extract of a letter from the marquis of Wellington to
-lieutenant-general sir John Murray, dated Freneda, April 6th, 1813._
-
-“In regard to feeding the Spanish troops in Spain, I have invariably
-set my face against it and have never consented to it or done it,
-even for a day in any instance. My reasons are, first that it
-entails upon Great Britain an expense which the country is unable
-to bear; secondly, that it entails upon the department of the army
-which undertakes it a detail of business, and a burthen in respect
-to transport, and other means to which the departments if formed
-upon any moderate scale must be quite unequal; thirdly, I know
-from experience that if we don’t interfere, the Spanish troops,
-particularly if paid as yours are, and in limited numbers, will not
-want food in any part of Spain, whereas the best and most experienced
-of our departments would not be able to draw from the country
-resources for them. I have already consented to the formation of a
-magazine for the use of general Whittingham and general Roche’s corps
-for a certain number of days, if it should be found necessary to
-give them assistance of this description. I can go no farther, and
-I earnestly recommend to you if you give assistance to all, to give
-over a magazine to last a given time, but not to take upon yourself
-to supply the Spanish troops engaged in operations. If, however, you
-should notwithstanding this recommendation take upon yourself to give
-such supplies, I must object, as commander-in-chief of the Spanish
-army, to your giving more than bread to the troops who receive pay,
-as that is positively contrary to the regulations and customs of the
-Spanish army. I recommend to you also to attend with caution to the
-demands of both general Whittingham and general Roche, and to observe
-that in proportion as you will comply with their demands, demands
-will be made upon you by general Elio and others, and you will
-involve yourself in a scale of expense and difficulty, which will
-cramp all your operations, and which is quite inconsistent with the
-views of government on the eastern coast of the Peninsula.”
-
-
-No. XVIII.
-
-General state of the French army, April 15, 1812.
-
-Extracted from the Imperial Muster-rolls.
-
- Present under Arms. Detached. Hosp. Total.
- Men. Horses. Men. Horses. Men. Horses.
- Armée de
-
- Midi 55,797 11,014 2,498 700 6,065 64,360 11,714
- Centre 19,148 3,993 144 51 624 19,916 4,044
- Portugal 56,937 8,108 4,394 2,278 7,706 69,037 10,386
- Ebre 16,830 1,873 21 6 3,425 20,276 1,879
- Arragon 14,786 3,269 2,695 658 1,467 18,948 3,927
- Catalogne 28,924 1,259 1,163 49 5,540 35,627 1,308
- Nord 48,232 7,074 1,309 72 8,677 58,276 7,213
- -------------------------------------------------------
- Total 240,654 36,590 12,224 3,614 33,504 286,440 40,471
- Reserve de
- Bayonne 4,038 157 36 35 865 4,939 192
- -------------------------------------------------------
- General Total 244,692 36,747 12,260 3,849 34,369 291,370 40,663
- -------------------------------------------------------
-
- Civic guards
- attached to
- the army of
- the south. 6,497 1,655 ” ” 258 6,755 1,497
- Troupes
- Espagnols. 33,952 525 ” ” ” 33,952 525
- ------------------------------------------------------
- Total Espagnols 40,449 2,180 ” ” 258 40,707 2,022
- ------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-General state, May 15, 1812.
-
- Present under Arms. Detached. Hosp. Total.
- Men. Horses. Men. Horses. Men. Cav. Art.
- Armée de
- Midi 56,031 12,101 2,787 660 4,652 63,470 7,311 4,340
- Centre 17,395 4,208 158 37 766 19,203 3,332 420
- Portugal 52,618 7,244 9,750 1,538 8,332 70,700 4,481 3,448
- Arragon 27,218 4,768 4,458 605 3,701 35,377 2,976 1,980
- Catalonia 33,677 1,577 1,844 267 6,009 41,530 1,376 279
- Nord 38,771 6,031 2,560 271 7,767 49,098 4,443 1,163
- ------------------------------------------------------------
- Total 225,710 35,929 21,557 3,378 31,227 279,378 23,919 11,630
- Old Reserve
- at Bayonne 3,894 221 1,642 ” 964 6,500 207 ”
- New Reserve
- at Bayonne 2,598 116 3,176 ” 5 5,769 103 ”
- ------------------------------------------------------------
- General 232,202 36,266 26,375 3,378 32,196 291,647 24,229 11,630
- Total ------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-General state of the French Armies, March 15, 1813.
-
- Present under Arms. Detached. Hosp. Total.
- Men. Horses. Men. Horses. Men. Cav. Train.
- Armée de
- Midi 36,605 6,602 2,060 1,617 7,144 45,809 8,650 2,601
- Centre 16,227 1,966 940 76 2,401 19,568 2,790 451
- Portugal 34,825 3,654 157 ” 7,731 42,713 6,726 2,149
- Arragon 36,315 3,852 55 ” 2,442 38,812 6,123 1,799
- Catalonia 27,323 1,109 110 ” 2,013 29,446 1,884 635
- Nord 40,476 1,978 41 ” 8,030 48,547 3,171 830
- Reserve de
- Bayonne 5,877 55 80 ” 634 6,591 78 21
- ----------------------------------------------------------
- Total 197,648 19,216 3,443 1,693 30,395 231,486 29,422 8,486
- ----------------------------------------------------------
-
-The operations and misfortunes of the French prevented any general
-states being sent home between the 15th of March and the 15th of
-August, when a new organization of the armies took place; but the
-numbers given in the narrative of this History are the result of
-calculations founded on the comparison of a variety of documents, and
-are believed to be a very close approximation to the real strength of
-the armies.
-
-
-No. XIX.
-
-Especial state of the army of Portugal, June 15, 1812.
-
-Head-quarters, Tordesillas.
-
-
- Present under arms. Detached. Hosp. Total. Horses.
- Men. Horses Men. Horses. Men. Cav. Train.
- 1st
- Division Foy 5,138 ” 319 ” 516 5,973 ” ”
- 2d do. Clausel 7,405 ” 678 ” 613 8,696 ” ”
- 3d do. Ferey 5,547 ” 12 ” 926 6,485 ” ”
- 4th do. Sarrut 5,056 ” 214 ” 862 6,132 ” ”
- 5th do. Maucune 5,269 ” 588 ” 1,513 7,370 ” ”
- 6th do. Brennier 5,021 ” 124 ” 720 5,865 ” ”
- 7th do. Thomieres 6,352 61 ” ” 1,905 8,257 61 ”
- 8th do. Bonnet 6,681 139 66 ” 685 7,432 139 ”
- Light
- Cavalry, Curto 1,386 1,398 1,073 324 246 2,705 1,722 ”
- 3 escadrons
- Dragoons Boyer 1,389 1,378 479 358 86 1,954 1,736 ”
- Artillery 3,612 2,339 513 258 220 4,345 347 2,148
- Genie 414 9 67 7 84 565 ” 12
- Equipage 955 1,107 51 44 242 1,251 ” 1,084
- Gendarmes et
- Infirmerie 325 75 ” ” 15 340 54 ”
- --------------------------------------------------
- Total 54,550 6,506 4,184 991 8,633 67,370 4,059 3,244
- --------------------------------------------------
-
-From these 54,550 men, present under arms, must be deducted the
-artillery, engineers, equipages, and garrisons, the officers and
-sergeants, and the losses sustained between the siege of the forts
-and the battle of Salamanca, the result will be about 42,000 sabres
-and bayonets in the battle.
-
- Reinforcements en marche de l’armée du nord 1,370
- Do. de Bayonne 12,676
-
- _Note._—These troops did not join before the battle of Salamanca.
-
-
-Artillery of the army of Portugal, June 15, 1812, Materiel.
-
- { Poid et calibre. Nombre.
- { Canon de 12 lbs. 2 }
- Bouches { 8 do. 20 } Total des canons
- a feu { 4 do. 33 } 60
- { 3 do. 5 }
- {
- { Obusiers de 6 pouces 11 } Total des obusiers
- { Ditto de 4 pouces 3 lignes 3 } 14
- --
- Total 74
-
- { These guns
- Venant de l’armée du nord 8 { arrived after
- { the battle.
- --
- 82
-
-
-Total loss of the army of Portugal from 10th July to 10th of August,
-1812, including the battle of Salamanca. Extracted from the Imperial
-Muster-rolls.
-
- Tués. Blessés.
-
- { Duke de Raguse ” 1
- { General Clauzel ” 1
- Officiers { General Bonnet ” 1
- superieurs { General Ferrey 1 ”
- { General Thomieres 1 ”
- { General Desgravier Bertholet 1 ”
- General Carrie ” 1 Prisonnier.
- General Menne ” 1
- Aide-de-camp du Colonel Richemont ” 1
- duc de Raguse
- Le Clerc de Montpree 1 ”
- Darel ” 1
- -------------
- Total Tués 4 Blessés 7
- -------------
-
- Officiers inferieurs et soldats. Tués ou Pris. Blessés. Traineurs.
- Officiers 162 232 ”
- Soldats 3,867 7,529 645
- -----------------------------
- Grande Total 4,029 7,761 645
- -----------------------------
-
- Officiers et Soldats 12,435
- Chevaux 1,190
- Canons 12
- Deux aigles de 22eme et 101eme Regt. de ligne.
-
-
-No. XX.
-
-Strength of the Anglo-Portuguese army under Lord Viscount Wellington,
-on the morning of the 22d of July, 1812. Extracted from the original
-morning state.
-
-_Note._—The numbers are exclusive of officers, sergeants, trumpeters,
-artillery-men, and staff, shewing merely the sabres and bayonets in
-the field.
-
- British cavalry,
- one division, present under arms 3,314 men 3,388 horses.
- British infantry,
- seven divisions do. 22,067 ” ” ”
- -------------------------
- Total British 25,381
-
- D’Urban’s Portuguese cavalry,
- three regiments, about 1,500 These troops not in the state
- Portuguese infantry,
- seven divisions, and two
- independent brigades 16,017
- ------------------------------
- 17,517
- ------
- Total Anglo-Portuguese 42,898
-
- Carlos d’Espana’s Spanish division, about 3,000
- Julian Sanchez’ cavalry 500
- ------------------
- 3,500
- ------
- Sabres and bayonets 46,398
- ------
-
-
-No. of British, German, Portuguese, and Spanish guns at the battle of
-Salamanca.
-
- Weight of calibre. Number of guns.
-
- British horse artillery 6 lbs. 18
- Foot do. 9 lbs. 12
- Do. do. 12 lbs. 12
- German do. 9 lbs. 6
- Portuguese and British
- brigaded together 24 lb. howitzers 6
- --
- 54
- One Spanish battery 6
- --
- General total 60 pieces.
-
-
-No. XXI.
-
-Official report of the loss of the allies on the Trabancos and
-Guarena rivers, 18th July, 1812.
-
- Officers. Sergeants. Rank and file. Horses. Men.
- { 3 3 56 59 Killed }
- British { 16 7 274 65 Wounded }
- { ” ” 27 21 Missing }
- } 543
- { 1 2 31 ” Killed }
- Portuguese { 6 3 87 ” Wounded }
- { ” ” 27 ” Missing }
- -------------------------------------
- Total 26 15 502 145
- -------------------------------------
-
-
-Loss of the allies in the battle of Salamanca.
-
- { 28 24 336 96 Killed }
- British {188 136 2,400 120 Wounded }
- { ” ” 74 37 Missing }
- } 5,224
- { 13 4 287 18 Killed }
- Portuguese { 74 42 1,436 13 Wounded }
- { 1 1 180 7 Missing }
- ————————————————————
- Total 304 207 4,713 291
- ————————————————————
-
-
-Loss of the German cavalry on the Almar Stream, July 23.
-
- Men and Officers. Horses.
- 117 117 117
-
-
-The British loss by infantry divisions and cavalry brigades.
-
- { Le Marchant’s brigade, lost Men and officers 105 }
- Cavalry { Anson’s do. do. do. 5 }
- { Vr. Alten’s do. do. do. 31 }
-
- { 1st Division General Campbell lost Men and officers 69 }
- { 3d do. General Pakenham do. do. 456 }
- { 4th do. General Cole do. do. 537 }
- Infantry { 5th do. General Leith do. do. 464 }
- { 6th do. General Clinton do. do. 1,198 }
- { 7th do. General S. Hope do. do. 119 }
- { Light do. General C. Alten do. do. 29 }
-
- Artillery General Framingham do. do. 14
- -----
- 3,027
- -----
-
-
-No. XXII.
-
-Strength of the Anglo-Portuguese army at Vittoria. Extracted from the
-morning state of the 19th June, 1813.
-
- Total.
- Present under arms. On command. Present. On command.
-
- British Cavalry 7,791 851
- Portuguese do. 1,452 225
- ---------------------
- Total cavalry 9,243 1,076
-
- British infantry 33,658 1,771
- Portuguese do. 23,905 1,038
- ---------------------
- Total infantry 57,563 2,809
- ----------------
-
- Sabres and bayonets 66,806 3,885
-
- Deduct the 6th division
- left at Medina de Pomar 6,320
- ----------------
- Sabres and bayonets 60,486
-
- Spanish Auxiliaries.
- { Morillo’s division about 3,000
- Infantry { Giron’s do. do. 12,000
- { Carlos
- { Carlos d’Espagna’s do. do. 3,000
- { Longa’s do. do. 3,300
- Penne Villemur do. 1,000
- Cavalry Julian Sanchez do. 1,000
- 23,000
- ------------
- Grand Total 83,486
- ------------
-
-
-No. of Anglo-Portuguese guns at the battle of Vittoria.
-
-COLONEL A. DICKSON commanding.
-
- British horse artillery 9 lbs. 45
- Do. do. 6 lbs. 30
- Do. do. 5½ inch howitzers 15
- --
- Total 90
-
-No Spanish guns set down in the return. Number unknown.
-
-
-END OF VOL. V.
-
-
-MARCHANT, PRINTER, INGRAM-COURT, FENCHURCH-STREET.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[1] In a recent number of the “Quarterly Review,” the writer of an
-article upon the correspondence of Louis the XVIII. quotes me as
-saying that Massena had _one hundred and thirty-five thousand men_
-under his orders, as if he had invaded Portugal with an army of that
-amount, whereas I have expressly said that he invaded Portugal with
-_sixty-five thousand_, the rest being extended as far as Biscay. The
-assertion of the Reviewer is therefore essentially false with the
-appearance of truth. The same writer, while rebuking the Editor of
-the Correspondence for ignorance, asserts, that the battle of Busaco
-was fought between the 9th of October and the 5th of November! It was
-fought on the 27th of September.
-
-Another writer in the same No. treating of Professor Drumann’s work,
-speaks of “_following_ an impulse which is from _behind_,” a figure
-of speech which must appear singularly felicitous to those who
-have watched a puppy dog chasing his own tail; but your Quarterly
-Reviewers are your only men for accuracy of fact and expression!
-
-[2] These numbers are somewhat below those I have assigned to the
-French army; my calculation was made from the imperial muster-rolls,
-but the difference may be easily accounted for by the length of time
-which elapsed when marshal Jourdan wrote this letter. His numbers are
-evidently from memory, and probably he did not mean to include the
-king’s guards and Spaniards.
-
-
-
-
- * * * * *
-
- PUBLISHED BY
- T. AND W. BOONE,
- 29, _New Bond-street_.
-
-
- A REPLY TO
- LORD STRANGFORD’S “OBSERVATIONS”
- ON SOME PASSAGES IN
- COLONEL NAPIER’S HISTORY OF THE WAR
- IN THE PENINSULA.
-
- BY COLONEL NAPIER, C.B.
- Second Edition, 8vo. price 1s.
-
- * * * * *
-
- A REPLY TO VARIOUS OPPONENTS,
-
- PARTICULARLY TO
- “_STRICTURES ON COLONEL NAPIER’S HISTORY OF THE
- WAR IN THE PENINSULA_:”
-
- Together with
- OBSERVATIONS ILLUSTRATING SIR JOHN MOORE’S CAMPAIGNS.
-
- BY COLONEL NAPIER, C.B.
-
- 8vo. price 2s.
-
- * * * * *
-
- COL. NAPIER’S JUSTIFICATION OF HIS
- THIRD VOLUME,
-
- FORMING A
- SEQUEL TO HIS REPLY TO VARIOUS OPPONENTS,
- AND CONTAINING SOME
- _NEW AND CURIOUS FACTS RELATIVE TO_
- THE BATTLE OF ALBUERA.
-
- 8vo. price 1s. 6d.
-
- * * * * *
-
- A LETTER TO
- GENERAL LORD VISCOUNT BERESFORD,
-
- BEING AN ANSWER TO
- HIS LORDSHIP’S ASSUMED REFUTATION OF
- _COLONEL NAPIER’S JUSTIFICATION OF HIS THIRD VOLUME_.
-
- BY COLONEL NAPIER, C.B.
-
- In 8vo. price 1s. 6d.
-
- * * * * *
-
- COUNTER-REMARKS TO
- MR. DUDLEY MONTAGU PERCEVAL’S
- REMARKS
-
- UPON SOME PASSAGES IN COLONEL NAPIER’S FOURTH VOLUME
- OF HIS HISTORY OF THE PENINSULAR WAR.
-
- In 8vo. price 1s. 6d.
-
- * * * * *
-
- In the Press, in one vol. 8vo.
-
- REMARKS ON MILITARY LAW
- AND THE
- PUNISHMENT OF FLOGGING.
-
- BY
- COLONEL CHARLES JAMES NAPIER, C.B.
-
- * * * * *
-
- COLONIZATION;
- PARTICULARLY
- IN SOUTHERN AUSTRALIA:
-
- WITH SOME REMARKS ON
- SMALL FARMS AND OVER POPULATION.
-
- BY COLONEL CHARLES JAMES NAPIER, C.B.
- Author of “The Colonies; particularly the Ionian Islands.”
-
- In One vol. 8vo. price 9_s._ boards.
-
-“We earnestly recommend the book to all who feel an interest in the
-welfare of the people.”—_Sun._
-
- * * * * *
-
- In One Volume, post 8vo. price 10_s._ 6_d._
-
- RANDOM SHOTS
- FROM A RIFLEMAN.
-
- BY
- CAPTAIN JOHN KINCAID, FIRST BATTALION,
- _Author of “Adventures in the Rifle Brigade.”_
-
-“It is one of the most pithy, witty, soldier-like, and pleasant books
-in existence.”—_United Service Journal._
-
-“The present volume is to the full as pleasant, and, what is still
-more strange, as original as the last. Criticism would become a
-sinecure if many such volumes were written: all left for us is to
-admire and recommend.”—_New Monthly Magazine._
-
-“If you have military adventures to relate, take pen in hand, and
-relate them in the pleasant, cheerful, and agreeable manner, in which
-John Kincaid, the prince of adjutants and good fellows, relates
-his. Read his _Random Shots_, in order to give you an idea of such
-matters, for few there are who have seen more shots fired than the
-gallant captain of the rifles.”—_Fraser’s Magazine._
-
-“The present volume is likely to add to his reputation. It
-is a useful appendix to the larger works of Napier and other
-military commentators. It is never dull, tedious, technical, or
-intricate.”—_Times._
-
-“Those who have read Captain Kincaid’s Adventures in the Rifle
-Brigade will seize this volume with avidity, and having dashed
-through it, will lay it down with only one feeling of regret—that it
-is not longer.”—_News._
-
-“His book is full of genuine humour, without one particle of the
-trickery sometimes resorted to for the purpose of supplying the place
-of wit.”—_Sun._
-
-“This is a most racy, spiritedly sketchy performance.”—_Court
-Journal._
-
- * * * * *
-
- In Two Volumes, post 8vo. price 21_s._
-
- ADMIRAL NAPIER’S
- ACCOUNT OF THE
- WAR IN PORTUGAL
-
- BETWEEN
- DON PEDRO AND DON MIGUEL,
- WITH PLANS OF HIS ACTION OFF
- CAPE ST. VINCENT.
-
-“An excellent and spirit-stirring book—plain, honest, and
-straightforward—the very stuff of which the web of history alone
-should be composed. This is indeed an honest, fair, and impartial
-history.”—_Morning Chronicle._
-
-“In spirit and in keeping, from beginning to end, Admiral Napier’s
-‘War in Portugal’ is the happiest picture we could conceive of the
-hero of the battle off Cape St. Vincent—its especial excellence
-consisting in a regardless bluntness of manner and language that is
-quite admirable and delightful.”—_Monthly Review._
-
-“His work will create a fresh interest in events, which, before
-reading, we thought impossible.”—_Naval and Military Gazette._
-
-“It is Cæsar’s Commentaries in the first person.”—_Spectator._
-
-“Candid to a degree, and sincere as a sailor’s will. This is the very
-stuff of which history should be composed.”—_Bell’s Messenger._
-
-“If Admiral Napier be not distinguished by the common-place
-facilities of authorship, he possesses the higher qualities of truth,
-discretion, and clear-sightedness, in no slight degree.”—_Atlas._
-
-“In speaking of himself and his deeds, he has hit the just and
-difficult medium—shewing his real feelings, yet steering clear of
-affected modesty on the one hand, and of overweening modesty on the
-other.”—_Tait’s Magazine._
-
-“This is a very graphic account of the affairs in which the gallant
-author figured so nobly, and added fresh lustre to the name of
-Napier.”—_News._
-
- * * * * *
-
- In foolscap 8vo. price 1_s._
-
- THE NURSERY GOVERNESS;
-
- BY ELIZABETH NAPIER,
-
- Published after her Death by her Husband, Col. C. J. Napier, C.B.
-
-“Hear the instructions of thy father, and forsake not the law of thy
-mother.”—_Proverbs_, ch. i. v. 8.
-
-“This is an admirable little book.”—_True Sun._
-
-“The excellent instructions laid down by Mrs. Napier will, we have
-no doubt, prove a ‘rich legacy’ not only to her own children, but to
-those in many a nursery.”—_Liverpool Chronicle._
-
-“Not only the nursery-governess, but the mother and daughter,
-especially in the higher walks of life, may read it with
-advantage.”—_Atlas._
-
-“We are so convinced of its utility, that we would strongly recommend
-it to the diligent study of every female who has the care of a
-family, either as a mother or governess.”—_Sun._
-
- * * * * *
-
- In One Volume, post 8vo. price 10_s._ 6_d._ boards,
-
- NARRATIVE OF
- EVENTS IN THE SOUTH OF FRANCE,
-
- And of the ATTACK ON NEW ORLEANS, in 1814 & 1815.
-
- By CAPT. I. H. COOKE, 43d Regt.
-
-“This clever and fearless account of the attack on New Orleans is
-penned by one of the ‘occupation;’ whose soldier-like view and keen
-observation during the period of the stirring events he so well
-relates, has enabled him to bring before the public the ablest
-account that has yet been given of that ill-fated and disgraceful
-expedition, and also to rescue the troops who were employed on it
-from those degrading reflections which have hitherto unjustly been
-insinuated against them.”—_Gentleman’s Magazine._
-
-“We wish earnestly to call the attention of military men to
-the campaign before New Orleans. It is fraught with a fearful
-interest, and fixes upon the mind reflections of almost every hue.
-Captain Cooke’s relation is vivid; every evolution is made as
-clear to the eye as if we had been present, and the remarks, we
-think, are eminently judicious. The book must be generally read,”
-&c.—_Metropolitan._
-
-“It is full of good feeling, and it abounds with sketches of the
-service.”—_Sunday Herald._
-
- * * * * *
-
- SKETCHES IN SPAIN,
-
- During the Years 1829-30-31 and 32;
-
-Containing Notices of some Districts very little known; of the Manners of
- the People, Government, Recent Changes, Commerce, Fine Arts,
- and Natural History.
-
- BY CAPTAIN S. E. COOK, R.N. K.T.S. F.G.S.
-
- Two vol. 8vo. price 21_s._
-
-“Volumes of great value and attraction; we would say, in a word, they
-afford us the most complete account of Spain in every respect which
-has issued from the press.”—_Literary Gazette._
-
-“The value of the book is in its matter and its facts. If written
-upon any country it would have been useful, but treating of one
-like Spain, about which we know almost nothing, but of which it is
-desirable to know so much, Captain Cook’s Sketches must be considered
-an acquisition to the library.”—_Spectator._
-
-“These volumes comprise every point worthy of notice, and the whole
-is so interspersed with lively adventure and description; so imbued
-with a kindly spirit of good-nature, courting and acknowledging
-attention, as to render it attractive reading.”—_United Service
-Gazette._
-
-“No one could either pretend to write or converse upon this country
-without preparing himself by a previous perusal of this instructive
-work.”—_Metropolitan._
-
- * * * * *
-
- Just Published, in post 8vo. price 5s.
-
- RECOLLECTIONS AND REFLECTIONS
-
-Relative of the Duties of Troops composing the advanced Corps of the Army,
-
- BY LIEUTENANT-COLONEL I. LEACH, C.B.
- Late of the Rifle Brigade.
- Author of “Rough Sketches of the Life of an Old Soldier.”
-
- * * * * *
-
- THE HISTORY
- OF THE
- KING’S GERMAN LEGION,
-
- FROM THE PERIOD OF ITS ORGANIZATION IN 1803, TO THAT OF ITS
- DISSOLUTION IN 1816.
-
- _Compiled from Manuscript Documents._
-
- By N. LUDLOW BEAMISH, ESQ. F.R.S. late Major unattached.
-
-Vol. I. 8vo. with coloured plates; price 20_s._ boards; to be completed in
- two volumes.
-
-“The work is not like others we could name—a mere compilation from
-newspapers and magazines. Major Beamish has left no source of
-information unexplored; and the access he obtained to manuscript
-journals has enabled him to intersperse his general narrative
-with interesting personal anecdotes, that render this volume as
-delightful for those who read for amusement, as those who read for
-profit.”—_Athenæum._
-
-“We are altogether much pleased with the volume, and heartily
-recommend it to the British public.”—_Literary Gazette._
-
- * * * * *
-
- MEMOIR
-
- BY
- GENERAL SIR HEW DALRYMPLE, BART.
-
- OF HIS
- PROCEEDINGS AS CONNECTED WITH THE AFFAIRS OF SPAIN,
- AND THE
- COMMENCEMENT OF THE PENINSULAR WAR.
-
- In one vol. 8vo. price 9_s._ boards.
-
-“These volumes, the work of a gentleman of high and varied
-accomplishments, whose opportunities of observation have been
-unusually extensive and well-improved, will command and repay
-attention. They contain by far the best account of Spain which has
-yet issued from the press.”—_United Service Gazette._
-
- * * * * *
-
- AN ESSAY ON THE
- PRINCIPLES AND CONSTRUCTION OF
- MILITARY BRIDGES,
-
- AND THE PASSAGE OF RIVERS IN MILITARY OPERATIONS.
-
- BY MAJOR-GENERAL SIR HOWARD DOUGLAS, BART.
-
- K.S.C., D.C.L., F.R.S., &c. &c.
-
- The Second Edition, containing much additional Matter and Plates,
- 8vo. price 20_s._ boards.
-
- * * * * *
-
- In 8vo. price 2_s._
-
- PRUSSIA IN 1833;
-
- ORGANIZATION OF THE ARMY OF PRUSSIA, AND HER CIVIL INSTITUTIONS.
-
- Translated from the French by M. de Chambray. With an Appendix by
- General de Caraman.
-
-“We would recommend to military readers in general, and especially to
-the authorities who have the destiny of the army in their hands, an
-attentive perusal of this work. The public will learn from it that
-the army in Prussia, hitherto supposed to be the worst paid force,
-is, in fact, better dealt with than is the case ‘_with the best paid
-army in Europe_.’”—_United Service Journal._
-
- * * * * *
-
- _In the Press_,
-
- THE CAMPAIGNS OF DON PEDRO
- IN PORTUGAL,
-
- From the Landing of the Constitutional Army to the Convention of
- Evora Monte, and subsequent Disbanding of the Armies.
-
- BY GENERAL ANTHONY BACON.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Immediately will be Published, in one vol. 8vo.
-
- THE ADVENTURES OF
- CAPTAIN JOHN PATTERSON,
- OF THE 50th, OR QUEEN’S OWN REGIMENT.
-
-_With Notices of the Officers and of the Regiment from 1807 to 1821._
-
-
-
-
- TRANSCRIBER’S NOTE
-
- Obvious typographical errors and punctuation errors have been
- corrected after careful comparison with other occurrences within
- the text and consultation of external sources.
-
- Some hyphens in words have been silently removed, some added,
- when a predominant preference was found in the original book.
-
- Some occurrences of upper-case titles (such as Lord, Sir, General)
- have been made lower-case for consistency.
-
- To save space in the wide tables in Appendix Notes XVIII and XIX,
- the headings ‘Hospital.’ ‘Cavalry.’ and ‘Artillery.’ have been
- abbreviated to ‘Hosp.’ ‘Cav.’ and ‘Art.’.
-
- In those sections of the Appendix that are French documents,
- incorrect grammar, spelling and accents have been left unchanged.
-
- In notes XVIII-XXII of the Appendix some of the printed totals
- are incorrect; these have been left as printed.
-
- Except for those changes noted below, all misspellings in the text,
- and inconsistent or archaic usage, have been retained.
-
- Pg iii: The anchor for the first Footnote was missing; it has been
- placed at the end of the paragraph “... shall now learn.”
- Pg vii: ‘2º.’ inserted in front of ‘_Battle of Busaco._’.
- Pg xlii: ‘have been mistated’ replaced by ‘have been misstated’.
- Pg lxiv: ‘for tho letter’ replaced by ‘for the letter’.
- Pg lxxiv: ‘be here meaned’ replaced by ‘be here meant’.
- Pg lxxv: ‘Holland combated’ replaced by ‘Holland combatted’.
- Pg lxxvii: ‘in underminig those’ replaced by ‘in undermining those’.
- Pg 20: ‘Castello’ replaced by ‘Castelo’. Also on pg 338 and pg 521.
- Pg 37: ‘instead of faling’ replaced by ‘instead of falling’.
- Pg 72: ‘to war down’ replaced by ‘to wear down’.
- Pg 100: ‘Appendix No. 1, Section 1.’ replaced by ‘Appendix No. 18.’.
- Pg 139: ‘on the sea-bord’ replaced by ‘on the sea-board’.
- Pg 165: ‘Ciudad Rodigo road’ replaced by ‘Ciudad Rodrigo road’.
- Pg 196: ‘from Valladodid in’ replaced by ‘from Valladolid in’.
- Pg 205: ‘the disputes betwen’ replaced by ‘the disputes between’.
- Pg 214: ‘the aid-de-camp of’ replaced by ‘the aide-de-camp of’.
- Pg 216: In the Sidenote: ‘Sarsfield’ replaced by ‘Sarzfield’.
- Pg 228: In the Sidenote: ‘official re-’ replaced by ‘official report’.
- Pg 238: ‘the aid-du-camp of’ replaced by ‘the aide-de-camp of’.
- Pg 267: ‘and pallisaded work’ replaced by ‘and palisaded work’.
- Pg 283: ‘army of Porugal’ replaced by ‘army of Portugal’.
- Pg 293: ‘had place at’ replaced by ‘had taken place at’.
- Pg 318: ‘wanton villany’ replaced by ‘wanton villainy’.
- Pg 340: ‘the last compaign’ replaced by ‘the last campaign’.
- Pg 398: ‘the militaay chest’ replaced by ‘the military chest’.
- Pg 399: ‘the preceedings of’ replaced by ‘the proceedings of’.
- Pg 405: ‘partisans of the’ replaced by ‘partizans of the’.
- Pg 418: ‘the Englsh general’ replaced by ‘the English general’.
- Pg 419: ‘court-martials for’ replaced by ‘courts-martial for’.
- Pg 426: ‘the multidude, and’ replaced by ‘the multitude, and’.
- Pg 499: ‘Bilbao, immedately’ replaced by ‘Bilbao, immediately’.
- Pg 564: ‘retrogade movement’ replaced by ‘retrograde movement’.
- Pg 575: ‘defensive sytem is’ replaced by ‘defensive system is’.
- Pg 619: ‘Portugal, Jnne 15’ replaced by ‘Portugal, June 15’.
- Pg 620: ‘Prisoner’ replaced by ‘Prisonnier’.
-
-*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HISTORY OF THE WAR IN THE
-PENINSULA AND IN THE SOUTH OF FRANCE FROM THE YEAR 1807 TO THE YEAR
-1814, VOL. 5 OF 6 ***
-
-Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will
-be renamed.
-
-Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
-law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works,
-so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the
-United States without permission and without paying copyright
-royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part
-of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
-concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark,
-and may not be used if you charge for an eBook, except by following
-the terms of the trademark license, including paying royalties for use
-of the Project Gutenberg trademark. If you do not charge anything for
-copies of this eBook, complying with the trademark license is very
-easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose such as creation
-of derivative works, reports, performances and research. Project
-Gutenberg eBooks may be modified and printed and given away--you may
-do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks not protected
-by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the trademark
-license, especially commercial redistribution.
-
-START: FULL LICENSE
-
-THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
-PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
-
-To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
-distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
-(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full
-Project Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at
-www.gutenberg.org/license.
-
-Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-
-1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
-and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
-(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
-the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or
-destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your
-possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a
-Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound
-by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the
-person or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph
-1.E.8.
-
-1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
-used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
-agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
-things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
-paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this
-agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below.
-
-1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the
-Foundation" or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection
-of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual
-works in the collection are in the public domain in the United
-States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the
-United States and you are located in the United States, we do not
-claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing,
-displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as
-all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope
-that you will support the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting
-free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm
-works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the
-Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with the work. You can easily
-comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the
-same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg-tm License when
-you share it without charge with others.
-
-1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
-what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are
-in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States,
-check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this
-agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing,
-distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any
-other Project Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no
-representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any
-country other than the United States.
-
-1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
-
-1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other
-immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear
-prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work
-on which the phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the
-phrase "Project Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed,
-performed, viewed, copied or distributed:
-
- 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 will have to check the laws of the country where
- you are located before using this eBook.
-
-1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is
-derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not
-contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the
-copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in
-the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are
-redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply
-either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or
-obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
-with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
-must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any
-additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms
-will be linked to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works
-posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the
-beginning of this work.
-
-1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
-License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
-work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
-
-1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
-electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
-prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
-active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm License.
-
-1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
-compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including
-any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access
-to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format
-other than "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official
-version posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm website
-(www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense
-to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means
-of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original "Plain
-Vanilla ASCII" or other form. Any alternate format must include the
-full Project Gutenberg-tm License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
-
-1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
-performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
-unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
-access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-provided that:
-
-* You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
- the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
- you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed
- to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he has
- agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid
- within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are
- legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty
- payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in
- Section 4, "Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg
- Literary Archive Foundation."
-
-* You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
- you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
- does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
- License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all
- copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue
- all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg-tm
- works.
-
-* You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of
- any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
- electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of
- receipt of the work.
-
-* You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
- distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
-
-1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work or group of works on different terms than
-are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing
-from the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the manager of
-the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the Foundation as set
-forth in Section 3 below.
-
-1.F.
-
-1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
-effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
-works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project
-Gutenberg-tm collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may
-contain "Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate
-or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
-intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or
-other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or
-cannot be read by your equipment.
-
-1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
-of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
-liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
-fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
-LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
-PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
-TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
-LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
-INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
-DAMAGE.
-
-1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
-defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
-receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
-written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
-received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium
-with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you
-with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in
-lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person
-or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second
-opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If
-the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing
-without further opportunities to fix the problem.
-
-1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
-in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO
-OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT
-LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
-
-1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
-warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of
-damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement
-violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the
-agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or
-limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or
-unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the
-remaining provisions.
-
-1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
-trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
-providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in
-accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the
-production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses,
-including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of
-the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this
-or any Project Gutenberg-tm work, (b) alteration, modification, or
-additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any
-Defect you cause.
-
-Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
-electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of
-computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It
-exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations
-from people in all walks of life.
-
-Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
-assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
-goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
-remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
-and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future
-generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see
-Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at
-www.gutenberg.org
-
-Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation
-
-The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non-profit
-501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
-state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
-Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
-number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by
-U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
-
-The Foundation's business office is located at 809 North 1500 West,
-Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up
-to date contact information can be found at the Foundation's website
-and official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
-
-Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without
-widespread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
-increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
-freely distributed in machine-readable form accessible by the widest
-array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
-($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
-status with the IRS.
-
-The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
-charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
-States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
-considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
-with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
-where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND
-DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular
-state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
-have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
-against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
-approach us with offers to donate.
-
-International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
-any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
-outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
-
-Please check the Project Gutenberg web pages for current donation
-methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
-ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To
-donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-
-Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm concept of a library of electronic works that could be
-freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and
-distributed Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of
-volunteer support.
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
-editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in
-the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not
-necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper
-edition.
-
-Most people start at our website which has the main PG search
-facility: www.gutenberg.org
-
-This website includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
-including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
-subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
diff --git a/old/69220-0.zip b/old/69220-0.zip
deleted file mode 100644
index 68ec608..0000000
--- a/old/69220-0.zip
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/69220-h.zip b/old/69220-h.zip
deleted file mode 100644
index f83ca85..0000000
--- a/old/69220-h.zip
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/69220-h/69220-h.htm b/old/69220-h/69220-h.htm
deleted file mode 100644
index 84e2df4..0000000
--- a/old/69220-h/69220-h.htm
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,30061 +0,0 @@
-<!DOCTYPE html>
-<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en" lang="en">
-<head>
- <meta charset="UTF-8" />
- <title>
- History of the war in the Peninsula, Vol. 5 of 6, by W. F. P. Napier—A Project Gutenberg eBook
- </title>
- <link rel="icon" href="images/cover.jpg" type="image/x-cover" />
- <style> /* <![CDATA[ */
-
-body {
- margin-left: 10%;
- margin-right: 10%;
-}
-
- h1,h2,h3,h4 {
- text-align: center; /* all headings centered */
- clear: both;
- margin-top: 1.5em;
- margin-bottom: 1em;
- word-spacing: 0.2em;
- letter-spacing: 0.1em;
- line-height: 1em;
- font-weight: normal;
-}
-
-h1 {font-size: 160%; line-height: 2em; margin-bottom: .5em;}
-h2 {font-size: 130%; line-height: 1.7em; letter-spacing: 0.1em;}
-h3 {font-size: 110%;}
-h4 {font-size: 80%; margin-top: 2em;}
-
-p {
- margin-top: .51em;
- text-align: justify;
- margin-bottom: .49em;
- text-indent: 1em;
-}
-
-.p1 {margin-top: 1em;}
-.p2 {margin-top: 2em;}
-.p3 {margin-top: 3em;}
-.p4 {margin-top: 4em;}
-.p10 {margin-top: 10em;}
-
-.p4b {margin-bottom: 4em;}
-
-.negin1 {padding-left: 1em; text-indent: -1em; text-align: justify;}
-.in6 {text-indent: 6em; text-align: justify;}
-
-.noindent {text-indent: 0em;}
-
-div.chapter {page-break-before: always;}
-h2.nobreak {page-break-before: avoid;}
-
-x-ebookmaker-drop, .x-ebookmaker-drop {}
-
-.pfs150 {font-size: 150%; text-align: center; text-indent: 0em; word-spacing: 0.3em;}
-.pfs135 {font-size: 135%; text-align: center; text-indent: 0em; word-spacing: 0.3em;}
-.pfs120 {font-size: 120%; text-align: center; text-indent: 0em; word-spacing: 0.3em;}
-.pfs100 {font-size: 100%; text-align: center; text-indent: 0em; word-spacing: 0.3em;}
-.pfs90 {font-size: 90%; text-align: center; text-indent: 0em; word-spacing: 0.3em;}
-.pfs80 {font-size: 80%; text-align: center; text-indent: 0em; word-spacing: 0.3em;}
-.pfs70 {font-size: 70%; text-align: center; text-indent: 0em; word-spacing: 0.3em;}
-.pfs60 {font-size: 60%; text-align: center; text-indent: 0em; word-spacing: 0.3em;}
-
-.fs50 {font-size: 50%; font-style: normal;}
-.fs60 {font-size: 60%; font-style: normal;}
-.fs70 {font-size: 70%; font-style: normal;}
-.fs80 {font-size: 80%; font-style: normal;}
-.fs90 {font-size: 90%; font-style: normal;}
-.fs120 {font-size: 120%; font-style: normal;}
-.fs150 {font-size: 150%; font-style: normal;}
-
-.bold {font-weight: bold;}
-
-
-/* for horizontal lines */
-hr {
- width: 33%;
- margin-top: 1em;
- margin-bottom: .7em;
- margin-left: 33.5%;
- margin-right: 33.5%;
- clear: both;
-}
-
-hr.tb {width: 30%; margin-left: 35%; margin-right: 35%;}
-hr.chap {width: 65%; margin-left: 17.5%; margin-right: 17.5%;}
-hr.full {width: 95%; margin-left: 2.5%; margin-right: 2.5%;}
-
-hr.r10 {width: 10%; margin-left: 45%; margin-right: 45%;}
-hr.r20 {width: 20%; margin-left: 40%; margin-right: 40%;}
-hr.r30 {width: 30%; margin-left: 35%; margin-right: 35%;}
-
-.x-ebookmaker hr.chap {width: 0%; display: none;}
-
-
-/* for inserting info from TN and Errata changes */
-.corr {
- text-decoration: none;
- border-bottom: thin dashed blue;}
-
-.x-ebookmaker .corr {
- text-decoration: none;
- border-bottom: none;}
-
-
-/* for different code on screen versus handhelds */
-.screenonly { display: block; }
-
-.x-ebookmaker .screenonly { display: none; }
-
-
-/* for tables */
-table {
- margin-left: auto;
- margin-right: auto;}
-
-table.autotable { border-collapse: collapse; }
-
-td {padding: .18em .3em 0 .3em;}
-
-.tdl {text-align: left; padding-left: 1.5em; text-indent: -1em;}
-.tdr {text-align: right;}
-.tdc {text-align: center;}
-
-.tdlx {text-align: justify; padding-left: 1em; text-indent: -1em;
- padding-top: .5em; vertical-align: top;}
-.tdly {text-align: justify; padding-left: 1em; text-indent: -1em;
- vertical-align: top;}
-
-.tdcx {text-align: center; padding-top: 1.5em; padding-bottom: 0em;}
-
-.tdrp {text-align: right; padding-right: 1.5em;}
-.tdrq {text-align: right; padding-right: 2em;}
-.tdrqq {text-align: right; padding-right: 4em;}
-
-.tdrb {text-align: right; vertical-align: bottom;}
-.tdrt {text-align: right; vertical-align: top;}
-
-.bt {vertical-align: middle; border-top: solid thin;}
-.bb {vertical-align: middle; border-bottom: solid thin;}
-
-.wd20 {width: 20%;}
-.wd40 {width: 40%;}
-.wd50 {width: 50%;}
-
-
-/* for spacing */
-.pad2 {padding-left: 2em;}
-.pad3 {padding-left: 3em;}
-.pad4 {padding-left: 4em;}
-.pad6 {padding-left: 6em;}
-.pad10 {padding-left: 10em;}
-
-.padr2 {padding-right: 2em;}
-.padr4 {padding-right: 4em;}
-.padr6 {padding-right: 6em;}
-.padr13 {padding-right: 13em;}
-
-
-.pagenum { /* uncomment the next line for invisible page numbers */
- /* visibility: hidden; */
- position: absolute;
- color: #A9A9A9;
- left: 92%;
- font-size: smaller;
- text-align: right;
- font-style: normal;
- font-weight: normal;
- font-variant: normal;
- text-indent: .5em;
-}
-
-
-/* blockquote (/# #/) */
-
-.letterquot { margin: .5em; font-size: 90%; line-height: 1.3em;}
-
-/* sidenotes */
-.sidenote, .sidenote7, .sidenote9 {
- float: right;
- clear: right;
- margin: .5em .3em 0 .5em;
- padding: .2em;
- text-align: left;
- text-indent: 0em;
- font-size: 60%;
- color: black;
- background: #eeeeee;
- border: dashed thin;
- font-style: normal;
- font-weight: normal;}
-
-.sidenote {
- float: right;
- clear: right;
- width: 18%;}
-
-.x-ebookmaker .sidenote {
- float: right;
- clear: right;
- width: 18%;}
-
-.sidenote7 {
- float: right;
- clear: right;
- width: 7%;}
-
-.x-ebookmaker .sidenote7 {
- float: right;
- clear: right;
- width: 7%;}
-
-.sidenote9 {
- float: right;
- clear: right;
- width: 9%;}
-
-.x-ebookmaker .sidenote9 {
- float: right;
- clear: right;
- width: 9%;}
-
-
-/* general placement and presentation */
-.bbox {margin: 0em;
- padding: .25em;
- border: solid thin;}
-
-.center {text-align: center; text-indent: 0em;}
-
-.right {text-align: right; margin-right: 1em;}
-.rt {text-align: right; margin-right: 1em; margin-bottom: -.7em;}
-
-.smcap {font-variant: small-caps;}
-.allsmcap {font-variant: small-caps; text-transform: lowercase;}
-
-sup {font-size: 60%;}
-sub {font-size: 60%;}
-
-.lsp {letter-spacing: 0.1em;}
-.lsp2 {letter-spacing: 0.2em;}
-.lsp3 {letter-spacing: 0.3em;}
-.lht {line-height: 2em;}
-
-
-.caption {font-weight: normal; font-size: 70%;
- padding-bottom: 0.50em;}
-
-
-/* Images */
-
-img {
- border: none;
- max-width: 100%;
- height: auto;
-}
-
-img.w100 {width: 100%;}
-
-
-.figcenter {
- margin: auto;
- text-align: center;
- page-break-inside: avoid;
- max-width: 100%;}
-
-
-/* Footnotes */
-.footnotes {border: dashed 1px; margin-top: 2em; margin-bottom: 3em;
- padding-bottom: 1em;}
-
-.footnote {margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-size: 90%;}
-.footnote p {text-indent: 0em;}
-.footnote .label {position: absolute; right: 84%; text-align: right;}
-
-.fnanchor {
- vertical-align: super;
- font-size: .8em;
- text-decoration: none;
-}
-
-
-/* Transcriber's notes */
-.transnote {background-color: #E6E6FA;
- color: black;
- font-size:smaller;
- padding:0.5em;
- margin-bottom:5em;
- font-family:sans-serif, serif; }
-
-.transnote p {text-indent: 0em;}
-
-
-/* custom cover (cover.jpg) */
-.customcover {visibility: hidden; display: none;}
-.x-ebookmaker .customcover {visibility: visible; display: block;}
-
-/* Illustration classes */
-.illowp100 {width: 100%;}
-.illowp50 {width: 50%;}
-
- /* ]]> */ </style>
-</head>
-<body>
-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of History of the war in the Peninsula and in the south of France from the year 1807 to the year 1814, vol. 5 of 6, by William Francis Patrick Napier</p>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-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 <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
-are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: History of the war in the Peninsula and in the south of France from the year 1807 to the year 1814, vol. 5 of 6</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: William Francis Patrick Napier</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: October 24, 2022 [eBook #69220]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: Brian Coe, John Campbell and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries)</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HISTORY OF THE WAR IN THE PENINSULA AND IN THE SOUTH OF FRANCE FROM THE YEAR 1807 TO THE YEAR 1814, VOL. 5 OF 6 ***</div>
-
-
-<div class="transnote">
-<p><strong>TRANSCRIBER’S NOTE</strong></p>
-
-<p>There are only two Footnotes in the book. They have been placed at
-the end of the book. The anchors are denoted by <span class="fnanchor">[1]</span> and <span class="fnanchor">[2]</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="customcover">The cover image was created by the transcriber
-and is placed in the public domain.</p>
-
-<p>This is volume 5 of 6. Similar to volume 4, this volume had a date
-(Year. Month) as a margin header on most pages. This information about
-the chronology of the narrative has been preserved as a Sidenote to
-the relevant paragraph on that page whenever the header date changed.</p>
-
-<p>With a few exceptions noted at the end of the book, variant spellings
-of names have not been changed.</p>
-
-<p>Some minor changes to the text are noted at the <a href="#TN">end of the book.</a>
-<span class="screenonly">These are indicated by a <ins class="corr">dashed blue</ins> underline.</span></p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="pad3">Volume 1 of this series can be found at</span><br />
-<span class="pad6"><a href="https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/67318">https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/67318</a></span><br />
-<span class="pad3">Volume 2 of this series can be found at</span><br />
-<span class="pad6"><a href="https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/67554">https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/67554</a></span><br />
-<span class="pad3">Volume 3 of this series can be found at</span><br />
-<span class="pad6"><a href="https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/68187">https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/68187</a></span><br />
-<span class="pad3">Volume 4 of this series can be found at</span><br />
-<span class="pad6"><a href="https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/68536">https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/68536</a></span><br />
-</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h1>
-<span class="lsp2 bold">HISTORY</span><br />
-<span class="fs50">OF THE</span><br />
-<span class="fs120">WAR IN THE PENINSULA</span></h1>
-</div>
-
-<p class="pfs80">AND IN THE</p>
-
-<p class="p1 pfs120">SOUTH OF FRANCE,</p>
-
-<p class="p1 pfs90">FROM THE YEAR 1807 TO THE YEAR 1814.</p>
-
-<p class="p2 pfs70">BY</p>
-
-<p class="pfs135">W. F. P. NAPIER, C.B.</p>
-
-<p class="pfs70 lht"><em>COLONEL H. P. FORTY-THIRD REGIMENT,<br />
-MEMBER OF THE ROYAL SWEDISH ACADEMY OF MILITARY SCIENCES.</em></p>
-
-<p class="p1 pfs120">VOL. V.</p>
-
-<hr class="r10" />
-
-<p class="p2 pfs70">TO WHICH ARE PREFIXED</p>
-<p class="pfs90">ANSWERS TO SOME ATTACKS</p>
-<p class="pfs70">IN</p>
-<p class="pfs80">ROBINSON’S LIFE OF PICTON, <span class="allsmcap">AND IN</span> THE QUARTERLY REVIEW;</p>
-<p class="p1 pfs70">WITH</p>
-<p class="pfs100">COUNTER-REMARKS</p>
-<p class="pfs70">TO</p>
-<p class="pfs90">MR. DUDLEY MONTAGU PERCEVAL’S REMARKS</p>
-<p class="p1 pfs70">UPON SOME PASSAGES IN COLONEL NAPIER’S FOURTH VOLUME OF
-THE HISTORY OF THE PENINSULAR WAR.</p>
-
-<hr class="r30" />
-
-<p class="p1 pfs100">LONDON:</p>
-<p class="pfs90">THOMAS &amp; WILLIAM BOONE, NEW BOND-STREET.</p>
-
-<hr class="r10" />
-
-<p class="pfs70 lsp">MDCCCXXXVI.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<p class="p10 pfs80">LONDON:</p>
-
-<p class="pfs70">MARCHANT, PRINTER, INGRAM-COURT, FENCHURCH-STREET.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="TABLE_OF_CONTENTS">TABLE OF CONTENTS.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table class="autotable fs80">
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlx"><a href="#NOTICE">Notice</a></td>
-<td class="tdrb">Page&#160;i</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlx"><a href="#Robinson">Answer to Robinson’s Life of Picton</a></td>
-<td class="tdrb">ii</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlx"><a href="#Quarterly">Answer to the Quarterly Review</a></td>
-<td class="tdrb">xxiv</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlx"><a href="#COUNTER-REMARKS">Counter-Remarks, &amp;c.</a></td>
-<td class="tdrb">xlvii</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdcx fs150" colspan="2"><a href="#BOOK_XVII">BOOK XVII.</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdcx fs120 lsp" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_BXVII_I">CHAPTER I.</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlx">Summary of the political state of affairs—Lord Wellesley resigns—Mr. Perceval killed—New administration—Story of the war
- resumed—Wellington’s precautionary measures described—He relinquishes the design of invading Andalusia and resolves to
- operate in the north—Reasons why—Surprize of Almaraz by general Hill—False alarm given by sir William Erskine prevents
- Hill from taking the fort of Mirabete—Wellington’s discontent—Difficult moral position of English generals</td>
-<td class="tdrb">Page&#160;1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdcx fs120 lsp" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_BXVII_II">CHAP. II.</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlx">Progress of the war in different parts of Spain—State of Gallicia-French precautions and successes against the Partidas of
- the north—Marmont’s arrangements in Castile—Maritime expedition suggested by sir Howard Douglas—He stimulates the activity
- of the northern Partidas—The curate Merino defeats some French near Aranda de Duero—His cruelty to the prisoners—Mina’s
- activity—Harasses the enemy in Arragon—Is surprized at Robres by general Pannetier—Escapes with difficulty—Re-appears in
- the Rioja—Gains the defiles of Navas Tolosa—Captures two great convoys—Is chased by general Abbé and nearly crushed, whereby
- the Partidas in the north are discouraged—Those in other parts become more enterprising—The course of the Ebro from Tudela
- to Tortoza so infested by them that the army of the Ebro is formed by drafts from Sachet’s forces and placed under general
- Reille to repress them—Operations of Palombini against the Partidas—He moves towards Madrid—Returns to the Ebro—Is ordered
- to join the king’s army—Operations in Arragon and Catalonia—The Catalonians are cut off from the coast line—Eroles raises a
- new division in Talarn—Advances into Arragon—Defeats general Bourke at Rhoda—Is driven into Catalonia by Severoli—Decaen
- defeats Sarzfield and goes to Lerida—Lacy concentrates in the mountains of Olot—Descends upon Mattaro—Flies from thence
- disgracefully—Lamarque defeats Sarzfield—Lacy’s bad conduct—Miserable state of Catalonia</td>
-<td class="tdrb">23</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdcx fs120 lsp" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_BXVII_III">CHAP. III.</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlx">Operations in Valencia and Murcia—Sachet’s able government of Valencia—O’Donel organizes a new army in Murcia—Origin of
- the Sicilian expedition to Spain—Secret intrigues against Napoleon in Italy and other parts—Lord William Bentinck proposes
- to invade Italy—Lord Wellington opposes it—The Russian admiral Tchtchagoff projects a descent upon Italy—Vacillating
- conduct of the English ministers productive of great mischief—Lord William Bentinck sweeps the money-markets to the injury
- of lord Wellington’s operations—Sir John Moore’s plan for Sicily rejected—His ability and foresight proved by the ultimate
- result—Evil effects of bad government shewn by examples</td>
-<td class="tdrb">45</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdcx fs120 lsp" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_BXVII_IV">CHAP. IV.</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlx">Operations in Andalusia and Estremadura—Advantage of lord Wellington’s position shewn—Soult’s plans vast but
- well-considered—He designs to besiege Tarifa, Alicant, and Carthagena, and march upon Lisbon—Restores the French interest
- at the court of Morocco—English embassy to the Moorish emperor fails—Soult bombards Cadiz, and menaces a serious
- attack—Ballesteros, his rash conduct—He is defeated at Bornos—Effect of his defeat upon the allies in Estremadura—Foy
- succours the fort of Mirabete—Hill is reinforced—Drouet falls back to Azagua—Followed by Hill—General Slade defeated by
- Lallemande in a cavalry combat at Macquilla—Exploit of cornet Strenowitz—General Barrois marches to reinforce Drouet by
- the road of St. Ollala—Hill falls back to Albuera—His disinterested conduct</td>
-<td class="tdrb">56</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdcx fs120 lsp" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_BXVII_V">CHAP. V.</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlx">Political situation of France—Secret policy of the European courts—Causes of the Russian war—Napoleon’s grandeur and
- power—Scene on the Niemen—Design attributed to Napoleon of concentrating the French armies behind the Ebro—No traces of
- such an intention to be discovered—His proposals for peace considered—Political state of England—Effects of the continental
- system—Extravagance, harshness, and improvident conduct of the English ministers—Dispute with America—Political state of
- Spain—Intrigues of Carlotta—New scheme of mediation with the colonies—Mr. Sydenham’s opinion of it—New constitution
- adopted—Succession to the crown fixed—Abolition of the Inquisition agitated—Discontent of the clergy and
- absolute-monarchy-men—Neglect of the military affairs—Dangerous state of the country—Plot to deliver up Ceuta—Foreign
- policy of Spain—Negociations of Bardaxi at Stockholm—Fresh English subsidy—Plan of enlisting Spanish soldiers in British
- regiments fails—The councillor of state Sobral offers to carry off Ferdinand from Valençay but Ferdinand rejects his
- offer—Joseph talks of assembling a cortes at Madrid, but secretly negociates with that in the Isla</td>
-<td class="tdrb">65</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdcx fs120 lsp" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_BXVII_VI">CHAP. VI.</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlx">Political state of Portugal—Internal condition not improved—Government weak—Lord Strangford’s conduct condemned—Lord
- Wellesley resolves to recall him and send lord Louvaine to Rio Janeiro—Reasons why this did not take place—Lord
- Strangford’s career checked by the fear of being removed—Lord Wellington obtains full powers from the Brazils—Lord
- Castlereagh’s vigorous interference—Death of Linhares at Rio Janeiro—Domingo Souza succeeds him as chief minister but
- remains in London—Lord Wellington’s moderation towards the Portuguese regency—His embarrassing situation described—His
- opinion of the Spanish and Portuguese public men—His great diligence and foresight aided by the industry and vigour of
- Mr. Stuart supports the war—His administrative views and plans described—Opposed by the regency—He desires the prince
- regent’s return to Portugal without his wife—Carlotta prepares to come without the prince—Is stopped—Mr. Stuart proposes
- a military government but lord Wellington will not consent—Great desertion from the Portuguese army in consequence of
- their distressed state from the negligence of the government—Severe examples do not check it—The character of the
- Portuguese troops declines—Difficulty of procuring specie—Wellington’s resources impaired by the shameful cupidity of
- English merchants at Lisbon and Oporto—Proposal for a Portuguese bank made by Domingo Souza, Mr. Vansittart, and Mr.
- Villiers—Lord Wellington ridicules it—He permits a contraband trade to be carried on with Lisbon by Soult for the sake
- of the resources it furnishes</td>
-<td class="tdrb">83</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdcx fs150" colspan="2"><a href="#BOOK_XVIII">BOOK XVIII.</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdcx fs120 lsp" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_BXVIII_I">CHAP. I.</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlx">Numbers of the French in the Peninsula shewn—Joseph commander-in-chief—His dissentions with the French generals—His
- plans—Opposed by Soult, who recommends different operations and refuses to obey the king—Lord Wellington’s plans
- described—His numbers—Colonel Sturgeon skilfully repairs the bridge of Alcantara—The advantage of this measure—The
- navigation of the Tagus and the Douro improved and extended—Rash conduct of a commissary on the Douro—Remarkable letter
- of lord Wellington to lord Liverpool—Arrangements for securing the allies’ flanks and operating against the enemy’s
- flanks described—Marmont’s plans—His military character—He restores discipline to the army of Portugal—His measures for
- that purpose and the state of the French army described and compared with the state of the British army and Wellington’s
- measures</td>
-<td class="tdrb">100</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdcx fs120 lsp" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_BXVIII_II">CHAP. II.</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlx">Campaign of 1812—Wellington advances to the Tormes—Marmont retires—The allies besiege the forts of Salamanca—General
- aspect of affairs changes and becomes gloomy—The king concentrates the army of the centre—Marmont returns to the Tormes
- and cannonades the allies on the position of San Christoval—Various skirmishes—Adventure of Mr. Mackay—Marmont retires to
- Monte Rubia—Crosses the Tormes with a part of his army—Fine conduct of general Bock’s German cavalry—Graham crosses the
- Tormes and Marmont retires again to Monte Rubia—Observations on this movement—Assault on San Vincente fails—Heroic death
- of general Bowes—Siege suspended for want of ammunition—It is renewed—Cajetano is stormed—San Vincente being on fire
- surrenders—Marmont retires to the Duero followed by Wellington—The French rear-guard suffers some loss between Rueda and
- Tordesillas—Positions of the armies described—State of affairs in other parts described—Procrastination of the Gallician
- army—General Bonet abandons the Asturias—Coincidence of Wellington’s and Napoleon’s views upon that subject—Sir Home
- Popham arrives with his squadron on the coast of Biscay—His operations—Powerful effect of them upon the campaign—Wellington
- and Marmont alike cautious of bringing on a battle—Extreme difficulty and distress of Wellington’s situation</td>
-<td class="tdrb">122</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdcx fs120 lsp" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_BXVIII_III">CHAP. III.</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlx">Bonet arrives in the French camp—Marmont passes the Duero—Combat of Castrejon—Allies retire across the Guarena—Combat on
- that river—Observations on the movements—Marmont turns Wellington’s flank—Retreat to San Christoval—Marmont passes the
- Tormes—Battle of Salamanca—Anecdote of Mrs. Dalbiac</td>
-<td class="tdrb">147</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdcx fs120 lsp" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_BXVIII_IV">CHAP. IV.</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlx">Clauzel passes the Tormes at Alba—Cavalry combat at La Serna—Chauvel’s cavalry joins the French army—The king reaches
- Blasco Sancho—Retires to Espinar on hearing of the battle—Receives letters from Clauzel which induce him to march on
- Segovia—Wellington drives Clauzel across the Duero—Takes Valladolid—Brings Santocildes over the Duero—Marches upon
- Cuellar—The king abandons Segovia and recrosses the Guadarama—State of affairs in other parts of Spain—General Long
- defeats Lallemand in Estremadura—Caffarelli is drawn to the coast by Popham’s expedition—Wellington leaves Clinton at
- Cuellar and passes the Guadarama—Cavalry combat at Majadahonda—The king unites his army at Valdemoro—Miserable state of
- the French convoy—Joseph passes the Tagus; hears of the arrival of the Sicilian expedition at Alicant—Retreats upon
- Valencia instead of Andalusia—Maupoint’s brigade succours the garrison of Cuenca, is beaten at Utiel by Villa
- Campa—Wellington enters Madrid—The Retiro surrenders—Empecinado takes Guadalaxara—Extraordinary journey of colonel
- Fabvier—Napoleon hears of Marmont’s defeat—His generous conduct towards that marshal—Receives the king’s report against
- Soult—His magnanimity—Observations</td>
-<td class="tdrb">182</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdcx fs150" colspan="2"><a href="#BOOK_XIX">BOOK XIX.</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdcx fs120 lsp" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_BXIX_I">CHAP. I.</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlx">State of the war—Eastern operations—Lacy’s bad conduct—French army of the Ebro dissolved—Lacy’s secret agents blow up the
- magazines in Lerida—He is afraid to storm the place—Calumniates Sarzfield—Suchet comes to Reus—The hermitage of St. Dimas
- surrendered to Decaen by colonel Green—The French general burns the convent of Montserrat and marches to Lerida—General
- Maitland with the Anglo-Sicilian army appears off Palamos—Sails for Alicant—Reflections on this event—Operations in
- Murcia—O’Donel defeated at Castalla—Maitland lands at Alicant—Suchet concentrates his forces at Xativa—Entrenches a camp
- there—Maitland advances to Alcoy—His difficulties—Returns to Alicant—The king’s army arrives at Almanza—The remnant of
- Maupoint’s brigade arrives from Cuenca—Suchet re-occupies Alcoy—O’Donel comes up to Yecla—Maitland is reinforced from
- Sicily and entrenches a camp under the walls of Alicant</td>
-<td class="tdrb">213</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdcx fs120 lsp" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_BXIX_II">CHAP. II.</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlx">Operations in Andalusia—The king orders Soult to abandon that province—Soult urges the king to join him with the other
- armies—Joseph reiterates the order to abandon Andalusia—Soult sends a letter to the minister of war expressing his
- suspicions that Joseph was about to make a separate peace with the allies—The king intercepts this letter, and sends
- colonel Desprez to Moscow, to represent Soult’s conduct to the emperor—Napoleon’s magnanimity—Wellington anxiously
- watches Soult’s movements—Orders Hill to fight Drouet, and directs general Cooke to attack the French lines in front of
- the Isla de Leon—Ballesteros, pursued by Leval and Villate, skirmishes at Coin—Enters Malaga—Soult’s preparations to
- abandon Andalusia—Lines before the Isla de Leon abandoned—Soult marches towards Grenada—Colonel Skerrit and Cruz Murgeon
- land at Huelva—Attack the French rear-guard at Seville—Drouet marches upon Huescar—Soult moving by the mountains reaches
- Hellin, and effects his junction with the king and Suchet—Maitland desires to return to Sicily—Wellington prevents
- him—Wellington’s general plans considered—State of affairs in Castile—Clauzel comes down to Valladolid with the French
- army—Santo Cildes retires to Torrelobaton, and Clinton falls back to Arevalo—Foy marches to carry off the French garrisons
- in Leon—Astorga surrenders before his arrival—He marches to Zamora and drives Sylveira into Portugal—Menaces Salamanca—Is
- recalled by Clauzel—The Partidas get possession of the French posts on the Biscay coast—Take the city of Bilbao—Reille
- abandons several posts in Arragon—The northern provinces become ripe for insurrection</td>
-<td class="tdrb">234</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdcx fs120 lsp" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_BXIX_III">CHAP. III.</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlx">Wellington’s combinations described—Foolish arrangements of the English ministers relative to the Spanish clothing—Want of
- money—Political persecution in Madrid—Miserable state of that city—Character of the Madrilenos—Wellington marches against
- Clauzel—Device of the Portuguese regency to avoid supplying their troops—Wellington enters Valladolid—Waits for
- Castaños—His opinion of the Spaniards—Clauzel retreats to Burgos—His able generalship—The allies enter Burgos, which is in
- danger of destruction from the Partidas—Reflections upon the movements of the two armies—Siege of the castle of Burgos</td>
-<td class="tdrb">254</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdcx fs120 lsp" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_BXIX_IV">CHAP. IV.</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlx">State of the war in various parts of Spain—Joseph’s distress for money—Massena declines the command of the army of
- Portugal—Caffarelli joins that army—Reinforcements come from France—Mischief occasioned by the English newspapers—Souham
- takes the command—Operations of the Partidas—Hill reaches Toledo—Souham advances to relieve the castle of Burgos—Skirmish
- at Monasterio—Wellington takes a position of battle in front of Burgos—Second skirmish—Wellington weak in
- artillery—Negligence of the British government on that head—The relative situation of the belligerents—Wellington offered
- the chief command of the Spanish armies—His reasons for accepting it—Contumacious conduct of Ballesteros—He is arrested
- and sent to Ceuta—Suchet and Jourdan refuse the command of the army of the south—Soult reduces Chinchilla—The king
- communicates with Souham—Hill communicates with Wellington—Retreat from Burgos—Combat of Venta de Pozo—Drunkenness at
- Torquemada—Combat on the Carion—Wellington retires behind the Pisuerga—Disorders in the rear of the army—Souham skirmishes
- at the bridge of Cabeçon—Wellington orders Hill to retreat from the Tagus to the Adaja—Souham fails to force the bridges
- of Valladolid and Simancas—The French captain Guingret swims the Duero and surprizes the bridge of Tordesillas—Wellington
- retires behind the Duero—Makes a rapid movement to gain a position in front of the bridge of Tordesillas and destroys the
- bridges of Toro and Zamora, which arrests the march of the French</td>
-<td class="tdrb">280</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdcx fs120 lsp" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_BXIX_V">CHAP. V.</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlx">The king and Soult advance from Valencia to the Tagus—General Hill takes a position of battle—The French pass the
- Tagus—Skirmish at the Puente Largo—Hill blows up the Retiro and abandons Madrid—Riot in that city—Attachment of the
- Madrilenos towards the British troops—The hostile armies pass the Guadarama—Souham restores the bridge of Toro—Wellington
- retreats towards Salamanca and orders Hill to retreat upon Alba de Tormes—The allies take a position of battle behind the
- Tormes—The Spaniards at Salamanca display a hatred of the British—Instances of their ferocity—Soult cannonades the castle
- of Alba—The king reorganizes the French armies—Soult and Jourdan propose different plans—Soult’s plan adopted—French pass
- the Tormes—Wellington by a remarkable movement gains the Valmusa river and retreats—Misconduct of the troops—Sir Edward
- Paget taken prisoner—Combat on the Huebra—Anecdote—Retreat from thence to Ciudad Rodrigo—The armies on both sides take
- winter cantonments</td>
-<td class="tdrb">308</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdcx fs120 lsp" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_BXIX_VI">CHAP. VI.</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlx">Continuation of the Partizan warfare—General Lameth made governor of Santona—Reille takes the command of the army of
- Portugal—Drouet, count D’Erlon, commands that of the centre—Works of Astorga destroyed by the Spaniards—Mina’s operations
- in Arragon—Villa Campa’s operations—Empecinado and others enter Madrid—The duke Del Parque enters La Mancha—Elio and
- Bassecour march to Albacete and communicate with the Anglo-Sicilian army—The king enters Madrid—Soult’s cavalry scour
- La Mancha—Suchet’s operations—General Donkin menaces Denia—General W. Clinton takes the command of the Anglo-Sicilian
- army—Suchet intrenches a camp at Xativa—The Anglo-Sicilian army falls into disrepute—General Campbell takes the
- command—Inactivity of the army—The Frayle surprises a convoy of French artillery—Operations in Catalonia—Dissensions in
- that province—Eroles and Codrington menace Taragona—Eroles surprises a French detachment at Arbeça—Lacy threatens Mataro
- and Hostalrich returns to Vich—Manso defeats a French detachment near Molino del Rey—Decaen defeats the united Catalonian
- army and penetrates to Vich—The Spanish divisions separate—Colonel Villamil attempts to surprise San Felippe de
- Balaguer—Attacks it a second time in concert with Codrington—The place succoured by the garrison of Tortoza—Lacy suffers
- a French convoy to reach Barcelona, is accused of treachery and displaced—The regular warfare in Catalonia ceases—The
- Partizan warfare continues—England the real support of the war</td>
-<td class="tdrb">341</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdcx fs120 lsp" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_BXIX_VII">CHAP. VII.</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlx">General observations—Wellington reproaches the army—His censures indiscriminate—Analysis of his campaign—Criticisms of
- Jomini and others examined—Errors of execution—The French operations analyzed—Sir John Moore’s retreat compared with
- lord Wellington’s</td>
-<td class="tdrb">357</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdcx fs150" colspan="2"><a href="#BOOK_XX">BOOK XX.</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdcx fs120 lsp" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_BXX_I">CHAP. I.</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlx">Political affairs—Their influence on the war—Napoleon’s invasion of Russia—Its influence on the contest in the
- Peninsula—State of feeling in England—Lord Wellesley charges the ministers and especially Mr. Perceval with imbecility—His
- proofs thereof—Ability and zeal of lord Wellington and Mr. Stuart shewn—Absurd plans of the count of Funchal—Mr. Villiers
- and Mr. Vansittart—The English ministers propose to sell the Portuguese crown and church lands—The folly and injustice of
- these, and other schemes, exposed by lord Wellington—He goes to Cadiz—His reception there—New organization of the Spanish
- armies—Wellington goes to Lisbon where he is enthusiastically received—His departure from Cadiz the signal for renewed
- dissensions—Carlotta’s intrigues—Decree to abolish the Inquisition opposed by the clergy—The regency aid the clergy—Are
- displaced by the Cortez—New regency appointed—The American party in the Cortez adopt Carlotta’s cause—Fail from fear of
- the people—Many bishops and church dignitaries are arrested and others fly into Portugal—The pope’s nuncio Gravina opposes
- the cortez—His benefices sequestered—He flies to Portugal—His intrigues there—Secret overtures made to Joseph by some of
- the Spanish armies</td>
-<td class="tdrb">379</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdcx fs120 lsp" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_BXX_II">CHAP. II.</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlx">Political state of Portugal—Wellington’s difficulties—Improper conduct of some English ships of war—Piratical violence of
- a Scotch merchantman—Disorders in the military system—Irritation of the people—Misconduct of the magistrates—Wellington
- and Stuart grapple with the disorders of the administration—The latter calls for the interference of the British
- government—Wellington writes a remarkable letter to the prince regent and requests him to return to Portugal—Partial
- amendment—The efficiency of the army restored, but the country remains in an unsettled state—The prince unable to quit
- the Brazils—Carlotta prepares to come alone—Is stopped by the interference of the British government—An auxiliary Russian
- force is offered to lord Wellington by admiral Greig—The Russian ambassador in London disavows the offer—The emperor
- Alexander proposes to mediate between England and America—The emperor of Austria offers to mediate for a general peace—Both
- offers are refused</td>
-<td class="tdrb">409</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdcx fs120 lsp" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_BXX_III">CHAP. III.</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlx">Napoleon’s embarrassed position—His wonderful activity—His designs explained—The war in Spain becomes secondary—Many
- thousand old soldiers withdrawn from the armies—The Partidas become more disciplined and dangerous—New bands are raised
- in Biscay and Guipuscoa and the insurrection of the northern provinces creeps on—Napoleon orders the king to fix his
- quarters at Valladolid, to menace Portugal, and to reinforce the army of the north—Joseph complains of his generals, and
- especially of Soult—Napoleon’s magnanimity—Joseph’s complaints not altogether without foundation</td>
-<td class="tdrb">430</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdcx fs120 lsp" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_BXX_IV">CHAP. IV.</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlx">Operations south of the Tagus—Eroles and Codrington seek to entrap the governor of Taragona—They fail—Sarzfield and Villa
- Campa unite but disperse at the approach of Pannetier and Severoli—Suchet’s position—Great force of the allies in his
- front—The younger Soult engages the Spanish cavalry in La Mancha—General Daricau marches with a column towards
- Valencia—Receives a large convoy and returns to La Mancha—Absurd rumours about the English army rife in the French
- camp—Some of lord Wellington’s spies detected—Soult is recalled—Gazan assumes the command of the army of the south—Suchet’s
- position described—Sir John Murray takes the command of the Anglo-Sicilian troops at Alicant—Attacks the French post at
- Alcoy—His want of vigour—He projects a maritime attack on the city of Valencia, but drops the design because lord William
- Bentinck recals some of his troops—Remarks upon his proceedings—Suchet surprises a Spanish division at Yecla, and then
- advances against Murray—Takes a thousand Spanish prisoners in Villena—Murray takes a position at Castalla—His advanced
- guard driven from Biar—Second battle of Castalla—Remarks</td>
-<td class="tdrb">446</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdcx fs120 lsp" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_BXX_V">CHAP. V.</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlx">Operations north of the Tagus—Position of the French armies—Palombini marches from Madrid to join the army of the
- north—Various combats take place with the Partidas—Foy fails to surprise the British post at Bejar—Caffarelli demands
- reinforcements—Joseph misconceives the emperor’s plans—Wellington’s plans vindicated against French writers—Soult advises
- Joseph to hold Madrid and the mountains of Avila—Indecision of the king—He goes to Valladolid—Concentrates the French
- armies in Old Castile—A division under Leval remains at Madrid—Reille sends reinforcements to the army of the north—Various
- skirmishes with the Partidas—Leval deceived by false rumours at Madrid—Joseph wishes to abandon that capital—Northern
- insurrection—Operations of Caffarelli, Palombini, Mendizabel, Longa, and Mina—Napoleon recals Caffarelli—Clauzel takes
- the command of the army of the north—Assaults Castro but fails—Palombini skirmishes with Mendizabel—Introduces a convoy
- into Santona—Marches to succour Bilbao—His operations in Guipuscoa—The insurrection gains strength—Clauzel marches into
- Navarre—Defeats Mina in the valley of Roncal and pursues him into Arragon—Foy acts on the coast—Takes Castro—Returns to
- Bilbao—Defeats the Biscayen volunteers under Mugartegui at Villaro, and those of Guipuscoa under Artola at Lequitio—The
- insurrectional junta flies—Bermeo and Isaro are taken—Operations of the Partidas on the great line of communication</td>
-<td class="tdrb">470</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdcx fs120 lsp" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_BXX_VI">CHAP. VI.</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlx">Wellington restores the discipline of the allied army—Relative strength of the belligerent forces—Wellington’s plans
- described—Lord W. Bentinck again proposes to invade Italy—Wellington opposes it—The opening of the campaign delayed by the
- weather—State of the French army—Its movements previous to the opening of the campaign</td>
-<td class="tdrb">503</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdcx fs120 lsp" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_BXX_VII">CHAP. VII.</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlx">Dangerous discontent of the Portuguese army—Allayed by Wellington—Noble conduct of the soldiers—The left wing of the
- allies under general Graham marches through the Tras os Montes to the Esla—The right wing under Wellington advances
- against Salamanca—Combat there—The allies pass the Tormes—Wellington goes in person to the Esla—Passage of that
- river—Cavalry combat at Morales—The two wings of the allied army unite at Toro on the Duero—Remarks on that
- event—Wellington marches in advance—Previous movements of the French described—They pass the Carion and Pisuerga in
- retreat—The allies pass the Carion in pursuit—Joseph takes post in front of Burgos—Wellington turns the Pisuerga with his
- left wing and attacks the enemy with his right wing—Combat on the Hormaza—The French retreat behind Pancorbo and blow up
- the castle of Burgos—Wellington crosses the Upper Ebro and turns the French line of defence—Santander is adopted as a
- dépôt station and the military establishments in Portugal are broken up—Joseph changes his dispositions of defence—The
- allies advance—Combat of Osma—Combat of St. Millan—Combat of Subijana Morillas—The French armies concentrate in the basin
- of Vittoria behind the Zadora</td>
-<td class="tdrb">520</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdcx fs120 lsp" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_BXX_VIII">CHAP. VIII.</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlx">Confused state of the French in the basin of Vittoria—Two convoys are sent to the rear—The king takes up a new order of
- battle—The Gallicians march to seize Orduña but are recalled—Graham marches across the hills to Murguia—Relative strength
- and position of the hostile armies—Battle of Vittoria—Joseph retreats by Salvatierra—Wellington pursues him up the Borundia
- and Araquil valleys—Sends Longa and Giron into Guipuscoa—Joseph halts at Yrursun—Detaches the army of Portugal to the
- Bidassoa—Retreats with the army of the centre and the army of the south to Pampeluna—Wellington detaches Graham through
- the mountains by the pass of St. Adrian into Guipuscoa and marches himself to Pampeluna—Combat with the French
- rear-guard—Joseph retreats up the valley of Roncevalles—General Foy rallies the French troops in Guipuscoa and fights the
- Spaniards at Montdragon—Retreats to Bergara and Villa Franca—Graham enters Guipuscoa—Combat on the Orio river—Foy retires
- to Tolosa—Combat there—The French posts on the sea-coast abandoned with exception of Santona and St. Sebastian—Foy retires
- behind the Bidassoa—Clauzel advances towards Vittoria—Retires to Logroño—Wellington endeavours to surround him—He makes a
- forced march to Tudela—Is in great danger—Escapes to Zaragoza—Halts there—Is deceived by Mina and finally marches to
- Jacca—Gazan re-enters Spain and occupies the valley of Bastan—O’Donel reduces the forts of Pancorbo—Hill drives Gazan from
- the valley of Bastan—Observations</td>
-<td class="tdrb">548</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="LIST_OF_APPENDIX">LIST OF APPENDIX.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table class="autotable fs80">
-<tr>
-<td class="tdcx" colspan="2"><a href="#NO_I">No. I.</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlx">Extracts of letters relating to the battle of Salamanca</td>
-<td class="tdrb">585</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdcx" colspan="2"><a href="#NO_II">No. II.</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlx">Copies of two despatches from the emperor Napoleon to the minister at war relative to the duke of Ragusa</td>
-<td class="tdrb">587</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdcx" colspan="2"><a href="#NO_III">No. III.</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlx">Letter from the duke of Dalmatia to king Joseph, August 12, 1812</td>
-<td class="tdrb">588</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdcx" colspan="2"><a href="#NO_IV">No. IV.</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlx">Letter from the duke of Dalmatia to the minister at war</td>
-<td class="tdrb">590</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdcx" colspan="2"><a href="#NO_V">No. V.</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlx">Letter from colonel Desprez to king Joseph, Paris, Sept. 22, 1812</td>
-<td class="tdrb">593</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdcx" colspan="2"><a href="#NO_VI_A">No. VI. A.</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlx">Confidential letter from the duc de Feltre to king Joseph, Paris, Nov. 10, 1812</td>
-<td class="tdrb">595</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdcx" colspan="2"><a href="#NO_VI_B">No. VI. B.</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlx">Letter from colonel Desprez to king Joseph, Paris, Jan, 3, 1813</td>
-<td class="tdrb">596</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdcx" colspan="2"><a href="#NO_VII">No. VII.</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlx">Letter from Napoleon to the duc de Feltre, Ghiart, Sept. 2, 1812</td>
-<td class="tdrb">600</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdcx" colspan="2"><a href="#NO_VIII_A">No. VIII. A.</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlx">Extract. General Souham’s despatch to the minister at war</td>
-<td class="tdrb">602</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdcx" colspan="2"><a href="#NO_VIII_B">No. VIII. B.</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlx">Extracts. Two letters from the duc de Feltre to king Joseph</td>
-<td class="tdrb">602</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdcx" colspan="2"><a href="#NO_IX">No. IX.</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlx">Extract. Letter from marshal Jourdan to colonel Napier</td>
-<td class="tdrb">603</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdcx" colspan="2"><a href="#NO_X">No. X.</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlx">Letter from the duc de Feltre to king Joseph, Jan. 29, 1813</td>
-<td class="tdrb">605</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdcx" colspan="2"><a href="#NO_XI">No. XI.</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlx">Ditto &#160; &#160; &#160; ditto</td>
-<td class="tdrb">606</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdcx" colspan="2"><a href="#NO_XII">No. XII.</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlx">Ditto &#160; &#160; &#160; ditto, Feb. 12, 1813</td>
-<td class="tdrb">608</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdcx" colspan="2"><a href="#NO_XIII">No. XIII.</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlx">Ditto &#160; &#160; &#160; ditto, Feb. 12, 1813</td>
-<td class="tdrb">609</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdcx" colspan="2"><a href="#NO_XIV">No. XIV.</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlx">Two ditto &#160; &#160; &#160; ditto, March 12 and 18, 1813</td>
-<td class="tdrb">611</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdcx" colspan="2"><a href="#NO_XV">No. XV.</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlx">Letter from Joseph O’Donnel to general Donkin</td>
-<td class="tdrb">614</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdcx" colspan="2"><a href="#NO_XVI">No. XVI.</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlx">Letter from the marquis of Wellington to major-general Campbell</td>
-<td class="tdrb">616</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdcx" colspan="2"><a href="#NO_XVII">No. XVII.</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlx">Extract. Letter from the marquis of Wellington to lieutenant-general sir John Murray, April 6, 1813</td>
-<td class="tdrb">617</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdcx" colspan="2"><a href="#NO_XVIII">No. XVIII.</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlx">General states of the French army, April 15, May 15, 1812, and March 15, 1813</td>
-<td class="tdrb">618</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdcx" colspan="2"><a href="#NO_XIX">No. XIX.</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlx">Especial state of the army of Portugal, June 15, 1812; loss of ditto</td>
-<td class="tdrb">619</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdcx" colspan="2"><a href="#NO_XX">No. XX.</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlx">Strength of the Anglo-Portuguese army, July, 1812</td>
-<td class="tdrb">620</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdcx" colspan="2"><a href="#NO_XXI">No. XXI.</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlx">Losses of the allies, July 18, 1812</td>
-<td class="tdrb">621</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdcx" colspan="2"><a href="#NO_XXII">No. XXII.</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdlx">Strength of the allies at Vittoria</td>
-<td class="tdrb">622</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="LIST_OF_THE_PLATES">LIST OF THE PLATES,</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="pfs80"><em>To be placed together at <a href="#i_b_581fp_1">Page 582</a></em></p>
-
-<table class="autotable fs80">
-<tr>
-<td class="tdly">No.</td>
-<td class="tdrt"><a href="#i_b_581fp_1">1.</a></td>
-<td class="tdly">Explanatory Sketch of the Surprise of Almaraz, 1812.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdly"></td>
-<td class="tdrt"><a href="#i_b_581fp_2">2.</a></td>
-<td class="tdly">Explanatory Sketch of the Sieges of the Forts and Operations round Salamanca, 1812.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdly"></td>
-<td class="tdrt"><a href="#i_b_581fp_3">3.</a></td>
-<td class="tdly">Battle of Salamanca, with a Sketch of Operations before and after the Action.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdly"></td>
-<td class="tdrt"><a href="#i_b_581fp_4">4.</a></td>
-<td class="tdly">Explanatory Sketch of the Siege of Burgos, 1812.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdly"></td>
-<td class="tdrt"><a href="#i_b_581fp_5">5.</a></td>
-<td class="tdly">Sketch of the Retreat from Madrid and Burgos, 1812.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdly"></td>
-<td class="tdrt"><a href="#i_b_581fp_6">6.</a></td>
-<td class="tdly">Explanatory Sketch of the Position of the Partidas and of lord Wellington’s March from the Agueda to the Pyrenees, 1813.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdly"></td>
-<td class="tdrt"><a href="#i_b_581fp_7">7.</a></td>
-<td class="tdly">Battle of Castalla and Operations before the Action.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdly"></td>
-<td class="tdrt"><a href="#i_b_581fp_8">8.</a></td>
-<td class="tdly">Battle of Vittoria, with Operations before and after the Action.</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_i"></a>[Pg i]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="NOTICE"><span class="lsp3">NOTICE</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="r10" />
-
-<p>1º. In the present volume will be found a plan of the
-Peninsula on a very small scale, yet sufficient to indicate
-the general range of operations. A large map would be
-enormously expensive without any correspondent advantages
-to the reader; and it would only be a repetition of
-errors, because there are no materials for an accurate plan.
-The small one now furnished, together with the sketches
-which I have drawn and published with each volume, and
-which are more accurate than might be supposed, will give
-a clear general notion of the operations. Those who desire
-to have more detailed information will find it in Lieutenant
-Godwyn’s fine atlas of the battles in the Peninsula—a
-work undertaken by that officer with the sole view of
-forming a record of the glorious actions of the British
-army.</p>
-
-<p>2º. Most of the manuscript authorities consulted for
-former volumes have been also consulted for this volume,
-and in addition the official correspondence of Lord William
-Bentinck; some notes by Lord Hill; the journal and correspondence
-of sir Rufane Donkin; a journal of Colonel
-Oglander, twenty-sixth regiment; a memoir by sir George
-Gipps, royal engineers; and a variety of communications
-by other officers. Lastly, authenticated copies of the official<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_ii"></a>[ii]</span>
-journals and correspondence of most of the marshals and
-generals who commanded armies in Spain. These were
-at my request supplied by the French War-office with
-a prompt liberality indicative of that military frankness
-and just pride which ought and does characterize the
-officers of Napoleon’s army. The publication of this
-volume also enables me with convenience to produce additional
-authorities for former statements, while answering,
-as I now do, the attacks upon my work which have appeared
-in the “Life of Sir Thomas Picton,” and in the
-“Quarterly Review.”</p>
-
-<hr class="r10" />
-
-<p class="fs80">“Many there are that trouble me and persecute me; yet do I not swerve
-from the testimonies,”—<span class="smcap">Psalm cxix.</span></p>
-
-<hr class="r10" />
-
-<p id="Robinson"><cite>Robinson’s Life of Picton.</cite>—This writer of an English
-general’s life, is so entirely unacquainted with English
-military customs, that he quotes a common order of the<span class="sidenote">Life of Picton, page 31.</span>
-day, accrediting a new staff officer to the army, as a
-remarkable testimony to that staff officer’s talents. And
-he is so unacquainted with French military customs, that,
-treating of the battle of Busaco, he places a French marshal,
-Marmont, who by the way was not then even in<span class="sidenote">Page 325.</span>
-Spain, at the head of a <em>division</em> of Ney’s corps. He dogmatises
-upon military movements freely, and is yet so incapable
-of forming a right judgment upon the materials
-within his reach, as to say, that sir John Moore should not
-have retreated, because as he was able to beat the French
-at Coruña, he could also have beaten them in the heart of
-Spain. Thus setting aside the facts that at Coruña Moore
-had fifteen thousand men to fight twenty thousand, and in
-the heart of Spain he had only twenty-three thousand to
-fight more than three hundred thousand!</p>
-
-<p>And lest this display of incompetency should not be sufficient,
-he affirms, that the same sir John Moore had, comparatively,
-greater means at Sahagun to beat the enemy<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_iii"></a>[iii]</span>
-than Lord Wellington had in the lines of Torres Vedras.
-Now those lines, which Wellington had been fortifying for
-more than a year, offered three nearly impregnable positions,
-defended by a hundred thousand men. There was a
-fortress, that of St. Julian’s, and a fleet, close at hand as
-a final resource, and only sixty thousand French commanded
-by Massena were in front. But sir John Moore
-having only twenty-three thousand men at Sahagun, had
-no lines, no fortifications for defence, and no time to form
-them, he was nearly three hundred miles from his fleet,
-and Napoleon in person had turned one hundred thousand
-men against him, while two hundred thousand more remained
-in reserve!</p>
-
-<p>Any lengthened argument in opposition to a writer so
-totally unqualified to treat of warlike affairs, would be a
-sinful waste of words; but Mr. Robinson has been at
-pains to question the accuracy of certain passages of my
-work, and with what justice the reader shall now learn.<ins class="corr" id="tn-iii" title="Transcriber’s Note—Original text: this anchor was missing">
-<a id="FNanchor_1" href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a></ins></p>
-
-<p>1º. <em>Combat on the Coa.</em>—The substance of Mr. Robinson’s
-complaint on this subject is, that I have imputed to
-general Picton, the odious crime of refusing, from personal
-animosity, to support general Craufurd;—that such a
-serious accusation should not be made without ample
-proof;—that I cannot say whether Picton’s instructions did
-not forbid him to aid Craufurd;—that the roads were so<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_iv"></a>[iv]</span>
-bad, the distance so great, and the time so short, Picton
-could not have aided him;—that my account of the action
-differs from general Craufurd’s;—that I was only a lieutenant
-of the forty-third, and consequently could know
-nothing of the matter;—that I have not praised Picton—that
-he was a Roman hero and so forth. Finally it is denied
-that Picton ever quarrelled with Craufurd at all; and
-that, so far from having an altercation with him on the day
-of the action he did not on that day even quit his own
-quarters at Pinhel. Something also there is about general
-Cole’s refusing to quit Guarda.</p>
-
-<p>To all this I reply that I never did accuse general
-Picton of acting from personal animosity, and neither the
-letter nor the spirit of my statement will bear out such a
-meaning, which is a pure hallucination of this author.
-That the light division was not supported is notorious. The
-propriety of supporting it I have endeavoured to shew,
-the cause why it was not so supported I have not attempted
-to divine; yet it was neither the distance, nor the badness
-of the roads, nor the want of time; for the action, which
-took place in July, lasted from day-break until late in the
-evening, the roads, and there were several, were good at
-that season, and the distance not more than eight miles.</p>
-
-<p>It is quite true, as Mr. Robinson observes, that I cannot
-affirm of my own knowledge whether the duke of Wellington
-forbade Picton to succour Craufurd, but I can certainly
-affirm that he ordered him to support him because it
-is so set down in his grace’s despatches, volume 5th, pages
-535 and 547; and it is not probable that this order should
-have been rescinded and one of a contrary tendency substituted,
-to meet an event, namely the action on the Coa,
-which Craufurd had been forbidden to fight. Picton acted
-no doubt upon the dictates of his judgment, but all men are
-not bound to approve of that judgment; and as to the
-charge of faintly praising his military talents, a point was
-forced by me in his favour, when I compared him to general
-Craufurd of whose ability there was no question; more<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_v"></a>[v]</span>
-could not be done in conscience, even under Mr. Robinson’s
-assurance that he was a Roman hero.</p>
-
-<p>The exact object of Mr. Robinson’s reasoning upon the
-subject of general Cole’s refusal to quit Guarda it is
-difficult to discover; but the passage to which it relates, is
-the simple enunciation of a fact, which is now repeated,
-namely, that general Cole being requested by general
-Craufurd to come down with his whole division to the Coa,
-refused, and that lord Wellington approved of that refusal,
-though he ordered Cole to support Craufurd under certain
-circumstances. Such however is Mr. Robinson’s desire to
-monopolize all correctness, that he will not permit me to
-know any thing about the action, though I was present, because,
-as he says, being only a lieutenant, I could not
-know any thing about it. He is yet abundantly satisfied
-with the accuracy of his own knowledge, although he was
-not present, and was neither a captain nor lieutenant. I
-happened to be a captain of seven years standing, but
-surely, though we should admit all subalterns to be blind,
-like young puppies, and that rank in the one case, as age
-in the other, is absolutely necessary to open their eyes,
-it might still be asked, why I should not have been able,
-after having obtained a rank which gave me the right of
-seeing, to gather information from others as well as Mr.
-Robinson? Let us to the proof.</p>
-
-<p>In support of his views, he has produced, the rather
-vague testimony of an anonymous officer, on general
-Picton’s staff, which he deems conclusive as to the fact,
-that Picton never quarrelled with Craufurd, that he did
-not even quit Pinhel on the day of the action, and consequently
-could not have had any altercation with him on
-the Coa. But the following letters from officers on Craufurd’s
-staff, not anonymous, shew that Picton did all these
-things. In fine that Mr. Robinson has undertaken a task
-for which he is not qualified.</p>
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_vi"></a>[vi]</span></p>
-
-<p class="p1 negin1"><em>Testimony of lieutenant-colonel Shaw Kennedy, who was
-on general Craufurd’s staff at the action of the Coa,
-July 24, 1810.</em></p>
-
-<p class="right">
-“<em>Manchester, 7th November, 1835.</em><br />
-</p>
-
-<p>“I have received your letter in which you mention
-‘<cite>Robinson’s Life of Picton</cite>;’ that work I have not seen.
-It surprises me that any one should doubt that Picton
-and Craufurd met on the day the French army invested
-Almeida in 1810. I was wounded previously, and did not
-therefore witness their interview; but I consider it certain
-that Picton and Craufurd did meet on the 24th July,
-1810, on the high ground on the left bank of the Coa
-during the progress of the action, and that a brisk altercation
-took place between them. They were primed and
-ready for such an altercation, as angry communications
-had passed between them previously regarding the disposal
-of some sick of the light division. I have heard
-Craufurd mention in joke his and Picton’s testiness with
-each other, and I considered that he alluded both to the
-quarrel as to the sick; and to that which occurred when
-they met during the action at Almeida.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-“<span class="smcap">J. S. Kennedy.</span>”<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>“<em>Colonel Napier, &amp;c. &amp;c. &amp;c.</em>”</p>
-
-
-<p class="p1 negin1"><em>Testimony of colonel William Campbell, who was on general
-Craufurd’s staff at the action on the Coa, July 24,
-1810.</em></p>
-
-<p class="right">
-“<em>Esplanade, Dover, 13th Nov. 1835.</em><br />
-</p>
-
-<p>“Your letter from Freshford has not been many minutes
-in my hands; I hasten to reply. General Picton <em>did</em>
-come out of Pinhel on the day of the Coa combat as you
-term it. It was in the afternoon of that day when all the
-regiments were in retreat, and general Craufurd was with
-his staff and others on the heights above, that, I think, on
-notice being given of general Picton’s approach, general<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_vii"></a>[vii]</span>
-Craufurd turned and moved to meet him. Slight was the
-converse, short the interview, for upon Craufurd’s asking
-enquiringly, whether general Picton did not consider it
-advisable to move out something from Pinhel in demonstration
-of support, or to cover the light division, in terms
-not bland, the general made it understood that ‘he should
-do no such thing.’ This as you may suppose put an end
-to the meeting, further than some violent rejoinder on the
-part of my much-loved friend, and fiery looks returned!
-We went our several ways, general Picton, I think, proceeding
-onwards a hundred yards to take a peep at the
-bridge. This is my testimony.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span style="margin-right: 7.5em;">“Yours truly,</span><br />
-“<span class="smcap">William Campbell</span>.”<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>“<span class="smcap">Colonel Napier, &amp;c. &amp;c. &amp;c.</span>”</p>
-
-
-<p class="p1"><ins class="corr" id="tn-vii" title="Transcriber’s Note—Original text: '2º.' was missing">
-2º.</ins> <em>Battle of Busaco.</em>—Mr. Robinson upon the authority of
-one of general Picton’s letters, has endeavoured to show
-that my description of this battle is a mass of errors; but
-it shall be proved that his criticism is so, and that general
-Picton’s letter is very bad authority.</p>
-
-<p>In my work it is said that the allies resisted vigorously,
-yet the French gained the summit of the ridge, and while
-the leading battalions established themselves on the crowning
-rocks, others wheeled to their right, intending to sweep
-the summit of the Sierra, but were driven down again in a
-desperate charge made by the left of the third division.</p>
-
-<p>Picton’s letter says, that the head of the enemy’s column
-got possession of a rocky point on the crest of the position,
-and that they were followed by the remainder of a large
-column which was driven down in a desperate charge made
-by the left of the third division.</p>
-
-<p>So far we are agreed. But Picton gives the merit of
-the charge to the light companies of the seventy-fourth
-and eighty-eighth regiments, and a wing of the forty-fifth
-aided by <em>the eighth Portuguese regiment, under major Birmingham</em>,
-whereas, in the History the whole merit is given<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_viii"></a>[viii]</span>
-to the eighty-eighth and forty-fifth regiments. Lord Wellington’s
-despatch gives the merit to the forty-fifth, and
-eighty-eighth, aided by the eighth Portuguese regiment,
-<em>under colonel Douglas</em>. The “<cite>Reminiscences of a Subaltern</cite>,”
-written by an officer of the eighty-eighth regiment, and
-published in the United Service Journal, in like manner,
-gives the merit to the eighty-eighth and forty-fifth British
-regiments, and the <em>eighth Portuguese</em>.</p>
-
-<p>It will presently be seen why I took no notice of the
-share the eighth Portuguese are said to have had in this
-brilliant achievement. Meanwhile the reader will observe
-that Picton’s letter indicates the <em>centre</em> of his division as
-being forced by the French, and he affirms that he drove
-them down again with his <em>left</em> wing without aid from the
-fifth division. But my statement makes both the <em>right</em>
-and <em>centre</em> of his division to be forced, and gives the fifth
-division, and especially colonel Cameron and the ninth
-British regiment, a very large share in the glory, moreover
-I say that the <em>eighth Portuguese was broken to pieces</em>. Mr.
-Robinson argues that this must be wrong, for, says he,
-the eighth Portuguese <em>were not broken</em>, and if the right of
-the third division had been forced, the French would have
-encountered the fifth division. To this he adds, with a
-confidence singularly rash, his scanty knowledge of facts
-considered, that colonel Cameron and the ninth regiment
-would doubtless have made as good a charge as I have
-described, “<em>only they were not there</em>.”</p>
-
-<p>In reply, it is now affirmed distinctly and positively, that
-the French did break the eighth Portuguese regiment, did
-gain the rocks on the summit of the position, and on the
-<em>right</em> of the third division; did ensconce themselves in those
-rocks, and were going to sweep the summit of the Sierra
-when the fifth division under general Leith attacked
-them; and the ninth regiment led by colonel Cameron did
-form under fire, as described, did charge, and did beat the
-enemy out of those rocks; and if they had not done so,
-the third division, then engaged with other troops, would<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_ix"></a>[ix]</span>
-have been in a very critical situation. Not only is all this
-re-affirmed, but it shall be proved by the most irrefragable
-testimony. It will then follow that the History is accurate,
-that general Picton’s letter is inaccurate, and the writer
-of his life incompetent to censure others.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Robinson may notwithstanding choose to abide by
-the authority of general Picton’s letter, which he “fortunately
-found amongst that general’s manuscripts,” but
-which others less fortunate had found in <em>print</em> many years
-before; and he is the more likely to do so, because he has
-asserted that if general Picton’s letters are false, they are
-wilfully so, an assertion which it is impossible to assent to.
-It would be hard indeed if a man’s veracity was to be
-called in question because his letters, written in the hurry
-of service gave inaccurate details of a battle. General
-Picton wrote what he believed to be the fact, but to give
-any historical weight to his letter on this occasion, in
-opposition to the testimony which shall now be adduced
-against its accuracy, would be weakness. And with the
-more reason it is rejected, because Mr. Robinson himself
-admits that another letter, written by general Picton on
-this occasion to the duke of Queensbury, was so inaccurate
-as to give general offence to the army; and because his
-letters on two other occasions are as incorrect as on this of
-Busaco.</p>
-
-<p>Thus writing of the assault of Ciudad Rodrigo, Picton
-says, “about this time, namely, when the third division
-carried the main breach, the light division which was
-rather late in their attack, also succeeded in getting
-possession of the breach they were ordered to attack.”
-Now it has been proved to demonstration, that the light
-division carried the small breach, and were actually attacking
-the flank of the French troops defending the great
-breach, when the third division carried that point. This
-indeed is so certain, that Mr. Uniack of the ninety-fifth, and
-others of the light division, were destroyed on the ramparts
-close to the great breach by that very explosion which was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_x"></a>[x]</span>
-said to have killed general M’Kinnon; and some have gone
-so far as to assert that it is doubtful if the great breach
-would have been carried at all but for the flank attack of
-the light division.</p>
-
-<p>Again, general Picton writing of the battle of Fuentes
-Onoro, says “the light division under general Craufurd
-was rather <em>roughly handled by the enemy’s cavalry</em>, and
-had that arm of the French army been as daring and
-active upon this occasion, as they were when following us
-to the lines of Torres Vedras, they would doubtless have
-cut off the light division to a man.”</p>
-
-<p>Nevertheless as an eye-witness, and, being then a field-officer
-on the staff, by Mr. Robinson’s rule entitled to see,
-I declare most solemnly that the French cavalry, though
-they often menaced to charge, never came within sure
-shot distance of the light division. The latter, with the
-exception of the ninety-fifth rifles, who were skirmishing
-in the wood of Pozo Velho, was formed by regiments in
-three squares, flanking and protecting each other, they
-retired over the plain leisurely without the loss of a man,
-without a sabre-wound being received, without giving or
-receiving fire; they moved in the most majestic manner
-secure in their discipline and strength, which was such
-as would have defied all the cavalry that ever charged
-under Tamerlane or Genghis.</p>
-
-<p>But it is time to give the proofs relative to Busaco, the
-reader being requested to compare them with the description
-of that battle in my History.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p1 center">
-<em>Extracts from major-general sir John Cameron’s letters</em><br />
-<em>to colonel Napier.</em><br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-“<em>Government House, Devonport, Aug. 9th</em>, 1834.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>“—I am sorry to perceive in the recent publication of
-lord Beresford, his ‘<cite>Refutation of your justification of
-your third volume</cite>,’ some remarks on the battle of Busaco
-which disfigure, not intentionally I should hope, the operations<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xi"></a>[xi]</span>
-of the British brigade in major-general Leith’s
-corps on that occasion, of which I, as commanding officer
-of one of the regiments composing it, may perhaps be permitted
-to know something. I shall however content myself
-at present with giving you a detail of the operations of the
-British brigade in major-general Leith’s <em>own words</em>, extracted
-from a document in my possession, every syllable
-of which can be verified by many distinguished officers now
-living, some of them actors in, all of them eye-witnesses to
-the affair.</p>
-
-<p>“‘The ground where the British brigade was now moving,
-was behind a chain of rocky eminences where it had
-appeared clearly, the enemy was successfully pushing to
-establish himself and precluded major-general Leith from
-seeing at that moment the progress the enemy was making,
-but by the information of staff officers stationed on purpose
-who communicated his direction and progress. Major-general
-Leith moved the British brigade so as to endeavour
-to meet and check the enemy when he had gained the
-ascendancy. At this time a heavy fire of musketry was
-kept upon the height, the smoke of which prevented a clear
-view of the state of things. When however the rock
-forming the high part of the Sierra became visible, the
-enemy appeared in full possession of it, and a French
-officer was in the act of cheering with his hat off, while a
-continual fire was kept up from thence and along the whole
-face of the Sierra, in a diagonal direction towards the bottom,
-by the enemy ascending rapidly from the successive
-columns formed for the attack, on a mass of soldiers from
-the eighth and ninth Portuguese regiments, who having been
-severely pressed had given way and were rapidly retiring
-in complete confusion and disorder. Major-general Leith
-on that occasion spoke to Major Birmingham (who was on
-foot, having had his horse killed), who stated that the fugitives
-were of the ninth Portuguese as well as the eighth
-regiment, and that he had ineffectually tried to check
-their retreat. Major-general Leith addressed and succeeded<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xii"></a>[xii]</span>
-in stopping them, and they cheered when he
-ordered them to be collected and formed in the rear. They
-were passing as they retired diagonally to the right of the
-ninth British regiment. The face of affairs in this quarter
-now bore a different aspect, for the enemy who had been
-the assailant having dispersed or driven every thing opposed
-to him was in possession of the rocky eminence of the Sierra
-at this part of major-general Picton’s position without a
-shot then being fired at him. Not a moment was to be
-lost. Major-general Leith resolved instantly to attack
-the enemy with the bayonet. He therefore ordered the
-ninth British regiment, which had hitherto been moving
-rapidly by its left in column in order to gain the most
-advantageous ground for checking the enemy, to form the
-line, which they did with the greatest promptitude, accuracy,
-and coolness, under the fire of the enemy, who had
-just appeared formed on that part of the rocky eminence
-which overlooks the back of the ridge, and who had then for
-the first time perceived the British brigade under him.
-Major-general Leith had intended that the thirty-eighth
-regiment should have moved on in rear of, and to the left
-of, the ninth British regiment, to have turned the enemy
-beyond the rocky eminence which was quite inaccessible
-towards the rear of the Sierra, while the ninth should have
-gained the ridge on the right of the rocky height; the royal
-Scots to have been posted (as they were) in reserve. But
-the enemy having driven every thing before him in that
-quarter afforded him the advantage of gaining the top of
-the rocky ridge, which is accessible in front, before it was
-possible for the British brigade to have reached that position,
-although not a moment had been lost in marching
-to support the point attacked, and for that purpose it had
-made a rapid movement of more than two miles without
-halting and frequently in double-quick time. The thirty-eighth
-regiment was therefore directed to form also and
-support when major-general Leith led the ninth regiment
-to attack the enemy on the rocky ridge, which they did<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xiii"></a>[xiii]</span>
-without filing a shot. That part which looks behind the
-Sierra (as already stated) was inaccessible and afforded
-the enemy the advantage of outflanking the ninth on the
-left as they advanced, but the order, celerity, and coolness
-with which they attacked panic-struck the enemy, who
-immediately gave way on being charged with the bayonet,
-and the whole was driven down the face of the Sierra in
-confusion and with immense loss, from a destructive fire
-which the ninth regiment opened upon him as he fled with
-precipitation after the charge.’</p>
-
-<p>“I shall merely add two observations on what has been
-asserted in the ‘<cite>Refutation</cite>.’</p>
-
-<p>“First with regard to the confusion and retreat of a portion
-of the Portuguese troops, I certainly did not know at
-the moment what Portuguese corps the fugitives were of,
-but after the action I understood they were belonging to
-the eighth Portuguese; a very considerable number of
-them were crossing the front of the British column dispersed
-in sixes and sevens over the field just before I
-wheeled the ninth regiment into line for the attack. I
-pushed on a few yards to entreat them to keep out of our
-way, which they understood and called out ‘<i lang="pt" xml:lang="pt">viva los
-Ingleses, valerosos Portugueses</i>.’</p>
-
-<p>“As regards any support which the Portuguese afforded
-the British brigade in the pursuit, I beg to say that during
-the charge, while leading the regiment in front of the
-centre, my horse was killed under me, which for a moment
-retarded my own personal advance, and on extricating
-myself from under him, I turned round and saw the thirty-eighth
-regiment close up with us and the royal Scots
-appearing over the ridge in support; but did not see any
-Portuguese join in the pursuit, indeed it would have been
-imprudent in them to attempt such a thing, for at the time
-a brisk cannonade was opened upon us from the opposite
-side of the ravine.</p>
-
-<p>“This, my dear colonel, is, on my honour, an account of
-the operations of the British brigade in major-general Leith’s<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xiv"></a>[xiv]</span>
-corps at Busaco. It will be satisfactory to you to know that
-the information you received has been correct. The anonymous
-officer of the ninth regiment I do not know. There
-were several very capable of furnishing you with good information
-on the transactions of that day, not only as
-regarded their own immediate corps, but those around
-them. Colonel Waller I should consider excellent authority;
-that gallant officer must have been an eye-witness to
-all that passed in the divisions of Picton and Leith. I
-remember on our approach to the scene of confusion he
-delivered me a message from general Picton, intended
-for general Leith, at the time reconnoitring, to hasten our
-advance.”</p>
-
-
-<p class="right">
-“<em>Government House, Devonport, Aug. 21, 1834.</em><br />
-</p>
-
-<p>“——The fact really is that both the eighth and ninth
-Portuguese regiments gave way that morning, and I am
-positive that I am not far wrong in saying, that there were
-not of Portuguese troops within my view, at the moment I
-wheeled the ninth regiment into line, one hundred men
-prepared either for attack or defence. Sir James Douglas
-partly admits that his wing was broken when he says that
-‘if we were at any time <em>broken</em> it was from the too ardent
-wish of a corps of boy recruits to close.’ Now it is perfectly
-clear that the wing of the regiment under Major
-Birmingham fled, from what that officer said to general
-Leith. Sir James Douglas states also that ‘no candid
-man will deny that he supported the royals and ninth
-regiment, though before that he says, that ‘by an oblique
-movement he joined in the charge.’ I might safely
-declare on oath that the Portuguese never shewed themselves
-beyond the ridge of the Sierra that morning.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span style="margin-right: 4em;">“Very faithfully yours,</span><br />
-“<span class="smcap">John Cameron</span>.”<br />
-</p>
-
-
-<p>As these letters from general Cameron refer to some of
-marshal Beresford’s errors, as well as Mr. Robinson’s, an<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xv"></a>[xv]</span>
-extract from a letter of colonel Thorne’s upon the same
-subject will not be misplaced here.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p1 center">
-<em>Colonel Thorne to colonel Napier.</em><br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-“<em>Harborne Lodge, 28th Aug. 1834.</em><br />
-</p>
-
-<p>Extract.—“Viscount Beresford in the ‘<cite>Refutation of
-your Justification of your third volume</cite>,’ has doubted the
-accuracy of the strength of the third dragoon guards and
-fourth dragoons on the 20th March 1811, as extracted by
-you from the journal which I lent to you. As I felt confident
-I had not inserted any thing therein, which I did not
-obtain from <em>official documents</em>, that were in my possession
-at the time it was written, I have, since the perusal of the
-‘Refutation,’ looked over some of my Peninsula papers,
-and I am happy to say I have succeeded in finding
-amongst them, the monthly returns of quarters of the
-division of cavalry commanded by brigadier-general
-Long, dated Los Santos, April 20th, 1811, which was
-then sent to me by the deputy assistant quarter-master
-general of that division, and which I beg to enclose for
-your perusal, in order that you may see the statement I
-have made of the strength of that force in my journal <em>is to
-be relied upon, although his lordship insinuates to the contrary</em>,
-and that it contains <em>something more than</em> ‘<em>the depositary
-of the rumours of a camp</em>.’”</p>
-
-
-<p class="p1 negin1"><em>Extract from memorandum of the battle of Busaco, by
-colonel Waller, assistant quarter-master-general to the
-second division.</em></p>
-
-<p>“—The attack commenced on the right wing, consisting
-of Picton’s division, by the enemy opening a fire of artillery
-upon the right of the British which did but little injury,
-the range being too great to prove effective. At this
-moment were seen the heads of the several attacking columns,
-<span class="smcap">three, I think</span>, in number, and deploying into<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xvi"></a>[xvi]</span>
-line with the most beautiful precision, celerity, and gallantry.</p>
-
-<p>“As they formed on the plateau they were cannonaded
-from our position, and the regiment of Portuguese, either
-the eighth or the <em>16th Infantry</em>, which were formed in advance
-in <em>front</em> of the <em>74th regiment</em>, threw in some volleys
-of musketry into the enemy’s columns in a flank direction,
-but the regiment was quickly driven into the position.</p>
-
-<p>“More <em>undaunted</em> courage never was displayed by <em>French</em>
-troops than on <em>this</em> occasion: it could not have been surpassed,
-for their columns advanced in despite of a tremendous
-fire of grape and musketry from our troops in
-position in the rocks, and overcoming all opposition,
-although repeatedly charged by Lightburne’s brigade, or
-rather by the whole of Picton’s division, they advanced, and
-fairly drove the <span class="smcap">British right</span> wing from the rocky part
-of the position.</p>
-
-<p>“<em>Being an eye-witness</em> of this critical moment, and
-seeing that unless the ground was quickly recovered <em>the
-right flank</em> of the army would <em>infallibly</em> be turned, and
-the <em>great road</em> to Coimbra <em>unmasked</em>, seeing also that
-heavy columns of the enemy were descending into the
-valley to operate by the <em>road</em>, and to support the attack of
-the Sierra, and to cut off lord Wellington’s communication
-with Coimbra, I instantly galloped off to the rear to bring
-up general Hill’s corps to Picton’s support. Having proceeded
-about <em>two</em> miles along the upper edge and reverse
-side of the Sierra, I fell in with the head of general
-Leith’s column moving <em>left in front</em>, at the head of which
-was colonel Cameron’s brigade, led by the ninth regiment.
-I immediately rode up to colonel Cameron, and addressed
-him in an anxious tone as follows.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Pray, sir, who commands this brigade?’ ‘I do,’
-replied the colonel, ‘I am colonel Cameron.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Then for God’s sake, sir, move off instantly at <em>double-quick</em>
-with your brigade to Picton’s support; not <em>one
-moment</em> is to be lost, the enemy in great force are already<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xvii"></a>[xvii]</span>
-in possession of the <em>right of the position</em> on the Sierra and
-have driven Picton’s troops out of it. Move on, and when
-the rear of your brigade has passed the Coimbra road
-wheel into line, and you will embrace the point of attack.’
-Colonel Cameron did not hesitate <em>or balance</em> an <span class="allsmcap">INSTANT</span>,
-but giving the word ‘double-quick’ to his brigade nobly
-led them to battle and to victory.</p>
-
-<p>“The brave colonel attacked the enemy with such a
-gallant and irresistible impetuosity, that after some time
-fighting he recovered the ground which Picton had lost,
-inflicting <em>heavy slaughter</em> on the elite of the enemy’s
-troops. The ninth regiment behaved on this occasion with
-conspicuous gallantry, as <em>indeed</em> did <span class="allsmcap">ALL</span> the <span class="allsmcap">REGIMENTS</span>
-engaged. Great numbers of the enemy had descended
-low down in the rear of the position towards the Coimbra
-road, and were killed; the whole position was thickly
-strewed with their killed and wounded; amongst which <em>were
-many of our own troops</em>. The French were the finest men
-I ever saw. I spoke to several of the wounded men,
-light infantry and grenadiers, who were bewailing their
-unhappy fate on being defeated, assuring me they were the
-heroes of Austerlitz who had never before met with
-defeat!</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-“<span class="smcap">Robert Waller</span>, <em>Lieut.-colonel</em>.”<br />
-</p>
-
-
-<p class="p1 center">
-<em>Extract of a letter from colonel Taylor, ninth regiment, to</em><br />
-<em>colonel Napier.</em><br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-“<em>Fernhill, near Evesham, 26th April, 1832.</em><br />
-</p>
-
-<p>“<span class="smcap">Dear Sir</span>,</p>
-
-<p>“I have just received a letter from colonel Shaw, in which
-he quotes a passage from one of yours to him, expressive
-of your wish, if necessary, to print a passage from a statement
-which I made respecting the conduct of the ninth
-regiment at Busaco, and in reference to which, I have
-alluded to the discomfiture of the eighth Portuguese upon
-the same occasion. I do not exactly recollect the terms I
-made use of to colonel Shaw (nor indeed the shape which<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xviii"></a>[xviii]</span>
-my communication wore) but, my object was to bring to
-light the distinguished conduct of the ninth without any
-wish to, unnecessarily, obscure laurels, which others wore,
-even at their expense!</p>
-
-<p>“To account for the affair in question, I could not however
-well omit to state, that it was in consequence of the
-overthrow of the eighth Portuguese, that sir James Leith’s
-British brigade was called upon, and it is remarkable, that
-at the time, there was a considerable force of Portuguese
-(I think it was the old Lusitanian Legion which had
-just been modelled into two battalions) <em>between</em> Leith’s
-British and where the eighth were being engaged, Leith
-pushed on his brigade double-quick, column of sections left
-in front, past these Portuguese, nor did he halt until he
-came in contact with the enemy who had <em>crowned the
-heights</em> and were firing from behind the rocks, the ninth
-wheeled up into line, fired and charged, and all of the
-eighth Portuguese that was to be seen, at least by me, a
-company officer at the time, was some ten or a dozen men
-at <em>the outside</em>, with their commanding officer, but he and
-they were amongst the very foremost in the ranks of the
-ninth British. As an officer in the ranks of course I could
-not see much of what was going on generally, neither could
-I well have been mistaken as to what I did see, coming
-almost within my very contact! Colonel Waller, now, I
-believe on the Liverpool staff, was the officer who came to
-sir James Leith for assistance, I presume from Picton.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span style="margin-right: 7.5em;">“Yours, &amp;c.</span><br />
-“<span class="smcap">J. Taylor</span>.”<br />
-</p>
-
-
-<p class="p1 center">
-<em>Second communication from major-general sir John</em><br />
-<em>Cameron to colonel Napier.</em><br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<em>Stoke Devonport, Nov. 21st, 1835.</em><br />
-</p>
-
-<p>“<span class="smcap">My dear colonel</span>,</p>
-
-<p>“Some months ago I took the liberty of pointing out to
-you certain mis-statements contained in a publication of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xix"></a>[xix]</span>
-lord Beresford regarding the operations of the British
-brigade in major-general Leith’s corps at the battle of
-Busaco, and as those mis-statements are again brought
-before the public in Robinson’s Life of sir Thomas Picton I
-am induced to trouble you with some remarks upon what
-is therein advanced. A paragraph in major-general
-Picton’s letter to lord Wellington, dated 10th November,
-1810, which I first discovered some years ago in the
-Appendix No. 12 of Jones’s War in Spain, &amp;c. &amp;c. would
-appear to be the document upon which Mr. Robinson
-grounds his contradiction of your statement of the conduct
-of the ninth regiment at Busaco, but <em>that</em> paragraph, which
-runs as follows, I am bound to say is <em>not</em> the truth. ‘Major-general
-Leith’s brigade in consequence marched on, and
-arrived in time to <em>join</em> the five companies of the forty-fifth
-regiment under the honourable lieutenant-colonel Meade
-and the eighth Portuguese regiment under lieutenant-colonel
-Douglas in repulsing the enemy.’ This assertion
-of major-general Picton is, I repeat, <em>not true</em>, for, in the
-first place I did not see the forty-fifth regiment on that day,
-nor was I at any period during the action near them or
-any other British regiment to my left. In the second, as
-regards the eighth Portuguese regiment, the ninth British
-did not most assuredly join <em>that</em> corps in its retrograde
-movement. That major-general Picton left his right flank
-exposed, there can be no question, and had not assistance,
-and <em>British</em> assistance too, come up to his aid as it did I am
-inclined to believe that sir Thomas would have cut a very
-different figure in the despatch to what he did!! Having
-already given you a detail of the defeat of the enemy’s
-column which was permitted to gain the ascendency in
-considerable force on the right of the third division, I beg
-leave to refer you to the gallant officers I mentioned in a
-former letter, who were not only eye-witnesses to the
-charge made by the ninth regiment but actually distinguished
-themselves in front of the regiment at the side
-of their brave accomplished general during that charge.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xx"></a>[xx]</span>
-I believe the whole of sir Rowland Hill’s division from a
-bend in the Sierra could see the ninth in their pursuit of
-the enemy, and though last not the least in importance, as
-a party concerned, I may mention the present major-general
-sir James T. Barns, who commanded the British
-brigade under major-general Leith, (I omitted this gallant
-officer’s name in my former letter) as the major-general
-took the entire command and from him alone I received
-all orders during the action.</p>
-
-<p>“I have now done with Mr. Robinson and his work
-which was perhaps hardly worth my notice.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span style="margin-right: 5.5em;">“I am, my dear Colonel,</span><br />
-<span style="margin-right: 4em;">“Very sincerely yours,</span><br />
-“<span class="smcap">J. Cameron</span>.”<br />
-</p>
-
-
-<p class="p1">Having now sufficiently exposed the weakness of Mr.
-Robinson’s attack upon me, it would be well perhaps to
-say with sir J. Cameron “I have done with his work,”
-but I am tempted to notice two points more.</p>
-
-<p>Treating of the storming of Badajos, Mr. Robinson says,</p>
-
-<p>“Near the appointed time while the men were waiting
-with increased anxiety Picton with his staff came up. The
-troops fell in, all were in a moment silent until the general
-in his calm and impressive manner addressed a few words
-to each regiment. The signal was not yet given, but the
-enemy by means of lighted carcasses discovered the position
-of Picton’s soldiers; to delay longer would only have
-been to expose his men unnecessarily; he therefore gave
-the word to march.”——“Picton’s soldiers set up a loud
-shout and rushed forward up the steep <em>to the ditch at the
-foot of the castle walls</em>.—General Kempt who had thus far
-been with Picton at the head of the division was here
-badly wounded and carried to the rear. Picton was
-therefore left alone to conduct the assault.”</p>
-
-<p>Now strange to say Picton was not present when the
-signal was given, and consequently could neither address
-his men in his “usual calm impressive manner,” nor give<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xxi"></a>[xxi]</span>
-them the word to march. There was no ditch at the foot
-of the castle walls to rush up to, and, as the following letter
-proves, general Kempt alone led the division to the attack.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p1 center">
-<em>Extract of a letter from lieutenant-general sir James</em><br />
-<em>Kempt, K. C. B., master-general of the Ordnance, &amp;c. &amp;c.</em><br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<em>Pall Mall, 10th May, 1833.</em><br />
-</p>
-
-<p>“According to the first arrangement made by lord
-Wellington, my brigade only of the third division was
-destined to attack the castle by escalade. The two other
-brigades were to have attacked the bastion adjoining the
-castle, and to open a communication with it. <em>On the day,
-however, before the assault</em> took place, this arrangement
-was changed by lord Wellington, a French deserter from
-the castle (a serjeant of sappers) gave information that no
-communication could be established between the castle
-and the adjoining bastion, there being (he stated) only one
-communication between the castle and the town, and upon
-learning this, the whole of the third division were ordered
-by lord Wellington to attack the castle. But as my brigade
-only was originally destined for the service, and was to
-lead the attack, the arrangements for the escalade were in
-a great measure confided to me by general Picton.</p>
-
-<p>“The division had to <em>file</em> across a very narrow bridge to
-the attack under a fire from the castle and the troops in
-the covered way. It was ordered to commence at ten
-o’clock, but by means of fire-balls the formation of our
-troops at the head of the trench was discovered by the
-French, who opened a heavy fire on them, and the attack
-was commenced <em>from necessity</em> nearly half an hour before
-the time ordered. I was severely wounded in the foot on
-the glacis after passing the Rivillas almost at the commencement
-of the attack <em>in the trenches</em>, and met Picton
-coming to the front on my being carried to the rear. If
-the attack had not commenced till the hour ordered, he, I
-have no doubt, would have been on the spot to direct in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xxii"></a>[xxii]</span>
-person the commencement of the operations. I have no
-<em>personal</em> knowledge of what took place afterwards, but I
-was informed that after surmounting the most formidable
-difficulties, the escalade was effected by means of <em>two</em>
-ladders only in the first instance in the middle of the
-night, and there can be no question that Picton was
-present in the assault. In giving an account of this
-operation, pray bear in mind that <em>he</em> commanded the
-division, and to <em>him</em> and the enthusiastic valour and determination
-of the troops ought its success alone to be
-attributed.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span style="margin-right: 10em;">“Yours, &amp;c.</span><br />
-“<span class="smcap">James Kempt</span>.”<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>“<em>Colonel Napier, &amp;c.</em>”</p>
-
-
-<p class="p1">The other point to which I would allude is the battle of
-Salamanca. Mr. Robinson, with his baton of military
-criticism, belabours the unfortunate Marmont unmercifully,
-and with an unhappy minuteness of detail, first places
-general Foy’s troops on the <em>left</em> of the French army and
-then destroys them by the bayonets of the third division,
-although the poor man and his unlucky soldiers were all
-the time on the <em>right</em> of the French army, and were never
-engaged with the third division at all. This is however
-but a slight blemish for Mr. Robinson’s book, and his
-competence to criticise Marmont’s movements is no whit
-impaired thereby. I wish however to assure him that the
-expression put into the mouth of the late sir Edward
-Pakenham is “<i lang="it" xml:lang="it">né vero né ben trovato</i>.” Vulgar swaggering
-was no part of that amiable man’s character, which was
-composed of as much gentleness, as much generosity, as
-much frankness, and as much spirit as ever commingled in
-a noble mind. Alas! that he should have fallen so soon
-and so sadly!! His answer to lord Wellington, when the
-latter ordered him to attack, was not, “I will, my lord, by
-God!” With the bearing of a gallant gentleman who had
-resolved to win or perish, he replied, “Yes, if you will<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xxiii"></a>[xxiii]</span>
-give me one grasp of that conquering right hand.” But
-these finer lines do not suit Mr. Robinson’s carving of a
-hero; his manner is more after the coarse menacing idols
-of the South-Sea Islands, than the delicate gracious forms
-of Greece.</p>
-
-<p>Advice to authors is generally thrown away, yet Mr.
-Robinson would do well to rewrite his book with fewer
-inaccuracies, and fewer military disquisitions, avoiding to
-swell its bulk with such long extracts from my work, and
-remembering also that English commissaries are not “<i lang="la" xml:lang="la">feræ
-naturæ</i>” to be hanged, or otherwise destroyed at the pleasure
-of divisional generals. This will save him the trouble of
-attributing to sir Thomas Picton all the standard jokes
-and smart sayings, for the scaring of those gentry, which
-have been current ever since the American war, and which
-have probably come down to us from the Greeks. The
-reduction of bulk, which an attention to these matters will
-produce, may be compensated by giving us more information
-of Picton’s real services, towards which I contribute
-the following information. Picton in his youth served as a
-marine, troops being then used in that capacity, and it is
-believed he was in one of the great naval victories. Mr. Robinson
-has not mentioned this, and it would be well also, if
-he were to learn and set forth some of the general’s generous
-actions towards the widows of officers who fell under
-his command: they are to be discovered, and would do
-more honour to his memory than a thousand blustering
-anecdotes. With these changes and improvements, the
-life of sir Thomas Picton may perhaps, in future, escape
-the equivocal compliment of the newspaper puffers, namely,
-that it is “a military romance.”</p>
-
-<hr class="r10" />
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xxiv"></a>[xxiv]</span></p>
-
-<p class="p1" id="Quarterly"><cite>Quarterly Review.</cite>—This is but a sorry attack to repel.
-“<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Le jeu ne vaut pas la chandelle</i>,” but “rats and mice
-and such small deer have been Tom’s food for many a
-year.”</p>
-
-<p>The reviewer does not like my work, and he invokes
-the vinous vagaries of Mr. Coleridge in aid of his own
-spleen. I do not like his work, or Mr. Coleridge either,
-and I console myself with a maxim of the late eccentric
-general Meadows, who being displeased to see his officers
-wear their cocked hats awry, issued an order beginning
-thus:—“All men have fancy, few have taste.” Let that
-pass. I am ready to acknowledge real errors, and to
-give my authorities for disputed facts.</p>
-
-<p>1º. I admit that the road which leads over the Pyrennees
-to Pampeluna does not <em>unite</em> at that town with the
-royal causeway; yet the error was <em>ty</em>pographical, not
-<em>to</em>pographical, because the course of the royal causeway
-was shewn, just before, to be through towns very distant
-from Pampeluna. The true reading should be “<em>united
-with the first by a branch road commencing at Pampeluna</em>.”</p>
-
-<p>2º. The reviewer says, the mountains round Madrid
-do not touch the Tagus at both ends within the frontier of
-Spain, that river is not the chord of their arc; neither
-are the heights of Palmela and Almada near Lisbon one
-and the same. This is very true, although not very important.
-I should have written the heights of Palmela
-<em>and</em> Almada, instead of the heights of Palmela <em>or</em> Almada.
-But though the mountains round Madrid do not
-to the westward, actually touch the Tagus within the
-Spanish frontier, their shoots are scarcely three miles from
-that river near Talavera, and my description was general,
-being intended merely to shew that Madrid could not be
-approached from the eastward or northward, except over
-one of the mountain ranges, a fact not to be disputed.</p>
-
-<p>3º. It is hinted by the reviewer that lord Melville’s<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xxv"></a>[xxv]</span>
-degrading observation, namely, that “the worst men
-made the best soldiers,” was picked by me out of general
-Foy’s historical fragment. Now, that passage in my
-history was written many months before general Foy’s
-work was published; and my authority was a very clear
-recollection of lord Melville’s speech, as reported in the
-papers of the day. The time was just before his impeachment
-for malversation.</p>
-
-<p>General Foy’s work seems a favourite authority with
-the reviewer, and he treats general Thiebault’s work with
-disdain; yet both were Frenchmen of eminence, and the
-ennobling patriotism of vituperation might have been impartially
-exercised, the weakness of discrimination avoided.
-However general Thiebault’s work, with some apparent
-inaccuracies as to numbers, is written with great ability
-and elegance, and is genuine, whereas general Foy’s
-history is not even general Foy’s writing; colonel D’Esmenard
-in his recent translation of the Prince of Peace’s
-memoirs has the following conclusive passage upon that
-head.</p>
-
-<p>“<em>The illustrious general Foy undertook a history of
-the war in Spain, his premature death prevented him from
-revising and purifying his first sketch, he did me the
-honour to speak of it several times, and even attached
-some value to my observations; the imperfect manuscripts
-of this brilliant orator have been re-handled and re-made
-by other hands. In this posthumous history, he has been
-gratuitously provided with inaccurate and malignant assertions.</em>”</p>
-
-<p>While upon this subject, it is right to do justice to
-Manuel Godoy, Prince of the Peace. A sensual and
-corrupt man he was generally said to be, and I called<span class="sidenote">See Memoirs of Manuel Godoy, translated by Colonel D’Esmenard.</span>
-him so, without sufficient consideration of the extreme
-exaggerations which the Spaniards always display in their
-hatred. The prince has now defended himself; colonel
-D’Esmenard and other persons well acquainted with the
-dissolute manners of the Spanish capital, and having personal<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xxvi"></a>[xxvi]</span>
-experience of Godoy’s character and disposition,<span class="sidenote">See also London &amp; Westminster Review No 1.</span>
-have testified that his social demeanour was decent and
-reserved, and his disposition generous; wherefore I express
-my regret at having ignorantly and unintentionally
-calumniated him.</p>
-
-<p>To return to the reviewer. He is continually observing
-that he does not know my authority for such and such a
-fact, and therefore he insinuates, that no such fact had
-place, thus making his ignorance the measure of my
-accuracy. This logic seems to be akin to that of the
-wild-beast showman, who declares that “the little negro
-boys tie the ostrich bird’s leg to a tree, which fully accounts
-for the milk in the cocoa-nuts.” I might reply
-generally as the late alderman Coombe did to a certain
-baronet, who, in a dispute, was constantly exclaiming,
-“I don’t know that, Mr. Alderman! I don’t know that!”
-“Ah, sir George! all that you <em>don’t know</em> would make
-a large book!” However it will be less witty, but more
-conclusive to furnish at least some of my authorities.</p>
-
-<p>1º. In opposition to the supposititious general Foy’s
-account of Solano’s murder, and in support of my own
-history, I give the authority of sir Hew Dalrymple, from
-whom the information was obtained; a much better authority
-than Foy, because he was in close correspondence
-with the insurgents of Seville at the time, and had an
-active intelligent agent there.</p>
-
-<p>2º. Against the supposititious Foy’s authority as to the
-numbers of the French army in June 1808, the authority
-of Napoleon’s imperial returns is pleaded. From these
-returns my estimate of the French forces in Spain during
-May 1808 was taken, and it is so stated in my <a href="#NO_XVIII">Appendix.</a>
-The inconsistency of the reviewer himself may
-also be noticed, for he marks my number as <em>exclusive</em> of
-Junot’s army, and yet <em>includes</em> that army in what he calls
-Foy’s estimate! But Junot’s army was more than 29,000
-and not 24,000 as the supposititious Foy has it, and that
-number taken from 116,000 which, though wrong, is<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xxvii"></a>[xxvii]</span>
-Foy’s estimate of the whole leaves less than 87,000. I
-said 80,000. The difference is not great, yet my authority
-is the best, and the reviewer feels that it is so,
-or he would also have adopted general Foy’s numbers
-of the French at the combat of Roliça. In Foy’s
-history they are set down as less than 2,500, in mine
-they are called 5,000. He may be right, but it would
-not suit the reviewer to adopt a <em>truth</em> from a French
-writer.</p>
-
-<p>3º. On the negative proofs afforded 1º. by the absence
-of any quoted voucher in my work, 2º. by the absence of
-any acknowledgement of such a fact in general Anstruther’s
-manuscript journal, which journal may or may not
-be garbled, the reviewer asserts that the English ministers
-never contemplated the appointing of a military governor
-for Cadiz. Against this, let the duke of Wellington’s
-authority be pleaded, for in my note-book of conversations
-held with his grace upon the subject of my history,
-the following passage occurs:—</p>
-
-<p>“The ministers were always wishing to occupy Cadiz,
-lord Wellington thinks this a folly, Cadiz was rather a
-burthen to him, but either general Spencer or general
-Anstruther was intended to command there, thinks it was
-Anstruther, he came out with his appointment.”</p>
-
-<p>Now it is possible that as Acland’s arrival was also the
-subject of conversation, his name was mentioned instead
-of Anstruther’s; and it is also possible, as the note shows,
-that Spencer was the man, but the main fact relative to
-the government could not have been mistaken. To balance
-this, however, there undoubtedly is an error as to the
-situation of general Anstruther’s brigade at the battle of
-Vimiero. It appears by an extract from his journal, that
-it was disposed, not, as the reviewer says, on the right of
-Fane’s brigade, but at various places, part being on the
-right of Fane, part upon his left, part held in reserve.
-The forty-third were on the left of Fane, the fifty-second
-and ninety-seventh on his right, the ninth in reserve, the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xxviii"></a>[xxviii]</span>
-error is therefore very trivial, being simply the describing
-two regiments as of Fane’s brigade, when they were of
-Anstruther’s without altering their position. What does
-the public care whether it was a general called Fane, or a
-general called Anstruther, who was on the right hand if
-the important points of the action are correctly described?
-The fighting of the fifty-second and ninety-seventh has
-indeed been but slightly noticed, in my history, under
-the denomination of Fane’s right, whereas those regiments
-make a good figure, and justly so, in Anstruther’s journal,
-because it is the story of the brigade; but general history
-ought not to enter into the details of regimental fighting,
-save where the effects are decisive on the general result,
-as in the case of the fiftieth and forty-third on this occasion.
-The whole loss of the ninety-seventh and fifty-second
-together did not exceed sixty killed and wounded,
-whereas the fiftieth alone lost ninety, and the forty-third
-one hundred and eighteen.</p>
-
-<p>While on the subject of Anstruther’s brigade, it is right
-also to admit another error, one of place; that is if it be
-true, as the reviewer says, that Anstruther landed at
-Paymayo bay, and not at Maceira bay. The distance
-between those places may be about five miles, and the
-fact had no influence whatever on the operations; nevertheless
-the error was not drawn from Mr. Southey’s history,
-though I readily acknowledge I could not go to a
-more copious source of error. With respect to the imputed
-mistake as to time, viz. the day of Anstruther’s
-landing, it is set down in my first edition as the 19th,
-wherefore the 18th in the third edition is simply a mistake
-of the press! Alas! poor reviewer!</p>
-
-<p>But there are graver charges. I have maligned the
-worthy bishop of Oporto; and ill-used the patriotic
-Gallician junta! Reader, the bishop of Oporto and the
-patriarch of Lisbon are one and the same person! Examine
-then my history and especially its appendix and
-judge for yourself, whether the reviewer may not justly be<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xxix"></a>[xxix]</span>
-addressed as the pope was by Richard I. when he sent
-him the bishop of Beauvais’ bloody suit of mail. “See
-now if this be thy son’s coat.” But the junta! Why it
-is true that I said they glossed over the battle of Rio Seco
-after the Spanish manner; that their policy was but a
-desire to obtain money, and to avoid personal inconvenience;
-that they gave sir Arthur Wellesley incorrect
-statements of the number of the Portuguese and Spaniards
-at Oporto, and a more inaccurate estimate of the French
-army under Junot. All this is true. It is true that I have
-said it, true that they did it. The reviewer <em>says</em> my
-statement is a “gratuitous misrepresentation.” I will <em>prove</em>
-that the reviewer’s remark is a gratuitous impertinence.</p>
-
-<p>1º. The junta informed sir Arthur Wellesley, that
-Bessieres had twenty thousand men in the battle, whereas
-he had but fifteen thousand.</p>
-
-<p>2º. That Cuesta lost only two guns, whereas he lost
-eighteen.</p>
-
-<p>3º. That Bessieres lost seven thousand men and six
-guns, whereas he lost only three hundred and fifty men,
-and no guns.</p>
-
-<p>4º. That the Spanish army had retired to Benevente as
-if it still preserved its consistence, whereas Blake and
-Cuesta had quarrelled and separated, all the magazines
-of the latter had been captured and the whole country
-was at the mercy of the French. This was glossing it
-over in the Spanish manner.</p>
-
-<p>Again the junta pretended that they desired the deliverance
-of Portugal to enable them to unite with the
-southern provinces in a general effort; but Mr. Stuart’s
-letters prove that they would never unite at all with any
-other province, and that their aim was to separate from
-Spain altogether and join Portugal. Their wish to avoid
-personal inconvenience was notorious, it was the cause of
-their refusal to let sir David Baird’s troops disembark, it
-was apparent to all who had to deal with them, and it
-belongs to the national character. Then their eagerness<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xxx"></a>[xxx]</span>
-to obtain money, and their unpatriotic use of it when
-obtained, has been so amply set forth in various parts of
-my history that I need not do more than refer to that, and
-to my quoted authorities, especially in the second chapters
-of the 3d and 14th Books. Moreover the reviewer’s
-quotations belie his comments, and like the slow-worm
-defined by Johnson “a blind worm, a large viper, <em>venomous</em>,
-<em>not mortal</em>,” he is at once dull and malignant.</p>
-
-<p>The junta told sir Arthur Wellesley that ten thousand
-Portuguese troops were at Oporto, and that two thousand
-Spaniards, who had marched the 15th, would be there on
-the 25th of July; yet when sir Arthur arrived at Oporto,
-on the 25th, he found only fifteen hundred Portuguese
-and three hundred Spaniards; the two thousand men said
-to be in march had never moved and were not expected.
-Here then instead of twelve thousand men, there were
-only eighteen hundred! At Coimbra indeed eighty
-miles from Oporto, there were five thousand militia and
-regulars, one-third of which were unarmed, and according
-to colonel Browne’s letter, as given in the folio edition
-of the inquiry upon the Cintra convention, there were also
-twelve hundred armed peasants which the reviewer has
-magnified into twelve thousand. Thus without dwelling
-on the difference of place, the difference between the true
-numbers and the statements of the Gallician junta, was
-four thousand; nor will it mend the matter if we admit
-the armed peasants to be twelve thousand, for that would
-make a greater difference on the other side.</p>
-
-<p>The junta estimated the French at fifteen thousand men,
-but the embarkation returns of the number shipped after
-the convention gave twenty-five thousand seven hundred and
-sixty, making a difference of more than ten thousand men,
-exclusive of those who had fallen or been captured in the
-battles of Vimiero and Roliça, and of those who had died in
-hospital! Have I not a right to treat these as inaccurate
-statements; and the reviewer’s remark as an impertinence?</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xxxi"></a>[xxxi]</span></p>
-
-<p>The reviewer speaking of the battle of Baylen scoffs at
-the inconsistency of calling it an insignificant event and
-yet attributing to it immense results. But my expression
-was, an insignificant <em>action in itself</em>, which at once reconciles
-the seeming contradiction, and this the writer who
-has no honest healthy criticism, suppresses. My allusion
-to the disciplined battalions of Valley Forge, as being the
-saviours of American independence, also excites his
-morbid spleen, and assuming what is not true, namely,
-that I selected that period as the time of the greatest
-improvement in American discipline, he says, their soldiers
-there were few, as if that bore at all upon the
-question.</p>
-
-<p>But my expression is <em>at</em> Valley Forge not “<em>of</em> Valley
-Forge.” The allusion was used figuratively to shew that
-an armed peasantry cannot resist regular troops, and Washington’s
-correspondence is one continued enforcement of
-the principle, yet the expression may be also taken literally.
-It was with the battalions <em>of</em> Valley Forge that
-Washington drew Howe to the Delawarre, and twice
-crossing that river in winter, surprised the Germans at
-Trenton and beat the British at Prince Town. It was
-with those battalions he made his attacks at German’s-town;
-with those battalions he prevented Howe from
-sending assistance to Burgoyne’s army, which was in
-consequence captured. In fine, to use his own expression,
-“The British eagle’s wings were spread, and with those
-battalions he clipped them.” The American general,<span class="sidenote">See Stedman’s History, 4to. p. 285.</span>
-however, at one time occupied, close to Valley Forge, a
-camp in the Jerseys, bearing the odd name of <em>Quibble</em>-town,
-on which probably the reviewer’s eye was fixed.</p>
-
-<p>But notwithstanding Quibble-town, enthusiasm will not
-avail in the long run against discipline. Is authority
-wanted? We have had Napoleon’s and Washington’s,
-and now we have Wellington’s, for in the fifth volume of
-his Despatches, p. 215, as compiled by colonel Gurwood,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xxxii"></a>[xxxii]</span>
-will be found the following passage upon the arming of the
-Spanish and Portuguese people.</p>
-
-<p>“Reflection and above all experience have shown me
-the exact extent of this advantage in a military point of
-view, and I only beg that those who have to contend with
-the French, will not be diverted from the business of
-raising, arming, equipping, and training regular bodies by
-any notion that the people when armed and arrayed, will
-be of, I will not say any, but of much, use to them.
-The subject is too large for discussion in a paper of this
-description, but I can show hundreds of instances to prove
-the truth of as many reasons why exertions of this description
-ought not to be relied on. At all events no officer
-can calculate upon an operation to be performed against
-the French by persons of this description, and I believe
-that no officer will enter upon an operation against the
-French without calculating his means most anxiously.”</p>
-
-<p>It is said that some officers of rank have furnished the
-reviewer’s military criticisms, I can understand why, if the
-fact be true, but it is difficult to believe that any officer
-would even for the gratification of a contemptible jealousy,
-have lent himself to the assertion that sir Arthur Wellesley
-could not have made a <em>forced or a secret march</em> from
-Vimiero to Mafra, because he was encumbered with four
-hundred bullock-carts. Sir Arthur did certainly intend to<span class="sidenote">See his evidence, Court of Inquiry on the Convention of Cintra.</span>
-make that march, and he would as certainly not have
-attempted such a flank movement <em>openly and deliberately</em>
-while thus encumbered and moving at the rate of two
-miles an hour, within a short distance of a general having
-a more experienced army and an overwhelming cavalry.
-The sneer is therefore directed more against sir Arthur
-Wellesley than against me.</p>
-
-<p>This supposed officer of rank says that because the
-enemy had a shorter road to move in retreat, his line of
-march could not even be menaced, still less intercepted by
-his opponent moving on the longer route! How then did<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xxxiii"></a>[xxxiii]</span>
-Cæsar intercept Afranius and Petreius, Pompey’s lieutenants,
-on the Sicoris? How Pompey himself at Dyrrachium?
-How did Napoleon pass Beaulieu on the Po and
-gain Lodi? How did Massena dislodge Wellington from
-Busaco? How did Marmont turn him on the Guarena in
-1812? How did Wellington himself turn the French on
-the Douro and on the Ebro in 1813? And above all how
-did he propose to turn Torres Vedras by the very march
-in question, seeing that from Torres Vedras to Mafra is
-only twelve miles and from Vimiero to Mafra is nineteen
-miles, the roads leading besides over a river and through
-narrow ways and defiles? But who ever commended
-such dangerous movements, if they were not masked or
-their success insured by some peculiar circumstances, or
-by some stratagem? And what is my speculation but a
-suggestion of this nature? “Under certain circumstances,”
-said sir Arthur Wellesley at the enquiry, “an
-army might have gained three hours’ start in such a
-march.” The argument of the supposititious officer of
-rank is therefore a foolish sophism; nor is that relative to
-sir John Moore’s moving upon Santarem, nor the assertion
-that my plan was at variance with all sir Arthur Wellesley’s
-objects, more respectable.</p>
-
-<p>My plan, as it is invidiously and falsely called, was
-simply a reasoning upon the advantages of sir Arthur
-Wellesley’s plan, and the calculation of days by the
-reviewer is mere mysticism. Sir Arthur wished sir John
-Moore to go to Santarem, and if sir Arthur’s recommendation
-had been followed, sir John Moore, who, instead of
-taking five days as this writer would have him do, actually
-disembarked the greatest part of his troops in the Mondego
-in half a day, that is before one o’clock on the 22d,
-might have been at Santarem the 27th even according to
-the reviewer’s scale of march, ten miles a day! Was he
-to remain idle there, if the enemy did not abandon Lisbon
-and the strong positions covering that city? If he could
-stop Junot’s retreat either at Santarem or in the Alemtejo,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xxxiv"></a>[xxxiv]</span>
-a cavalry country, he could surely as safely operate towards
-Saccavem, a strong country. What was sir A.
-Wellesley’s observation on that head? “If the march to
-Mafra had been made as I had ordered it on the 21st of
-August in the morning, the position of Torres Vedras
-would have been turned, and there was no position in the
-enemy’s possession, excepting that in our front at Cabeça
-de Montechique and those in rear of it. And I must
-observe to the court that if sir John Moore’s corps had
-gone to Santarem as proposed as soon as it disembarked
-in the Mondego, there would have been no great safety in
-those positions, if it was, as it turned out to be, in our
-power to beat the French.” Lo! then, my plan is not at
-variance with sir Arthur Wellesley’s object. But the
-whole of the reviewer’s sophistry is directed, both as to
-this march and that to Mafra, not against me, but through
-me against the duke of Wellington whom the writer dare
-not attack openly; witness his cunning defence of that
-“<em>wet-blanket</em>” counsel which stopped sir Arthur Wellesley’s
-pursuit of Junot from the field of Vimiero. Officer
-of rank! Aye, it sounds grandly! but it was a shrewd
-thing of Agesilaus when any one was strongly recommended
-to him to ask “who will vouch for the voucher?”</p>
-
-<p>Passing now from the officer of rank, I affirm, notwithstanding
-Mr. Southey’s “magnificent chapters” and sir
-Charles Vaughan’s “brief and elegant work,” that the
-statement about Palafox and Zaragoza is correct. My
-authority is well known to sir Charles Vaughan, and is
-such as he is not likely to dispute; that gentleman will not,
-I feel well assured, now guarantee the accuracy of the
-tales he was told at Zaragoza. But my real offence is not
-the disparagement of Palafox, it is the having spoiled some
-magnificent romances, present or to come; for I remembered
-the Roman saying about the “Lying Greek fable,”
-and endeavoured so to record the glorious feats of my
-countrymen, that even our enemies should admit the facts.
-And they have hitherto done so, with a magnanimity<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xxxv"></a>[xxxv]</span>
-becoming brave men who are conscious of merit in misfortune,
-thus putting to shame the grovelling spirit that would
-make calumny and vituperation the test of patriotism.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Since writing the above a second article has appeared in
-the same review, to which the only reply necessary, is the
-giving of more proofs, that the passages of my history,
-contradicted by the reviewer, are strictly accurate. And to
-begin, it is necessary to inform him, that a man may be
-perfectly disciplined and a superb soldier, and yet be a
-raw soldier as to real service; and further, that staff
-officers may have been a long time in the English service,
-and yet be quite inexperienced. Even a quarter-master-general
-of an army has been known to commit all kinds of
-errors, and discover negligence and ignorance of his duty,
-in his first campaigns, who yet by dint of long practice
-became a very good officer in his line, though perhaps not
-so great a general as he would pass himself off for; for it
-was no ill saying of a Scotchman, that “some men, if
-bought at the world’s price, might be profitably sold at
-their own.” Now requesting the reader to observe that
-in the following quotations the impugned passages of my
-history are first given, and are followed by the authority,
-though not all the authority which might be adduced in
-support of each fact, I shall proceed to expose the reviewer’s
-fallacies.</p>
-
-<p>1º. History. “<em>Napoleon, accompanied by the dukes of
-Dalmatia and Montebello, quitted Bayonne the morning of
-the 8th, and reached Vittoria in the evening.</em>”</p>
-
-<p>The reviewer contradicts this on the authority of Savary’s
-Memoirs, quoting twice the pages and volume, namely
-vol. iv. pages 12, 40, and 41. Now Savary is a writer so
-careless about dates, and small facts, as to have made
-errors of a month as to time in affairs which he conducted<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xxxvi"></a>[xxxvi]</span>
-himself. Thus he says king Joseph abandoned Madrid on
-the 3d of July 1808, whereas it was on the 3d of August.
-He also says the landing of sir Arthur Wellesley in Portugal
-was made known to him, before the council of war
-relative to the evacuation of Madrid was held at that capital;
-but the council was held the 29th of July, and sir
-Arthur did not land until the 1st of August! Savary is
-therefore no authority on such points. But there is no
-such passage as the reviewer quotes, in Savary’s work.
-The reader will look for it in vain in pages 12, 40, and 41.
-It is neither in the fourth volume nor in any other volume.
-However at page 8 of the second volume, second part, he will
-find the following passage. “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">L’Empereur prit la route
-d’Espagne avec toute son armée. Il arriva à Bayonne avec
-la rapidité d’un trait, de même que de Bayonne à Vittoria.
-Il fit ce dernier trajet à cheval <em>en deux courses</em>, de la
-première il alla à Tolosa et de la seconde à Vittoria.</span>” The
-words “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">deux courses</span>” the reviewer with his usual candour
-translates, “<em>the first day to Tolosa, the second day to Vittoria</em>.”
-But notwithstanding this I repeat, that the emperor
-made his journey in one day. My authority is the
-assurance of a French officer of the general staff who was
-present, and if the value of the fact were worth the pains,
-I could show that it was very easy for Napoleon to do so,
-inasmuch as a private gentleman, the correspondent of one
-of the newspapers, has recently performed the same journey
-in fourteen hours. But my only object in noticing it at all
-is to show the flagrant falseness of the reviewer.</p>
-
-<p>2º. History. “<em>Sir John Moore had to organize an
-army of raw soldiers, and in a poor unsettled country just
-relieved from the pressure of a harsh and griping enemy, he
-had to procure the transport necessary for his stores, ammunition,
-and even for the conveyance of the officers’ baggage.
-Every branch of the administration civil and military was
-composed of men zealous and willing indeed, yet new to a
-service where no energy can prevent the effects of inexperience
-being severely felt.</em>”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xxxvii"></a>[xxxvii]</span></p>
-
-<p class="p1">Authorities. Extracts from sir John Moore’s Journal
-and Letters.</p>
-
-<p>“I am equipping the troops here and moving them
-towards the frontier, but I found the army without the
-least preparation, without any precise information with
-respect to roads, and no arrangement for feeding the
-troops upon their march.” “The army is without equipments
-of any kind, either for the carriage of the light baggage
-of regiments, artillery stores, commissariat stores, or
-any other appendage to an army, and not a magazine is
-formed on any of the routes.”—“The commissariat has at
-its head Mr. Erskine, a gentleman of great integrity and
-honour, and of considerable ability, but neither he nor any
-of his officers have any experience of what an army of this
-magnitude requires to put it in motion.”—“Every thing is
-however going on with zeal; there is no want of that in an
-English army, and though the difficulties are considerable,
-and we have to move through a very impracticable country,
-I expect to be past the frontier early in November.”</p>
-
-<p>Extract from a memoir by sir John Colborne, military
-secretary to sir John Moore.</p>
-
-<p>“The heads of departments were all zeal, but they had
-but little experience, and their means for supplying the
-wants of the army about to enter on an active campaign
-were in many respects limited.”</p>
-
-<p>3º. History. “<em>One Sataro, the same person who has
-been already mentioned as an agent of Junot’s in the negociations
-engaged to supply the army, but dishonestly failing
-in his contract so embarrassed the operations,” &amp;c. &amp;c.</em></p>
-
-<p>Authority. Extract from sir John Colborne’s Memoir
-quoted above.</p>
-
-<p>“Sataro, a contractor at Lisbon, had agreed to supply
-the divisions on the march through Portugal. He failed
-in his contract, and daily complaints were transmitted to
-head-quarters of want of provisions on this account. The
-divisions of generals Fraser and Beresford were halted, and
-had it not been for the exertions of these generals and of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xxxviii"></a>[xxxviii]</span>
-the Portuguese magistrates the army would have been
-long delayed.”</p>
-
-<p>4º. History. “<em>General Anstruther had unadvisedly
-halted the leading columns in Almeida.</em>”</p>
-
-<p>Authority. Extract from sir John Moore’s Journal.</p>
-
-<p>“Br.-general Anstruther, who took possession of Almeida
-from the French, and who has been there ever since, and
-to whom I had written to make preparations for the passage
-of the troops on this route and Coimbra, has stopt
-them within the Portuguese frontier instead of making
-them proceed as I had directed to Ciudad Rodrigo and
-Salamanca.”</p>
-
-<p>5º. History. “<em>Sir John Moore did not hear of the
-total defeat and dispersion of Belvedere’s Estremaduran
-army until a week after it happened, and then only through
-one official channel.</em>” That channel was Mr. Stuart. Sir
-John had heard indeed that the Estremadurans had been
-forced from Burgos, but nothing of their utter defeat and
-ruin: the difference is cunningly overlooked by the reviewer.</p>
-
-<p>Authority. Extract of a letter from sir John Moore to
-Mr. Frere, Nov. 16th, 1808.</p>
-
-<p>“I had last night the honour to receive your letter of
-the 13th, together with letters of the 14th from Mr. Stuart
-and lord William Bentinck.” “I did not know until I
-received Mr. Stuart’s letter that the defeat of the Estremaduran
-army had been so complete.”</p>
-
-<p>Now that army was destroyed on the morning of the
-10th, and here we see that the intelligence of it did not
-reach sir John Moore till the night of the 15th, which if
-not absolutely a whole week is near enough to justify the
-expression.</p>
-
-<p>6º. History. “<em>Thousands of arms were stored up in the
-great towns.</em>”</p>
-
-<p>Authority. Extract from sir John Moore’s letter to
-Mr. Stuart.</p>
-
-<p>1st December, 1808. “At Zamora there are <em>three or<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xxxix"></a>[xxxix]</span>
-four thousand</em> stand of arms, in other places <em>there may be
-more</em>. If they remain collected in towns they will be taken
-by the enemy.”</p>
-
-<p>7º. History. “<em>Sir John Hope’s division was ordered to
-pass the Duero at Tordesillas.</em>”</p>
-
-<p>Authority. Extract of a letter from sir John Moore to
-sir David Baird, 12th Dec. 1808.</p>
-
-<p>“Lord Paget is at Toro, to which place I have sent the
-reserve and general Beresford’s brigade, the rest of the
-troops from thence are moving to the Duero, my quarters
-to-morrow will be at Alaejos, <em>Hope’s at Tordesillas</em>.”</p>
-
-<p>Now it is true that on the 14th sir John Moore, writing
-from Alaejos to sir David Baird, says that he had <em>then</em>
-resolved to change his direction, and instead of going to
-Valladolid should be at Toro on the 15th with all the
-troops; but as Hope was to have been at Tordesillas the
-same day that Moore was at Alaejos, namely on the 13th,
-he must have marched from thence to Toro; and where
-was the danger? The cavalry of his division under general
-C. Stewart had already surprized the French at Rueda,
-higher up the Duero, and it was well known no infantry
-were nearer than the Carion.</p>
-
-<p>8º. History. “<em>Sir John Moore was not put in communication
-with any person with whom he could communicate
-at all.</em>”</p>
-
-<p>Authority. Extracts from sir John Moore’s letters and
-Journal, 19th and 28th November.</p>
-
-<p>“I am not in communication with any of the Spanish
-generals, and neither know their plans nor those of their
-government. No channel of information has been opened
-to me, and I have no knowledge of the force or situation
-of the enemy, but what as a stranger I picked up.”—“I
-am in communication with no one Spanish army, nor am I
-acquainted with the intentions of the Spanish government
-or any of its generals. Castaños with whom I was put in
-correspondence is deprived of his command at the moment
-I might have expected to hear from him, and La Romana,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xl"></a>[xl]</span>
-with whom I suppose I am now to correspond, (for it has
-not been officially communicated to me,) is absent, God
-knows where.”</p>
-
-<p>9º. History. “<em>Sir John’s first intention was to move
-upon Valladolid, but at Alaejos an intercepted despatch of
-the prince of Neufchatel was brought to head-quarters, and
-the contents were important enough to change the direction
-of the march. Valderas was given as the point of union
-with Baird.</em>”</p>
-
-<p>Authority. Extract from sir John Moore’s Journal.</p>
-
-<p>“I marched on the 13th from Salamanca; head-quarters,
-Alaejos; <em>there</em> I saw an intercepted letter from
-Berthier, prince of Neufchatel, to marshal Soult, duke of
-Dalmatia, which determined me to unite the army without
-loss of time. I therefore moved on the 15th to Toro instead
-of Valladolid. At <em>Valderas</em> I was joined by sir
-David Baird with two brigades.”</p>
-
-<p>10º. History. “<em>No assistance could be expected from
-Romana.</em>”—“<em>He did not destroy the bridge of Mansilla.</em>”—“<em>Contrary
-to his promise he pre-occupied Astorga, and
-when there proposed offensive plans of an absurd nature</em>.”</p>
-
-<p>Authorities. 1º. Sir John Moore to Mr. Frere, Dec.
-12th, 1808.</p>
-
-<p>“I have heard nothing from the marquis de la Romana
-in answer to the letters I wrote to him on the 6th and 8th
-instants. <em>I am thus disappointed of his co-operation or of
-knowing what plan he proposes.</em>”</p>
-
-<p>2º. Colonel Symes to sir David Baird, 14th Dec.</p>
-
-<p>“In the morning I waited on the marquis and pressed
-him as far as I could with propriety on the subject of joining
-sir John Moore, to which he evaded giving any more
-than general assurances.”</p>
-
-<p>3º. Extract from sir John Moore’s Journal.</p>
-
-<p>“At two I received a letter from Romana, brought to
-me by his aide-de-camp, stating that he had twenty-two
-thousand, (he only brought up six thousand,) and would
-be happy to co-operate with me.” “At Castro Nuevo sir<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xli"></a>[xli]</span>
-D. Baird sent me a letter he had addressed to him of
-rather a later date, stating that he was retiring into the
-Gallicias. I sent his aide-de-camp back to him with a
-letter requesting to know if such was his intention, but
-without expressing either approbation or disapprobation.
-<em>In truth I placed no dependance on him or his army.</em>”</p>
-
-<p>4º. Sir John Moore to lord Castlereagh, Astorga, 31st
-December.</p>
-
-<p>“I arrived here yesterday, when <em>contrary to his promise</em>
-and to my expectations I find the marquis de la Romana
-with a great part of his troops.”—“He said to me in direct
-terms that had he known how things were, he neither
-would have accepted the command nor have returned to
-Spain. With all this, however, he talks of attacks and
-movements which are <em>quite absurd</em>, and then returns to the
-helpless state of his army.” “<em>He could not be persuaded
-to destroy the bridge at Mansillas</em>, he posted some troops
-at it which were forced and taken prisoners by the French
-on their march from Mayorga.”</p>
-
-<p>The reviewer must now be content to swallow his disgust
-at finding Napoleon’s genius admired, Soult’s authority
-accepted, and Romana’s military talents contemned in my
-History; these proofs of my accuracy are more than enough,
-and instead of adding to them, an apology is necessary for
-having taken so much notice of two articles only remarkable
-for malevolent imbecility and systematic violation of
-truth. But if the reader wishes to have a good standard
-of value, let him throw away this silly fellow’s carpings,
-and look at the duke of Wellington’s despatches as compiled
-by colonel Gurwood, 5th and 6th volumes. He will
-there find that my opinions are generally corroborated,
-never invalidated by the duke’s letters, and that while no
-fact of consequence is left out by me, new light has been
-thrown upon many events, the true bearings of which were
-unknown at the time to the English general. Thus at
-page 337 of the despatches, lord Wellington speaks in
-doubt about some obscure negociations of marshal Victor,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xlii"></a>[xlii]</span>
-which I have shewn, book vii. chap. iii. to be a secret
-intrigue for the treacherous surrender of Badajos. The
-proceedings in Joseph’s council of war, related by me, and
-I am the first writer who was ever informed of them, shew
-the real causes of the various attacks made by the French
-at the battle of Talavera. I have shewn also, and I am
-the first English writer who has shewn it, that the
-French had in Spain one hundred thousand more men
-than the English general knew of, that Soult brought
-down to the valley of the Tagus after the fight of Talavera,
-a force which was stronger by more than twenty thousand
-men than sir Arthur Wellesley estimated it to be; and
-without this knowledge the imminence of the danger,
-which the English army escaped by crossing the bridge of
-Arzobispo, cannot be understood.</p>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote">See Wellington’s Despatches, vol. v. p. 488, et passim.</span>
-Again, the means of correcting the error which Wellington
-fell into in 1810 relative to Soult, who he supposed to
-have been at the head of the second corps in Placentia
-when he was really at Seville, has been furnished by me,
-insomuch as I have shewn that it was Mermet who was at
-the head of that corps, and that Wellington was deceived
-by the name of the younger Soult who commanded Mermet’s
-cavalry.</p>
-
-<p>Two facts only <ins class="corr" id="tn-xlii" title="Transcriber’s Note—Original text: 'have been mistated'">
-have been misstated</ins> in my history.</p>
-
-<p>1º. Treating of the conspiracy in Soult’s camp at
-Oporto, I said that D’Argenton, to save his life, readily
-told all he knew of the British, but <em>with respect to his
-accomplices, was immoveable</em>.</p>
-
-<p>2º. Treating of Cuesta’s conduct in the Talavera campaign
-I have enumerated amongst his reasons for not
-fighting that it was Sunday.</p>
-
-<p>Now the duke of Wellington says D’Argenton did betray
-his accomplices, and yet my information was drawn
-from authority only second to the duke’s, viz. major-general
-sir James Douglas, who conducted the interviews with
-D’Argenton, and was the suggester and attendant of his
-journey to the British head-quarters. He was probably<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xliii"></a>[xliii]</span>
-deceived by that conspirator, but the following extract
-from his narrative proves that the fact was not lightly
-stated in my History.</p>
-
-<p>“D’Argenton was willing enough to save his life by
-revealing every thing he knew about the English, and
-among other things assured Soult it would be nineteen
-days before any serious attack could be made upon Oporto;
-and there can be little doubt that Soult, giving credit to
-this information, lost his formidable barrier of the Douro
-by surprise. <em>As no threats on the part of the marshal
-could induce D’Argenton to reveal the name of his accomplices</em>,
-he was twice brought out to be shot and remanded
-in the expectation that between hope and intimidation he
-might be led to a full confession. On the morning
-of the attack he was hurried out of prison by the
-gens-d’armes, and, no other conveyance for him being at
-hand, he was placed upon a horse of his own, and that
-one the very best he had. The gens-d’armes in their hurry
-did not perceive what he very soon found out himself, that
-he was the best mounted man of the party, and watching
-his opportunity he sprung his horse over a wall into the
-fields, and made his escape to the English, who were following
-close.”</p>
-
-<p>For the second error so good a plea cannot be offered,
-and yet there was authority for that also. The story was
-circulated, and generally believed at the time, as being
-quite consonant with the temper of the Spanish general;
-and it has since been repeated in a narrative of the campaign
-of 1809, published by lord Munster. Nevertheless it
-appears from colonel Gurwood’s compilation, 5th vol.
-page 343, that it is not true.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Having thus disposed of the Quarterly Review I request
-the reader’s attention to the following corrections of errors,
-as to facts, which having lately reached me, are inserted<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xliv"></a>[xliv]</span>
-here in preference to waiting for a new edition of the
-volumes to which they refer.</p>
-
-<p>1º. <em>The storming of Badajos.</em></p>
-
-<p>“General Viellande, and Phillipon who was wounded,
-seeing all ruined, passed the bridge with a few hundred
-soldiers, and entered San Cristoval, where they all surrendered
-the next morning to lord Fitzroy Somerset.”</p>
-
-<p><em>Correction by colonel Warre, assented to by lord Fitzroy
-Somerset.</em></p>
-
-<p>“Lieut.-colonel Warre was the senior officer present at
-the surrender, having joined lord Fitzroy Somerset (who
-was in search of the governor and the missing part of the
-garrison) just as he was collecting a few men wherewith to
-summon in his capacity of aide-de-camp to the commander-in-chief,
-the tête-du-pont of San Christoval.”</p>
-
-<p>2º. <em>Assault of Tarifa.</em> “The Spaniards and the forty-seventh
-British regiment guarded the breach.”</p>
-
-<p><em>Correction by sir Hugh Gough.</em></p>
-
-<p>“The only part of the forty-seventh engaged during <em>the
-assault</em> were two companies under captain Livelesly, stationed
-on the east bastion one hundred and fifty paces
-from the breach, and the Spaniards were no where to
-be seen, except behind a pallisade in the street, a considerable
-way from the breach. <em>The eighty-seventh, and the
-eighty-seventh alone, defended the breach.</em> The two companies
-of the forty-seventh, I before mentioned, and the
-two companies of the rifles, which latter were stationed
-on my left but all under my orders, did all that disciplined
-and brave troops could do in support, and the two six-pounders,
-under lieut.-colonel Mitchel of the artillery,
-most effectively did their duty while their fire could tell,
-the immediate front of the breach from the great dip of the
-ground not being under their range.”</p>
-
-<p>This correction renders it proper that I should give my
-authority for saying the Spaniards were at the breach.</p>
-
-<p>Extract from a letter of sir Charles Smith, the engineer
-who defended Tarifa, to colonel Napier.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xlv"></a>[xlv]</span></p>
-
-<p>“The next great measure of opposition was to assign
-to the Spaniards the defence of the breach. This would
-have been insupportable: the able advocacy of lord Proby
-proved that it would be a positive insult to the Spanish
-nation to deprive its troops of the honour, and all my
-solemn remonstrances could produce, was to split the difference,
-and take upon myself to determine which half of
-the breach should be entrusted to our ally.”</p>
-
-<p>The discrepancy between sir Charles Smith’s and sir
-Hugh Gough’s statement is however easily reconciled,
-being more apparent than real. The Spaniards were
-<em>ordered</em> to defend half the breach, but in <em>fact</em> did not
-appear there.</p>
-
-<p>To the above it is proper here to add a fact made known
-to me since my fourth volume was published, and very
-honourable to major Henry King, of the eighty-second
-regiment. Being commandant of the town of Tarifa, a
-command distinct from the island, he was called to a
-council of war on the 29th of December, and when most
-of those present were for abandoning the place he gave
-in the following note,</p>
-
-<p>“I am decidedly of opinion that the defence of Tarifa
-will afford the British garrison an opportunity of gaining
-eternal honour, and it ought to be defended to the last
-extremity.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span style="margin-right: 3em;">“<span class="smcap">I. H. S. King</span>,</span><br />
-“<span class="fs80"><em>Commandant of Tarifa</em>.</span>”<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>3º. <em>Battle of Barosa.</em> “The Spanish Walloon guards,
-the regiment of Ciudad Real, and some guerilla cavalry,
-turned indeed without orders coming up just as the action
-ceased, and it was expected that colonel Whittingham, an
-Englishman, commanding a powerful body of horse, would
-have done as much, but no stroke in aid of the British
-was struck by a Spanish sabre that day, although the
-French cavalry did not exceed two hundred and fifty men,
-and it is evident that the eight hundred under Whittingham<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xlvi"></a>[xlvi]</span>
-might, by sweeping round the left of Ruffin’s division
-have rendered the defeat ruinous.”—History, vol. iii.
-p. 448.</p>
-
-<p>Extract of a letter from sir Samford Whittingham.</p>
-
-<p>“I am free to confess that the statement of the historian
-of the Peninsular War, as regards my conduct on the day
-of the battle of Barosa, is just and correct; but I owe it
-to myself, to declare that my conduct was the result of
-obedience to the repeated orders of the general commanding
-in chief under whose command I acted. In the
-given strength of the Spanish cavalry under my command
-on that day, there is an error. The total number of the
-Spanish cavalry, at the commencement of the expedition,
-is correctly stated; but so many detachments had taken
-place by orders from head-quarters that I had only one
-squadron of Spanish cavalry under my command on that
-day.”</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="p4 nobreak" id="COUNTER-REMARKS">COUNTER-REMARKS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p2 pfs90">TO</p>
-
-<p class="p2 pfs120">MR. DUDLEY MONTAGU PERCEVAL’S</p>
-
-<p class="p2 pfs135">REMARKS</p>
-
-<p class="p2 pfs80">UPON SOME PASSAGES IN COLONEL NAPIER’S FOURTH<br />
-VOLUME OF HIS HISTORY OF THE<br />
-PENINSULAR WAR.</p>
-
-<hr class="r10" />
-
-<p class="p2 pfs80">“The evil, that men do, lives after them.”</p>
-
-
-<hr class="p4 chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xlix"></a>[xlix]</span></p>
-
-<p class="p2 pfs120 lsp2">COUNTER-REMARKS,</p>
-
-<p class="pfs100"><em>&amp;c. &amp;c.</em></p>
-
-<hr class="r10" />
-
-
-<p class="noindent">In the fourth volume of my history of the Peninsular War
-I assailed the public character of the late Mr. Perceval,
-his son has published a defence of it, after having
-vainly endeavoured, in a private correspondence, to convince
-me that my attack was unfounded. The younger
-Mr. Perceval’s motive is to be respected, and had he confined
-himself to argument and authority, it was my intention
-to have relied on our correspondence, and left the
-subject matter in dispute to the judgment of the public.
-But Mr. Perceval used expressions which obliged me to
-seek a personal explanation, when I learned that he, unable
-to see any difference between invective directed against
-the public acts of a minister, and terms of insult addressed
-to a private person, thinks he is entitled to use such expressions;
-and while he emphatically “disavows all meaning
-or purpose of offence or insult,” does yet offer most grievous
-insult, denying at the same time my right of redress after
-the customary mode, and explicitly declining, he says from
-principle, an appeal to any other weapon than the pen.</p>
-
-<p>It is not for me to impugn this principle in any case,
-still less in that of a son defending the memory of his
-father; but it gives me the right which I now assert, to
-disregard any verbal insult which Mr. Perceval, intentionally
-or unintentionally, has offered to me or may offer to
-me in future. When a gentleman relieves himself from
-personal responsibility by the adoption of this principle, his
-language can no longer convey insult to those who do not
-reject such responsibility; and it would be as unmanly to
-use insulting terms towards him in return as it would be to
-submit to them from a person not so shielded. Henceforth<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_l"></a>[l]</span>
-therefore I hold Mr. Perceval’s language to be innocuous,
-but for the support of my own accuracy, veracity,
-and justice, as an historian, I offer these my “<em>Counter-Remarks</em>.”
-They must of necessity lacerate Mr. Perceval’s
-feelings, but they are, I believe, scrupulously cleared
-of any personal incivility, and if any passage having that
-tendency has escaped me I thus apologize before-hand.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Perceval’s pamphlet is copious in declamatory expressions
-of his own feelings; and it is also duly besprinkled
-with animadversions on Napoleon’s vileness, the horrors
-of jacobinism, the wickedness of democrats, the propriety
-of coercing the Irish, and such sour dogmas of melancholy
-ultra-toryism. Of these I reck not. Assuredly I did not
-write with any expectation of pleasing men of Mr. Perceval’s
-political opinions and hence I shall let his general
-strictures pass, without affixing my mark to them, and the
-more readily as I can comprehend the necessity of ekeing
-out a scanty subject. But where he has adduced specific
-argument and authority for his own peculiar cause,—weak
-argument indeed, for it is his own, but strong authority,
-for it is the duke of Wellington’s,—I will not decline discussion.
-Let the most honoured come first.</p>
-
-<p>The Duke of Wellington, replying to a letter from Mr.
-Perceval, in which the point at issue is most earnestly and
-movingly begged by the latter, writes as follows:—</p>
-
-
- <div class="letterquot">
-
-<p class="p2 right fs80"><em>London, June 6, 1835.</em></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Dear Sir</span>,</p>
-
-<p class="in6">I received last night your letter of the 5th.
-Notwithstanding my great respect for Colonel Napier and his
-work, I have never read a line of it; because I wished to avoid
-being led into a literary controversy, which I should probably find
-more troublesome than the operations which it is the design of the
-Colonel’s work to describe and record.</p>
-
-<p>I have no knowledge therefore of what he has written of your
-father, Mr. Spencer Perceval. Of this I am certain, that I never,
-whether in public or in private, said one word of the ministers, or<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_li"></a>[li]</span>
-of any minister who was employed in the conduct of the affairs
-of the public during the war, excepting in praise of them;—that
-I have repeatedly declared in public my obligations to them for
-the cordial support and encouragement which I received from
-them; and I should have been ungrateful and unjust indeed, if
-I had excepted Mr. Perceval, than whom a more honest, zealous,
-and able minister never served the king.</p>
-
-<p>It is true that the army was in want of money, that is to say,
-<em>specie</em>, during the war. Bank-notes could not be used abroad;
-and we were obliged to pay for every thing in the currency of the
-country which was the seat of the operations. It must not be
-forgotten, however, that at that period the Bank was restricted
-from making its payments in <em>specie</em>. That commodity became
-therefore exceedingly scarce in England; and very frequently
-was not to be procured at all. I believe, that from the commencement
-of the war in Spain up to the period of the lamented
-death of Mr. Perceval, the difficulty in procuring <em>specie</em> was
-much greater than it was found to be from the year 1812, to the
-end of the war; because at the former period all intercourse
-with the Continent was suspended: in the latter, as soon as the
-war in Russia commenced, the communication with the continent
-was in some degree restored; and it became less difficult to procure
-specie.</p>
-
-<p>But it is obvious that, from some cause or other, there was a
-want of money in the army, as the pay of the troops was six
-months in arrear; a circumstance which had never been heard of
-in a British army in Europe: and large sums were due in different
-parts of the country for supplies, means of transport, &amp;c. &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p>Upon other points referred to in your letter, I have really no
-recollection of having made complaints. I am convinced that
-there was no real ground for them; as I must repeat, that throughout
-the war, I received from the king’s servants every encouragement
-and support that they had in their power to give.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span style="margin-right: 8em;">Believe me, dear Sir,</span><br />
-<span style="margin-right: 3em;">Ever yours most faithfully,</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">Wellington</span>.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="fs80"><em>Dudley Montagu Perceval, Esq.</em></p>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p2">This letter imports, if I rightly understand it, that any<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_lii"></a>[lii]</span>
-complaints, by whomsoever preferred, against the ministers,
-and especially against Mr. Perceval, during the war in the
-Peninsula, had no real foundation. Nevertheless his Grace
-and others did make many, and very bitter complaints,
-as the following extracts will prove.</p>
-
-
- <div class="letterquot">
-
-<p class="p2 center" id="EX_1">No. 1.</p>
-
-<p><em>Lord Wellington to Mr. Stuart, Minister Plenipotentiary at
-Lisbon.</em></p>
-
-<p class="right fs80">
-“<em>Viseu, February 10th, 1810.</em><br />
-</p>
-
-<p>“I apprized Government more than two months ago of our
-probable want of money, and of the necessity that we should be
-supplied, not only with a large sum but with a regular sum
-monthly, equal in amount to the increase of expense occasioned
-by the increased subsidy to the Portuguese, and by the increase
-of our own army. <em>They have not attended to either of these
-demands</em>, and I must write again. But I wish you would mention
-the subject in your letter to lord Wellesley.”</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2 center" id="EX_2">No. 2.</p>
-
-<p class="right fs80">
-“<em>February 23d, 1810.</em><br />
-</p>
-
-<p>“It is obvious that the sums will fall short of those which
-<em>His Majesty’s Government have engaged to supply</em> to the
-Portuguese government, but that <em>is the fault of His Majesty’s
-Government in England, and they have been repeatedly informed
-that it was necessary that they should send out money</em>.
-The funds for the expenses of the British army are insufficient in
-the same proportion, and all that I can do is to divide the deficiency
-in its due proportions between the two bodies which are to be supported
-by the funds at our disposal.”</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2 center" id="EX_3">No. 3.</p>
-
-<p class="right fs80">
-“<em>March 1st, 1810.</em><br />
-</p>
-
-<p>“In respect to the 15,000 men in addition to those which
-Government did propose to maintain in this country, I have only
-to say, that I don’t care how many men they send here, <em>provided
-they will supply us with proportionate means to feed
-and pay them</em>; but I suspect they will fall short rather than
-exceed the thirty thousand men.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_liii"></a>[liii]</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="p2 center" id="EX_4">No. 4.</p>
-
-<p class="right fs80">
-“<em>March 5th, 1810.</em><br />
-</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Stuart, speaking of the Portuguese emigrating, says,</p>
-
-<p>“<em>If the determination of ministers at home or events here
-bring matters to that extremity.</em>”</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2 center" id="EX_5">No. 5.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><em>Lord Wellington to Mr. Stuart, in reference to Cadiz.</em></p>
-
-<p class="right fs80">
-“<em>30th March, 1810.</em><br />
-</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t understand the arrangement which Government have
-made of the command of the troops there. I have hitherto considered
-them as a part of the army, and from the arrangement
-which I made with the Spanish government they cost us nothing
-but their pay, and all the money procured by bills was applicable
-to the service in this country. <em>The instructions to general
-Graham alter this entirely, and they have even gone so far as
-to desire him to take measures to supply the Spaniards with
-provisions from the Mediterranean, whereas I had insisted
-that the Spaniards should feed our troops. The first consequence
-of this arrangement will be that we shall have no
-more money from Cadiz.</em> I had considered the troops at Cadiz
-so much a part of my army that I had written to my brother to
-desire his opinion whether, if the French withdrew from Cadiz,
-when they should attack Portugal, he thought I might bring into
-Portugal, at least the troops, which I had sent there. But I consider
-this now to be at an end.”</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2 center" id="EX_6">No. 6.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><em>Lord Wellington to Mr. Stuart.</em></p>
-
-<p class="right fs80">
-“<em>1st April, 1810.</em><br />
-</p>
-
-<p>“I agree with you respecting the disposition of the people of
-Lisbon. In fact all they wish for is to be saved from the French,
-and they were riotous last winter <em>because they imagined, with
-some reason, that we intended to abandon them</em>.”——“<em>The
-arrangement made by Government for the command at Cadiz
-will totally ruin us in the way of money.</em>”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_liv"></a>[liv]</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="p2 center" id="EX_7">No. 7.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><em>Lord Wellington to Mr. Stuart.</em></p>
-
-<p class="right fs80">
-“<em>April 20th, 1810.</em><br />
-</p>
-
-<p>“<em>The state of opinions in England is very unfavourable to
-the Peninsula. The ministers are as much alarmed as the
-public or as the opposition pretend to be, and they appear to
-be of opinion that I am inclined to fight a desperate battle,
-which is to answer no purpose. Their private letters are in
-some degree at variance with their public instructions, and
-I have called for an explanation of the former, which when
-it arrives will shew me more clearly what they intend. The
-instructions are clear enough, and I am willing to act under
-them, although they throw upon me the whole responsibility
-for bringing away the army in safety, after staying in the
-Peninsula till it will be necessary to evacuate it. But it will
-not answer in these times to receive private hints and opinions
-from ministers, which, if attended to, would lead to an act
-directly contrary to the spirit, and even to the letter of the
-public instructions; at the same time that, if not attended to,
-the danger of the responsibility imposed by the public instructions
-is increased tenfold.</em>”</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2 center" id="EX_8">No. 8.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><em>Ditto to Ditto.</em></p>
-
-<p class="right fs80">
-“<em>May, 1810.</em><br />
-</p>
-
-<p>“It is impossible for Portugal to aid in feeding Cadiz. We
-have neither money, nor provisions in this country, and the measures
-which they are adopting to feed the people there will positively
-oblige us to evacuate this country for want of money to support the
-army, and to perform the king’s engagements, unless the Government
-in England should enable us to remain by sending out large
-and regular supplies of specie. I have written fully to Government
-upon this subject.”</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2 center" id="EX_9">No. 9.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><em>General Graham to Mr. Stuart.</em></p>
-
-<p class="right fs80">
-“<em>Isla, 22d May, 1810.</em><br />
-</p>
-
-<p>In reference to his command at Cadiz, says, “lord Liverpool
-has decided the doubt by declaring this a part of lord Wellington’s<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_lv"></a>[lv]</span>
-army, and saying it is the wish of Government that though I am
-second in command to him I should be left here for the present.”
-“<em>This is odd enough; I mean that it should not have been
-left to his judgement to decide where I was to be employed;
-one would think he could judge fully better according to circumstances
-than people in England.</em>”</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2 center" id="EX_10">No. 10.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><em>Lord Wellington to Mr. Stuart.</em></p>
-
-<p class="right fs80">
-“<em>June 5, 1810.</em><br />
-</p>
-
-<p>“<em>This letter will shew you the difficulties under which we
-labour for want of provisions and of money to buy them.</em>”
-“<em>I am really ashamed of writing to the government</em> (Portuguese)
-upon this subject (of the militia), feeling as I do that we
-owe them so much money which we are unable to pay. According
-to my account the military chest is now indebted to the chest of
-the aids nearly £400,000. At the same time I have no money
-to pay the army, which is approaching the end of the second
-month in arrears, and which ought to be paid in advance. The
-bât and forage to the officers for March is still due, and we are
-in debt every where.” “<em>The miserable and pitiful want of
-money prevents me from doing many things which might and
-ought to be done for the safety of the country.</em>” “The corps
-ought to be assembled and placed in their stations. But want of
-provisions and money obliges me to leave them in winter-quarters
-till the last moment. <em>Yet if any thing fails, I shall not be
-forgiven.</em>”</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2 center" id="EX_11">No. 11.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><em>Mr. Stuart to Lord Wellington.</em></p>
-
-<p class="right fs80">
-“<em>June 9, 1810.</em><br />
-</p>
-
-<p>“I have received two letters from Government, the one relative
-to licenses, the other containing a letter from Mr. Harrison
-of the Treasury, addressed to colonel Bunbury, in which, after
-referring to the different estimates both for the British and Portuguese,
-and stating the sums at their disposal, <em>they not only
-conclude that we have more than is absolutely necessary, but
-state specie to be so scarce in England that we must not rely
-on further supplies from home, and must content ourselves with
-such sums as come from Gibraltar and Cadiz</em>,” &amp;c. &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_lvi"></a>[lvi]</span></p>
-
-<p>“From hand to mouth we may perhaps make shift, taking care
-to pay the Portuguese in kind and not in money, until the
-supplies, which the Treasury say in three or four months will be
-ready, are forthcoming. Government desire me to report to them
-any explanation which either your lordship or myself may be able
-to communicate on the subject of Mr. Harrison’s letter. As it
-principally relates to army finance, I do not feel myself quite
-competent to risk an opinion in opposition to what that gentleman
-has laid down. <em>I have, however, so often and so strongly
-written to them the embarrassment we all labour under, both
-respecting corn and money</em>, that there must be some misconception,
-or some inaccuracy has taken place in calculations
-which are so far invalidated by the fact, without obliging us to
-go into the detail necessary to find out what part of the statement
-is erroneous.”</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2 center" id="EX_12">No. 12.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><em>Wellington to Stuart.</em></p>
-
-<p class="right fs80">
-“<em>June, 1810.</em><br />
-</p>
-
-<p>“I received from the Secretary of State a copy of Mr. Hamilton’s
-letter to colonel Bunbury, and we have completely refuted
-him. He took an estimate made for September, October, and
-November, as the rate of expense for eight months, without adverting
-to the alteration of circumstances occasioned by change
-of position, increase of price, of numbers, &amp;c., <em>and then concluded
-upon his own statement, that we ought to have money
-in hand, (having included in it by the bye some sums which
-we had not received,) notwithstanding that our distress had
-been complained of by every post, and I had particularly
-desired, in December, that £200,000 might be sent out, and
-a sum monthly equal in amount to the increased Portuguese
-subsidy</em>.”</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2 center" id="EX_13">No. 13.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><em>Ditto to Ditto.</em></p>
-
-<p class="right fs80">
-“<em>June, 1810.</em><br />
-</p>
-
-<p>“All our militia in these provinces [<i lang="pt" xml:lang="pt">Tras os Montes and
-Entre Minho y Douro</i>] are disposable, and we might throw
-them upon the enemy’s flank in advance in these quarters [<em>Leon</em>]<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_lvii"></a>[lvii]</span>
-and increase our means of defence here and to the north of the
-Tagus very much indeed. <em>But we cannot collect them as an
-army, nor move them without money and magazines, and I am
-upon my last legs in regard to both.</em>”</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2 center" id="EX_14">No. 14.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><em>Wellington to Stuart.</em></p>
-
-<p class="right fs80">
-“<em>November, 1810.</em><br />
-</p>
-
-<p>“<em>I have repeatedly written to government respecting the
-pecuniary wants of Portugal, but hitherto without effect.</em>”</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2 center" id="EX_15">No. 15.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><em>Ditto to Ditto.</em></p>
-
-<p class="right fs80">
-“<em>December 22.</em><br />
-</p>
-
-<p>“It is useless to expect more money from England, as the
-desire of economy has overcome even the fears of the Ministers,
-<em>and they have gone so far as to desire me to send home the
-transports in order to save money</em>!”</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2 center" id="EX_16">No. 16.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><em>Ditto to Ditto.</em></p>
-
-<p class="right fs80">
-“<em>28th January, 1811.</em><br />
-</p>
-
-<p>“I think the Portuguese are still looking to assistance from
-England, and I have written to the king’s Government strongly
-upon the subject in their favour. But I <em>should deceive myself
-if I believed we shall get any thing, and them if I were to
-tell them we should; they must, therefore, look to their own
-resources</em>.”</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2 center" id="EX_17">No. 17.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><em>Ditto to Ditto.</em></p>
-
-<p class="center"><em>In reference to the Portuguese intrigue against him.</em></p>
-
-<p class="right fs80">
-“<em>18th February, 1811.</em><br />
-</p>
-
-<p>“I think also that they will be supported in the Brazils,
-and <em>I have no reason to believe that I shall be supported in
-England</em>.”</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2 center" id="EX_18">No. 18.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><em>Ditto to Ditto.</em></p>
-
-<p class="right fs80">
-“<em>13th April, 1811.</em><br />
-</p>
-
-<p>“<em>If the Government choose to undertake large services and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_lviii"></a>[lviii]</span>
-not supply us with sufficient pecuniary means, and leave to
-me the distribution of the means with which they do supply
-us, I must exercise my own judgement upon the distribution
-for which I am to be responsible.</em>”</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2 center" id="EX_19">No. 19.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><em>Lord Wellington to Mr. Stuart.</em></p>
-
-<p class="right fs80">
-“<em>4th July, 1811.</em><br />
-</p>
-
-<p>“The pay of the British troops is now nearly two months in
-arrears, instead of being paid one month in advance, according to
-his majesty’s regulations. The muleteers, upon whose services
-the army depends almost as much as upon those of the soldiers,
-are six months in arrears; <em>there are now bills to a large amount
-drawn by the commissioners in the country on the commissary
-at Lisbon still remaining unpaid, by which delay the credit of
-the British army and government is much impaired</em>, and you
-are aware of the pressing demands of the Portuguese government
-for specie. There is but little money in hand to be applied to the
-several services; <em>there is no prospect that any will be sent from
-England, and the supplies derived from the negociation of bills
-upon the treasury at Cadiz and Lisbon have been gradually
-decreasing</em>.”</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2 center" id="EX_20">No. 20.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><em>Lord Wellington to Lord Wellesley.</em></p>
-
-<p class="right fs80">
-“<em>26th July, 1811.</em><br />
-</p>
-
-<p>“Although there are, I understand, provisions in Lisbon, in
-sufficient quantities to last the inhabitants and army for a year,
-about 12 or 14,000 Portuguese troops which I have on the right
-bank of the Tagus are literally starving; even those in the cantonments
-on the Tagus cannot get bread, because the government
-have not money to pay for means of transport. <em>The soldiers in
-the hospitals die because the government have not money to
-pay for the hospital necessaries for them; and it is really
-disgusting to reflect upon the detail of the distresses occasioned
-by the lamentable want of funds to support the machine which
-we have put in motion.</em>”</p>
-
-<p>“Either Great Britain is interested in maintaining the war in
-the Peninsula, or she is not. If she is, there can be no doubt of
-the expediency of making an effort to put in motion against the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_lix"></a>[lix]</span>
-enemy the largest force which the Peninsula can produce. The
-Spaniards would not allow, I believe, of that active interference
-by us in their affairs which might affect and ameliorate their circumstances,
-<em>but that cannot be a reason for doing nothing</em>.
-Subsidies given without stipulating for the performance of specific
-services would, in my opinion, answer no purpose.”</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2 center" id="EX_21">No. 21.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><em>Mr. Sydenham to Mr. Stuart.</em></p>
-
-<p class="right fs80">
-“<em>27th September, 1811.</em><br />
-</p>
-
-<p>“I take great shame to myself for having neglected so long
-writing to you, &amp;c. but in truth I did not wish to write to you
-until I could give you some notion of the result of my mission
-and the measures which our government would have adopted in
-consequence of the information and opinion which I brought with
-me from Portugal, but <em>God knows how long I am to wait if I
-do not write to you until I could give you the information
-which you must naturally be so anxious to receive</em>. <em>From
-week to week I have anxiously expected that something would
-be concluded, and I as regularly deferred writing; however I
-am now so much in your debt that I am afraid you will attribute
-my silence to inattention rather than to the uncertainty
-and indecision of our further proceedings.</em> During the ten
-days agreeable voyage in the Armide I arranged all the papers of
-information which I had procured in Portugal, and I made out a
-paper on which I expressed in plain and strong terms all I thought
-regarding the state of affairs both in Portugal and Spain. These
-papers, together with the notes which I procured from lord Wellington
-and yourself, appeared to me to comprehend every thing
-which the ministers could possibly require, both to form a deliberate
-opinion upon every part of the subject and to shape their
-future measures. The letters which I had written to lord Wellesley
-during my absence from England, and which had been
-regularly submitted to the prince, had prepared them for most of
-the opinions which I had to enforce on my arrival. <em>Lord Wellesley
-perfectly coincided in all the leading points</em>, and a short
-paper of proposals was prepared for the consideration of the
-cabinet, supported by the most interesting papers which I brought
-from Portugal.”</p>
- </div>
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_lx"></a>[lx]</span></p>
-
-<p>Then followed an abstract of the proposals, after which
-Mr. Sydenham continues thus:—</p>
-
- <div class="letterquot">
-
-<p>“I really conceived that all this would have been concluded
-in a week, <em>but a month has elapsed, and nothing has yet been
-done</em>.” “Campbell will be able to tell you that I have done every
-thing in my power <em>to get people here to attend to their real
-interests in Portugal</em>, and I have clamoured for money, money,
-money in every office to which I have had access. To all my
-clamour and all my arguments I have invariably received the
-same answer ‘that the thing is impossible.’ The prince himself
-certainly appears to be <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">à la hauteur des circonstances</i>, and
-has expressed his determination to make every exertion to
-promote the good cause in the Peninsula. <em>Lord Wellesley has
-a perfect comprehension of the subject in its fullest extent,
-and is fully aware of the several measures which Great
-Britain ought and could adopt. But such is the state of
-parties and such the condition of the present government that
-I really despair of witnessing any decided and adequate
-effort on our part to save the Peninsula. The present feeling
-appears to be that we have done mighty things, and all that
-is in our power; that the rest must be left to all-bounteous
-Providence, and that if we do not succeed we must console
-ourselves by the reflection that Providence has not been so
-propitious as we deserved. This feeling you will allow is
-wonderfully moral and Christian-like, but still nothing will
-be done until we have a more vigorous military system, and
-a ministry capable of directing the resources of the nation
-to something nobler than a war of descents and embarkations.</em>”
-“Nothing can be more satisfactory than the state of affairs in
-the north; all that I am afraid of is that we have not a ministry
-capable of taking advantage of so fine a prospect.”</p>
- </div>
-
-
-<p>Mr. Sydenham’s statement of the opinions of Lord
-Wellesley at the time of the negociations which ended
-in that lord’s retirement in February, is as follows:—</p>
-
- <div class="letterquot">
-
-<p>“1st. That Lord Wellesley was the only man in power who
-had a just view of affairs in the Peninsula, or a military thought
-amongst them.”</p>
-
-<p>“2nd. That he did not agree with Perceval that they were<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_lxi"></a>[lxi]</span>
-to shut the door against the Catholics, neither did he agree with
-Grenville that they were to be conciliated by emancipation without
-securities.”</p>
-
-<p>“3rd. That with respect to the Peninsula, he rejected the
-notion that we were to withdraw from the Peninsula to husband
-our resources at home, <em>but he thought a great deal more both
-in men and money could be done than the Percevals admitted,
-and he could no longer act under Perceval with credit, or
-comfort, or use to the country</em>.”</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2 center" id="EX_22">No. 22.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><em>Extract of a letter from Mr. Hamilton, Under-Secretary
-of State.</em></p>
-
-<p class="right fs80">
-“<em>April 9th, 1810.</em><br />
-</p>
-
-<p>“I hope by next mail will be sent something more satisfactory
-and useful than we have yet done by way of instructions, <em>but
-I am afraid the late</em> O. P. <em>riots have occupied all the thoughts
-of our great men here, so as to make them, or at least some of
-them, forget more distant but not less interesting concerns</em>.
-With respect to the evils you allude to as arising from the
-inefficiency of the Portuguese government, the people here are
-by no means so satisfied of their existence (to a great degree)
-as you who are on the spot. <em>Here we judge only of the results,
-the details we read over, but being unable to remedy, forget
-them the next day.</em>”</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2 center" id="EX_23">No. 23.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><em>Lord Wellington to Mr. Stuart.</em></p>
-
-<p class="right fs80">
-“<em>6th May, 1812.</em><br />
-</p>
-
-<p>“In regard to money for the Portuguese government, I
-begged Mr. Bisset to suggest to you, that if you were not satisfied
-with the sum he was enabled to supply, you should make your
-complaint on the subject to the king’s government. I am not the
-minister of finance, nor is the commissary-general. <em>It is the
-duty of the king’s ministers to provide supplies for the service,
-and not to undertake a service for which they cannot provide
-adequate supplies of money and every other requisite. They
-have thrown upon me a very unpleasant task, in leaving to me
-to decide what proportion of the money which comes into the
-hands of the commissary-general, shall be applied to the
-service of the British army; and what shall be paid to the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_lxii"></a>[lxii]</span>
-king’s minister, in order to enable him to make good the king’s
-engagements to the Portuguese government; and at the same
-time that they have laid upon me this task, and have left me to
-carry on the war as I could, they have by their orders cut off
-some of the resources which I had.</em>”</p>
-
-<p>“<em>The British army have not been paid for nearly three
-months. We owe nearly a year’s hire to the muleteers of the
-army. We are in debt for supplies in all parts of the country;
-and we are on the point of failing in our payments for some
-supplies essentially necessary to both armies, which cannot be
-procured excepting with ready money.</em>”</p>
- </div>
-
-
-<p class="p2 center" id="EX_24">No. 24.</p>
-
-<p>The following extracts are of a late date, but being
-retrospective, and to the point, are proper to be inserted
-here. In 1813 lord Castlereagh complained of some proceedings<span class="sidenote">Vol. iv. p. 178.</span>
-described in my history, as having been adopted
-by lord Wellington and Mr. Stuart, to feed the army in
-1810 and 1811, and his censure elicited the letters from
-which these extracts are given.</p>
-
-
- <div class="letterquot">
-
-<p class="p2 center" id="EX_25">No. 25.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><em>Lord Wellington to Mr. Stuart.</em></p>
-
-<p class="right fs80">
-“<em>3d May, 1813.</em><br />
-</p>
-
-<p>“I have read your letter, No. 2, 28th April, in which you
-have enclosed some papers transmitted by lord Castlereagh, including
-a letter from the Board of Trade in regard to the purchases
-of corn made by your authority in concert with me, in
-Brazil, America, and Egypt. When I see a letter from the
-Board of Trade, I am convinced that the latter complaint originates
-with the jobbing British merchants at Lisbon; and although <em>I am
-delighted to see the Government turn their attention to the
-subject, as it will eventually save me a great deal of trouble,
-I am quite convinced that if we had not adopted, nearly three
-years ago, the system of measures now disapproved of, not
-only would Lisbon and the army and this part of the Peninsula
-have been starved; but if we had, according to the suggestions
-of the commander-in-chief, and the Treasury, and the
-Board of Trade, carried on transactions of a similar nature
-through the sharks at Lisbon, above referred to, calling<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_lxiii"></a>[lxiii]</span>
-themselves British merchants, the expense of the army
-crippled in its operations, and depending upon those who, I
-verily believe, are the worst subjects that his Majesty has;
-and enormous as that expense is, it would have been very much
-increased.</em>”</p>
-
-<p>“In regard to the particular subject under consideration, it is
-obvious to me that the authorities in England have taken a very
-confined view of the question.”</p>
-
-<p>“It appears to me to be extraordinary that when lord Castlereagh
-read the statement that the commissary-general had in his
-stores a supply of corn and flour to last 100,000 men for nine
-months, he should not have adverted to the fact, that the greatest
-part of the Portuguese subsidy, indeed all in the last year, but
-£600,000, was paid in kind, and principally in corn, and that he
-should not have seen that a supply for 100,000 men for nine
-months was not exorbitant under these circumstances. Then the
-Government appears to me to have forgotten all that passed on
-the particular subject of your purchases. <em>The advantage derived
-from them in saving a starving people during the scarcity
-of 1810-1811; in bringing large sums into the military chest
-which otherwise would not have found their way there; and
-in positive profit of money.</em>”——“If all this be true, which I
-believe you have it in your power to prove, I cannot understand
-why Government find fault with these transactions, unless it is
-that they are betrayed into disapprobation of them by merchants
-who are interested in their being discontinued. <em>I admit that
-your time and mine would be much better employed than in
-speculation of corn, &amp;c. But when it is necessary to carry on
-an extensive system of war with one-sixth of the money in
-specie which would be necessary to carry it on, we must consider
-questions and adopt measures of this sort, and we ought
-to have the confidence and support of the Government in adopting
-them.</em> It is only the other day that I recommended to my
-brother something of the same kind to assist in paying the Spanish
-subsidy; and I have adopted measures in respect to corn and
-other articles in Gallicia, with a view to get a little money for the
-army in that quarter. <em>If these measures were not adopted, not
-only would it be impossible to perform the king’s engagement,
-but even to support our own army.</em>”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_lxiv"></a>[lxiv]</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="p2 center"><em>Mr. Stuart to Mr. Hamilton.</em></p>
-
-<p class="right fs80">
-“<em>8th May.</em><br />
-</p>
-
-<p>“Though I thank you <ins class="corr" id="tn-lxiv" title="Transcriber’s Note—Original text: 'for tho letter'">
-for the letter</ins> from the Admiralty contained
-in yours of the 21st April, I propose rather to refer Government
-to the communication of lord Wellington and the admiral,
-by whose desire I originally adverted to the subject, than to continue
-my representations of the consequences to be expected from
-a state of things the navy department are not disposed to remedy.
-My private letter to lord Castlereagh, enclosing lord Wellington’s
-observations on the letter from the Treasury, will, I think, satisfy
-his lordship that the arrangements which had been adopted for the
-supply of the army and population of this country are of more
-importance than is generally imagined. <em>I am indeed convinced
-that if they had been left to private merchants, and that I had
-not taken the measures which are condemned, the army must
-have embarked, and a famine must have taken place.</em>”</p>
- </div>
-
-<hr class="r10" />
-
-<p>Now if these complaints thus made in the duke’s letters,
-written at the time, were unfounded, his Grace’s present
-letter is, for so much, a defence of Mr. Perceval; if they
-were not unfounded his present letter is worth nothing,
-unless as a proof, that with him, the memory of good is
-longer-lived than the memory of ill. But in either supposition
-the complaints are of historical interest, as shewing
-the difficulties, real or supposed, under which the general
-laboured. They are also sound vouchers for my historical
-assertions, because no man but the duke could have contradicted
-them; no man could have doubted their accuracy
-on less authority than his own declaration; and no man
-could have been so hardy as to put to him the direct question
-of their correctness.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Perceval objects to my quoting lord Wellesley’s
-manifesto, because that nobleman expressed sorrow at its
-appearance, and denied that he had composed it. But
-the very passage of lord Wellesley’s speech on which Mr.
-Perceval relies, proves, that the sentiments and opinions
-of the manifesto were really entertained by lord Wellesley,
-who repudiates the style only, and regrets, not<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_lxv"></a>[lxv]</span>
-that the statement appeared, but that it should have
-appeared at the moment when Mr. Perceval had been
-killed. The expression of this very natural feeling
-he, however, took care to guard from any mistake, by reasserting
-his contempt for Mr. Perceval’s political character.
-Thus he identified his opinions with those contained
-in the manifesto. And this view of the matter is confirmed
-by those extracts which I have given from the correspondence
-of Mr. Sydenham, no mean authority, for he was a
-man of high honour and great capacity; and he was the
-confidential agent employed by lord Wellesley, to ascertain
-and report upon the feelings and views of lord Wellington,
-with respect to the war; and also upon those obstacles
-to his success, which were daily arising, either from the
-conduct of the ministers at home, or from the intrigues of
-their diplomatists abroad.</p>
-
-<p>Thus it appears that if lord Wellington’s complaints, as
-exhibited in these extracts, were unfounded, they were at
-least so plausible as to mislead Mr. Sydenham on the spot,
-and lord Wellesley at a distance, and I may well be excused
-if they also deceived me. But was I deceived? Am
-I to be condemned as an historian, because lord Wellington,
-in the evening of his life, and in the ease and fulness
-of his glory, generously forgets the crosses, and remembers
-only the benefits of by-gone years? It may be said indeed,
-that his difficulties were real, and yet the government not
-to blame, seeing that it could not relieve them. To this I<span class="sidenote">See <a href="#EX_15">Extract. No. 15</a></span>
-can oppose the ordering away of the transports, on which,
-in case of failure, the safety of the army depended! To<span class="sidenote"><a href="#EX_7">Do. No. 7.</a></span>
-this I can oppose the discrepancy between the public and
-private instructions of the ministers! To this I can oppose
-those most bitter passages, “<em>If any thing fails I shall<span class="sidenote"><a href="#EX_10">Do. No. 10.</a></span>
-not be forgiven</em>,” and “<em>I have no reason to believe that I<span class="sidenote"><a href="#EX_17">Do. No. 17.</a></span>
-shall be supported in England</em>.”</p>
-
-<p>I say I can oppose these passages from the duke’s letters,
-but I need them not. Lord Wellesley, a man of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_lxvi"></a>[lxvi]</span>
-acknowledged talent, practised in governing, well acquainted
-with the resources of England, and actually a
-member of the administration at the time, was placed in
-a better position, to make a sound judgement than lord
-Wellington; lord Wellesley, an ambitious man, delighting
-in power, and naturally anxious to direct the political
-measures, while his brother wielded the military strength
-of the state; lord Wellesley, tempted to keep office by
-natural inclination, by actual possession, by every motive
-that could stir ambition and soothe the whisperings of conscience,
-actually quitted the cabinet</p>
-
-<p><em>Because he could not prevail on Mr. Perceval to support
-the war as it ought to be supported, and he could therefore
-no longer act under him with credit, or comfort, or use to
-the country;</em></p>
-
-<p><em>Because the war could be maintained on a far greater
-scale than Mr. Perceval maintained it, and it was dishonest
-to the allies and unsafe not to do it;</em></p>
-
-<p><em>Because the cabinet, and he particularized Mr. Perceval
-as of a mean capacity, had neither ability and
-knowledge to devise a good plan, nor temper and discretion
-to adopt another’s plan.</em></p>
-
-<p>Do I depend even upon this authority? No! In lord
-Wellington’s letter, stress is laid upon the word <em>specie</em>,
-the want of which, it is implied, was the only distress, because
-bank notes would not pass on the continent; but
-several extracts speak of corn and hospital stores, and the
-transport vessels ordered home were chiefly paid in paper.
-Notes certainly would not pass on the continent, nor in
-England neither, for their nominal value, and why? Because
-they were not money; they were the signs of debt;
-the signs that the labour, and property, and happiness, of
-unborn millions, were recklessly forestalled, by bad ministers,
-to meet the exigency of the moment. Now admitting,
-which I do not, that this exigency was real
-and unavoidable; admitting, which I do not, that one
-generation has a right to mortgage the labour and prosperity<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_lxvii"></a>[lxvii]</span>
-of another and unborn generation, it still remains a
-question, whether a minister, only empowered by a corrupt
-oligarchy, has such a right. And there can be no
-excuse for a man who, while protesting that the country
-was unable to support the war, as it ought to be supported,
-continued that war, and thus proceeded to sink the nation
-in hopeless debt, and risk the loss of her armies, and her
-honour, at the same time; there is no excuse for that
-man who, while denying the ability of the country, to
-support her troops abroad, did yet uphold all manner of
-corruption and extravagance at home.</p>
-
-<p>There was no specie, because the fictitious ruinous
-incontrovertible paper money system had driven it away,
-and who more forward than Mr. Perceval to maintain and
-extend that system—the bane of the happiness and morals
-of the country; a system which then gave power and
-riches to evil men, but has since plunged thousands upon
-thousands into ruin and misery; a system which, swinging
-like a pendulum between high taxes and low prices, at
-every oscillation strikes down the laborious part of the
-community, spreading desolation far and wide and threatening
-to break up the very foundations of society. And
-why did Mr. Perceval thus nourish the accursed thing?
-Was it that one bad king might be placed on the throne
-of France; another on the throne of Spain; a third on
-the throne of Naples? That Italy might be the prey of
-the barbarian, or, last, not least, that the hateful power
-of the English oligarchy, which he called social order and
-legitimate rights, might be confirmed? But lo! his narrow
-capacity! what has been the result? In the former
-countries insurrection, civil war, and hostile invasion,
-followed by the free use of the axe and the cord, the
-torture and the secret dungeon; and in England it would
-have been the same, if her people, more powerful and
-enlightened in their generation, had not torn the baleful
-oppression down, to be in due time trampled to dust as it
-deserves.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_lxviii"></a>[lxviii]</span></p>
-
-<p><em>Mr. Perceval was pre-eminently an “honest, zealous,
-and able servant of the king!”</em></p>
-
-<p>To be the servant of the monarch is not then to be the
-servant of the people. For if the country could not
-afford to support the war, as it ought to be supported,
-without detriment to greater interests, the war should have
-been given up; or the minister, who felt oppressed by
-the difficulty, should have resigned his place to those who
-thought differently. “<em>It is the duty of the king’s ministers<span class="sidenote">See <a href="#EX_23">Extract, No. 23.</a></span>
-to provide supplies for the service, and not to undertake
-a service for which they cannot provide adequate
-supplies of money and every other requisite!</em>” These are
-the words of Wellington, and wise words they are. Did
-Mr. Perceval act on this maxim? No! he suffered the
-war to starve on “<em>one-sixth of the money necessary to
-keep it up</em>,” and would neither withdraw from the contest,
-nor resign the conduct of it to lord Wellesley, who, with
-a full knowledge of the subject, declared himself able and
-willing to support it efficiently. Nay, Mr. Perceval, while
-professing his inability to furnish Wellington efficiently
-for one war in the Peninsula, was by his orders in council,
-those complicated specimens of political insolence, folly,
-and fraud, provoking a new and unjust war with America,
-which was sure to render the supply of that in the Peninsula
-more difficult than ever.</p>
-
-<p>But how could the real resources of the country for
-supplying the war be known, until all possible economy
-was used in the expenditure upon objects of less importance?
-Was there any economy used by Mr. Perceval?
-Was not that the blooming period of places, pensions,
-sinecures, and jobbing contracts? Did not the government
-and all belonging thereto, then shout and revel in their
-extravagance? Did not corruption the most extensive
-and the most sordid overspread the land? Was not that
-the palmy state of the system which the indignant nation
-has since risen in its moral strength to reform? Why did
-not Mr. Perceval reduce the home and the colonial<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_lxix"></a>[lxix]</span>
-expenses, admit the necessity of honest retrenchment,
-and then manfully call upon the people of England to bear
-the real burthen of the war, because it was necessary, and
-because their money was fairly expended to sustain their
-honour and their true interests? This would have been
-the conduct of an able, zealous, and faithful servant of
-the country; and am I to be silenced by a phrase, when
-I charge with a narrow, factious, and contemptible policy
-and a desire to keep himself in power, the man, who supported
-and extended this system of corruption at home,
-clinging to it as a child clings to its nurse, while the armies
-of his country were languishing abroad for that assistance
-which his pitiful genius could not perceive the means of
-providing, and which, if he had been capable of seeing it,
-his more pitiful system of administration would not have
-suffered him to furnish. Profuseness and corruption
-marked Mr. Perceval’s government at home, but the army
-withered for want abroad; the loan-contractors got fat<span class="sidenote">See <a href="#EX_20">Extract No. 20</a></span>
-in London, but the soldiers in hospital died because there
-was no money to provide for their necessities. The funds
-of the country could not supply both, and so he directed
-his economy against the troops, and reserved his extravagance
-to nourish the foul abuses at home, and this is to
-be a pre-eminently “<em>honest, zealous, and able servant of
-the king</em>!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote">See further on, Second <a href="#CORB_EX_4">Extracts, No. 4.</a></span>
-This was the man who projected to establish fortresses
-to awe London and other great towns. This was the man
-who could not support the war in Spain, but who did
-support the tithe war in Ireland, and who persecuted the
-press of England with a ferocity that at last defeated its
-own object. This was the man who called down vindictive<span class="sidenote"><a href="#CORB_EX_6">Ditto, No. 6</a></span>
-punishment on the head of the poor tinman, Hamlyn of
-Plymouth, because, in his ignorant simplicity, he openly
-offered money to a minister for a place; and this also was
-the man who sheltered himself from investigation, under
-the vote of an unreformed House of Commons, when
-Mr. Maddocks solemnly offered to prove at the bar, that<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_lxx"></a>[lxx]</span>
-he, Mr. Perceval, had been privy to, and connived at a
-transaction, more corrupt and far more mischievous and
-illegal in its aim than that of the poor tinman. This is
-the Mr. Perceval who, after asserting, with a view to obtain
-heavier punishment on Hamlyn, the distinguished purity<span class="sidenote">See further on, Second <a href="#CORB_EX_7">Extracts, No. 7.</a></span>
-of the public men of his day, called for that heavy punishment
-on Hamlyn for the sake of public justice, and yet took
-shelter himself from that public justice under a vote of an
-unreformed house, and suffered Mr. Ponsonby to defend
-that vote by the plea that such foul transactions were as
-“<em>glaring as the sun at noon-day</em>.” And this man is not
-to be called factious!</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Perceval the younger in his first letter to me says,
-“<em>the good name of my father is the only inheritance he
-left to his children</em>.” A melancholy inheritance indeed if
-it be so, and that he refers to his public reputation. But
-I find that during his life the minister Perceval had salaries
-to the amount of about eight thousand a-year, and the reversion
-of a place worth twelve thousand a-year, then enjoyed
-by his brother, lord Arden. And also I find that after his
-death, his family received a grant of fifty thousand pounds,
-and three thousand a-year from the public money. Nay,
-Mr. Perceval the son, forgetting his former observation,
-partly founds his father’s claim to reputation upon this large
-amount of money so given to his family. Money and
-praise he says were profusely bestowed, money to the
-family, praise to the father, wherefore Mr. Perceval must
-have been an admirable minister! Admirable proof!</p>
-
-<p>But was he praised and regretted by an admiring grateful
-people? No! the people rejoiced at his death. Bonfires
-and illuminations signalized their joy in the country,
-and in London many would have rescued his murderer; a<span class="sidenote"><a href="#CORB_EX_5">Ditto, No. 5</a></span>
-multitude even blessed him on the scaffold. No! He
-was not praised by the English people, for they had felt his
-heavy griping hand; nor by the people of Ireland, for they
-had groaned under his harsh, his unmitigated bigotry.
-Who then praised him? Why his coadjutors in evil, his<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_lxxi"></a>[lxxi]</span>
-colleagues in misrule; the majority of a corrupt House of
-Commons, the nominees of the borough faction in England,
-of the Orange faction in Ireland; those factions by which
-he ruled and had his political being, by whose support, and
-for whose corrupt interests he run his public “career of
-unmixed evil,” unmixed, unless the extreme narrowness of
-his capacity, which led him to push his horrid system
-forward too fast for its stability, may be called a good.</p>
-
-<p>By the nominees of such factions, by men placed in the
-situation, but without the conscience of Mr. Quentin Dick,<span class="sidenote">See further on, Second <a href="#CORB_EX_7">Extracts, No. 7.</a></span>
-Mr. Perceval was praised, and the grant of money to his
-family was carried; but there were many to oppose the
-grant even in that house of corruption. The grant was a
-ministerial measure, and carried, as such, by the same
-means, and by the same men, which, and who, had so long
-baffled the desire of the nation for catholic emancipation
-and parliamentary reform. And yet the people! emphatically,
-the people! have since wrung those measures from
-the factions; aye! and the same people loathe the very
-memory of the minister who would have denied both for
-ever, if it had been in his power.</p>
-
-<p>“<em>Mr. Perceval’s bigotry taught him to oppress Ireland,
-but his religion did not deter him from passing a law to
-prevent the introduction of medicines into France during a
-pestilence.</em>”</p>
-
-<p>This passage is, by the younger Mr. Perceval, pronounced
-to be utterly untrue, because bark is only <em>one
-medicine</em>, and not <em>medicines</em>; because there was no raging
-deadly general pestilence in France at the time; and because
-the measure was only retaliation for Napoleon’s
-Milan and Berlin decrees, a sort of war which even
-Quakers might wink at. What the extent of a Quaker’s conscience
-on such occasions may be I know not, since I have
-heard of one, who, while professing his hatred of blood-shedding,
-told the mate of his ship that if he did not port
-his helm, he would not run down his enemy’s boat. But
-this I do know, that Napoleon’s decrees were retaliation<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_lxxii"></a>[lxxii]</span>
-for our paper blockades; that both sides gave licenses for
-a traffic in objects which were convenient to them, while
-they denied to unoffending neutrals their natural rights of
-commerce; that to war against hospitals is inhuman, unchristianlike,
-and uncivilized, and that the avowal of the
-principle is more abhorrent than even the act. The avowed
-principle in this case was to distress the enemy. It was
-known that the French were in great want of bark, therefore
-it was resolved they should not have it, unless Napoleon
-gave up his great scheme of policy called the continental
-system. Now men do not want Jesuit’s bark unless
-to cure disease, and to prevent them from getting it, was
-literally to war against hospitals. It was no metaphor of
-Mr. Whitbread’s, it was a plain truth.</p>
-
-<p>Oh! exclaims Mr. Perceval, there was no deadly raging
-general pestilence! What then? Is not the principle the
-same? Must millions suffer, must the earth be cumbered
-with carcasses, before the christian statesman will deviate
-from his barbarous policy? Is a momentary expediency to
-set aside the principle in such a case? Oh! no! by no means!
-exclaims the pious minister Perceval. My policy is just, and
-humane; fixed on immutable truths emanating directly from
-true religion, and quite consonant to the christian dispensation;
-the sick people shall have bark, I am far from wishing
-to prevent them from getting bark. God forbid! I am not so
-inhuman. Yes, they shall have bark, but their ruler must first
-submit to me. “Port thy helm,” quoth the Quaker, “or
-thee wilt miss her, friend!” War against hospitals! Oh!
-No! “I do not war against the hospital, I see the black flag
-waving over it and I respect it; to be sure: I throw my
-shells on to it continually, but that is not to hurt the sick,
-it is only to make the governor capitulate.” And this is the
-pious sophistry by which the christian Mr. Perceval is to be
-defended!</p>
-
-<p>But Mr. Cobbett was in favour of this measure! Listen
-to him! By all means! Let us hear Mr. Cobbett; let
-us hear his “vigorous sentences,” his opinions, his proofs,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_lxxiii"></a>[lxxiii]</span>
-his arguments, the overflowings of his “true English spirit
-and feeling” upon the subject of Mr. Perceval’s administration.
-Yes! yes! I will listen to Mr. Cobbett, and what
-is more, I will yield implicit belief to Mr. Cobbett, where
-I cannot, with any feeling of truth, refute his arguments
-and assertions.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Cobbett defended the Jesuit’s bark bill upon the
-avowed ground that it was to assert our sovereignty of the
-seas, not our actual power on that element, but our right to
-rule there as we listed. That is to say, that the other people
-of the world were not to dare traffic, not to dare move upon
-that high road of nations, not to presume to push their commercial
-intercourse with each other, nay, not even to communicate
-save under the controul and with the license of
-England. Now, if we are endowed by Heaven with such
-a right, in the name of all that is patriotic and English, let
-it be maintained. Yet it seems a strange plea in justification
-of the christian Mr. Perceval—it seems strange that
-he should be applauded for prohibiting the use of bark to
-the sick people of Portugal and Spain, and France, Holland,
-Flanders, Italy, and the Ionian islands, for to all
-these countries the prohibition extended, on the ground of
-our right to domineer on the wide sea; and that he should
-also be applauded for declaiming against the cruelty, the
-ambition, the domineering spirit of Napoleon. I suppose
-we were appointed by heaven to rule on the ocean according
-to our caprice, and Napoleon had only the devil
-to sanction his power over the continent. We were christians,
-“truly British christians,” as the Tory phrase goes;
-and he was an infidel, a Corsican infidel. Nevertheless we
-joined together, each under our different dispensations,
-yes, we joined together, we agreed to trample upon the
-rest of the world; and that trade, which we would not allow
-to neutrals, we, by mutual licenses, carried on ourselves,
-until it was discovered that the sick wanted bark, sorely
-wanted it; then we, the truly British christians, prohibited
-that article. We deprived the sick people of the succour<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_lxxiv"></a>[lxxiv]</span>
-of bark; and without any imputation on our christianity, no
-doubt because the tenets of our faith permit us to be merciless
-to our enemies, provided a quaker winks at the act!
-Truly the logic, the justice, and the christianity of this
-position, seem to be on a par.</p>
-
-<p>All sufferings lead to sickness, but we must make our
-enemies suffer, if we wish to get the better of them, let
-them give up the contest and their sufferings will cease:
-wherefore there is nothing in this stopping of medicine.
-This is Mr. Cobbett’s argument, and Mr. Cobbett’s words
-are adopted by Mr. Perceval’s son. To inflict suffering on
-the enemy was then the object of the measure, and of course
-the wider the suffering spread the more desirable the measure.
-Now suffering of mind as well as of body must <ins class="corr" id="tn-lxxiv" title="Transcriber’s Note—Original text: 'be here meaned'">
-be here meant</ins>, because the dead and dying are not those who can
-of themselves oblige the government of a great nation to give
-up a war; it must be the dread of such sufferings increasing,
-that disposes the great body of the people to stop the career
-of their rulers. Let us then torture our prisoners; let us
-destroy towns with all their inhabitants; burn ships at sea
-with all their crews; carry off children and women, and
-torment them until their friends offer peace to save them.
-Why do we not? Is it because we dread retaliation? or
-because it is abhorrent to the usages of christian nations?
-The former undoubtedly, if the younger Mr. Perceval’s
-argument adopted from Cobbett is just; the latter if there
-is such a thing as christian principle. That principle once
-sacrificed to expediency, there is nothing to limit the extent
-of cruelty in war.</p>
-
-<p>So much for Mr. Cobbett upon the Jesuit’s bark bill, but
-one swallow does not make a summer; his “true English
-spirit and feeling” breaks out on other occasions regarding
-Mr. Perceval’s policy, and there, being quite unable to find
-any weakness in him, I am content to take him as a guide.
-Something more, however, there is, to advance on the subject
-of the Jesuit’s bark bill, ere I yield to the temptation of
-enlivening my pages with Cobbett’s “vigorous sentences.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_lxxv"></a>[lxxv]</span></p>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote">Hansard’s Debates.</span>
-Mr. Wilberforce, no small name amongst religious men
-and no very rigorous opponent of ministers, described this
-measure in the house, as a bill “<em>which might add to the
-ferocity and unfeeling character of the contest, but could
-not possibly put an end to the contest</em>.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Grattan said, “<em>we might refuse our Jesuit’s bark to
-the French soldiers; we might inflict pains and penalties, by
-the acrimony of our statutes, upon those who were saved from
-the severity of war; but the calculation was contemptible</em>.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Whitbread characterized the bill as “<em>a most abominable
-measure calculated to hold the country up to universal
-execration</em>. <em>It united in itself detestable cruelty with
-absurd policy.</em>”</p>
-
-<p>Lord <ins class="corr" id="tn-lxxv" title="Transcriber’s Note—Original text: 'Holland combated'">
-Holland combatted</ins> the principle of the bill, which
-he said “<em>would distress the women and children of Spain
-and Portugal more than the enemy</em>.”</p>
-
-<p>Lord Grenville “<em>cautioned the house to look well at the
-consideration they were to receive as the price of the
-honour, justice, and humanity of the country</em>.”</p>
-
-<p>Then alluding to the speech of Lord Mulgrave (who,
-repudiating the flimsy veil of the bill being merely a commercial
-regulation, boldly avowed that it was an exercise of
-our right to resort to whatever mode of warfare was adopted
-against us) Lord Grenville, I say, observed, that such a
-doctrine did not a little surprise him. “<em>If</em>,” said he,
-“<em>we are at war with the Red Indians, are we to scalp our
-enemies because the Indians scalp our men? When Lyons
-was attacked by Robespierre he directed his cannon more
-especially against the hospital of that city than against
-any other part, the destruction of it gave delight to his
-sanguinary inhuman disposition. In adopting the present
-measure we endeavour to assimilate ourselves to that monster
-of inhumanity, for what else is the bill but a cannon
-directed against the hospitals on the continent.</em>”</p>
-
-<p>But all this, says Mr. Perceval the younger, is but
-“declamatory invective, the answered and refuted fallacies
-of a minister’s opponents in debate.” And yet Mr.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_lxxvi"></a>[lxxvi]</span>
-Perceval, who thus assumes that all the opposition speeches
-were fallacies, does very complacently quote lord Bathurst’s
-speech in defence of the measure, and thus, in a most
-compendious manner, decides the question. Bellarmin
-says yes! exclaimed an obscure Scotch preacher to his
-congregation, Bellarmin says yes! but I say no! and Bellarmin
-being thus confuted, we’ll proceed. Even so Mr.
-Perceval. But I am not to be confuted so concisely as
-Bellarmin. Lord Erskine, after hearing lord Bathurst’s
-explanation, maintained that “<em>the bill was contrary to
-the dictates of religion and the principles of humanity</em>,”
-and this, he said, he felt so strongly, that he was “resolved
-<em>to embody his opinion in the shape of a protest
-that it might go down in a record to posterity</em>.” It is<span class="sidenote">Hansard’s Debates.</span>
-also a fact not to be disregarded in this case, that the
-bishops, who were constant in voting for all other ministerial
-measures, wisely and religiously abstained from
-attending the discussions of this bill. Lord Erskine was
-as good as his word, eleven other lords joined him, and
-their protests contained the following deliberate and solemn
-testimony against the bill.</p>
-
-<p>“Because <em>the Jesuit’s bark, the exportation of which
-is prohibited by this bill</em>, has been found, by long experience,
-to be a specific for many dangerous diseases which
-war has a tendency to spread and exasperate; <em>and because
-to employ as an engine of war the privation of the only
-remedy for some of the greatest sufferings which war is
-capable of inflicting, is manifestly repugnant to the principles
-of the Christian religion, contrary to humanity, and
-not to be justified by any practice of civilised nations</em>.</p>
-
-<p>“Because <em>the means to which recourse has been hitherto
-had in war, have no analogy to the barbarous enactments
-of this bill, inasmuch as it is not even contended that the
-privations to be created by it, have any tendency whatever
-to self-defence, or to compel the enemy to a restoration of
-peace, the only legitimate object by which the infliction of
-the calamities of war can in any manner be justified</em>.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_lxxvii"></a>[lxxvii]</span></p>
-
-<p>Such was the religious, moral, and political character,
-given to this bill of Mr. Perceval’s, by our own statesmen.
-Let us now hear the yet more solemnly recorded opinion
-of the statesmen of another nation upon Mr. Perceval’s
-orders in council, of which this formed a part. In the
-American president’s message to Congress, the following
-passages occur.</p>
-
-<p>“The government of Great Britain had already introduced
-into her commerce during war, a system <em>which at
-once violating the rights of other nations, and resting on
-a mass of perjury and forgery, unknown to other times,
-was making an unfortunate progress, <ins class="corr" id="tn-lxxvii" title="Transcriber’s Note—Original text: 'in underminig those'">
-in undermining those</ins> principles of morality and religion, which are the best
-foundations of national happiness</em>.”</p>
-
-<p>One more testimony. Napoleon, whose authority, whatever
-Mr. Perceval and men of his stamp may think, will
-always have a wonderful influence; Napoleon, at St.
-Helena, declared, “that posterity would more bitterly
-reproach Mr. Pitt for the hideous school he left behind
-him, than for any of his own acts; <em>a school marked by its
-insolent machiavelism, its profound immorality, its cold
-egotism, its contempt for the well-being of men and the
-justice of things</em>.” Mr. Perceval was an eminent champion
-of this hideous school, which we thus find the leading men
-of England, France, and America, uniting to condemn.
-And shall a musty Latin proverb protect such a politician
-from the avenging page of history? The human mind is
-not to be so fettered. Already the work of retribution is
-in progress.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Perceval the younger, with something of fatuity,
-hath called up Mr. Cobbett to testify to his father’s
-political merit. Commending that rugged monitor of evil
-statesmen for his “<em>vigorous sentences</em>,” for his “<em>real
-English spirit and feeling</em>,” he cannot now demur to his
-authority; let him then read and reflect deeply on the following
-passages from that eminent writer’s works, and he
-may perhaps discover, that to defend his father’s political<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_lxxviii"></a>[lxxviii]</span>
-reputation with success will prove a difficult and complicate
-task. If the passages are painful to Mr. Perceval, if the
-lesson is severe, I am not to blame. It is not I but
-himself who has called up the mighty seer, and if the stern
-grim spirit, thus invoked, will not cease to speak until all
-be told, it is not my fault.</p>
-
-<hr class="r10" />
-
-
- <div class="letterquot">
-
-<p class="p1 center">EXTRACTS FROM MR. COBBETT’S WRITINGS.<span class="sidenote">History of George IV.</span></p>
-
-<p class="p1 center" id="CORB_EX_1"><em>Extract 1.—Of Mr. Perceval’s harshness.</em></p>
-
-<p>“But there now came a man amongst them who soon surpassed
-all the rest in power, as well as in impudence and insolence
-towards the people. This was that Spencer Perceval of whose
-signal death we shall have to speak by and bye. This man, a
-sharp lawyer, inured, from his first days at the bar, to the
-carrying on of state prosecutions; a sort of understrapper, in
-London, to the attorneys-general in London, and frequently their
-deputy in the counties; a short, spare, pale faced, hard, keen,
-sour-looking man, with a voice well suited to the rest, with words
-in abundance at his command, with the industry of a laborious
-attorney, with no knowledge of the great interest of the nation,
-foreign or domestic, but with a thorough knowledge of those
-means by which power is obtained and preserved in England, and
-with no troublesome scruples as to the employment of those
-means. He had been Solicitor General under Pitt up to 1801,
-and Attorney General under Addington and Pitt up to February,
-1806. This man became the <em>adviser of the Princess</em>, during
-the period of the investigation and correspondence of which we
-have just seen the history; and, as we are now about to see, the
-power he obtained, by the means of that office, <em>made him the
-Prime Minister of England to the day of his death</em>, though
-no more fit for that office than any other barrister in London, taken
-by tossing up or by ballot.”</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2 center" id="CORB_EX_2"><em>Extract 2.—Of Perceval’s illiberal, factious, and crooked
-policy.</em></p>
-
-<p>“We have seen that the King was told that the <em>publication</em>”
-(the publication of the Princess of Wales’s justification) “would<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_lxxix"></a>[lxxix]</span>
-take place on <em>the Monday</em>. That Monday was <em>the 9th of March</em>.
-In this difficulty what was to be done? The whig ministry, with
-their eyes fixed on the <em>probable speedy succession of the Prince</em>,
-or at least, <em>his accession to power</em>, the King having recently
-been in a very shakey state; the whig ministry, with their eyes
-fixed on this expected event, and not perceiving, as Perceval did,
-the power that the <em>unpublished book</em> (for ‘The Book’ it is now
-called) <em>would give them with the Prince</em> as well as with the
-King, the whig ministry would not consent to the terms of the
-Princess, thinking, too, that in spite of her anger and her
-threats, she would not throw away the scabbard as towards the
-King.</p>
-
-<p>“In the meanwhile, however, Perceval, wholly unknown to the
-Whigs, had got the book actually <em>printed</em>, and bound up <em>ready
-for publication</em>, and it is clear that it was intended to be published
-on the Monday named in the Princess’s letter; namely, on
-the <em>9th of March</em>, unless prevented by the King’s <em>yielding to
-the wishes of Perceval</em>. He did yield, that is to say, he resolved
-<em>to change his ministers</em>! A <em>ground</em> for doing this was however
-a difficulty to be got over. To allege and promulgate the <em>true</em>
-ground would never do; for then the public would have cried
-aloud for the publication, which contained matter so deeply scandalous
-to the King and all the Royal family. Therefore <em>another
-ground</em> was alleged; and herein we are going to behold another
-and another important consequence, and other national calamities
-proceeding from this dispute between the Prince and his wife.
-This other ground that was chosen was the Catholic Bill. The
-Whigs stood pledged to grant a bill for the further relief of the
-Catholics. They had in September, 1806, <em>dissolved the parliament</em>,
-though it was only <em>four years</em> old, for the purpose of
-securing a majority in the House of Commons; and into this new
-house, which had met on the 19th of December, 1806, they had
-introduced the Catholic Bill, by the hands of Mr. Grey (now
-become Lord Howick,) with the <em>great and general approbation
-of the House</em>, and with a clear understanding, that, notwithstanding
-all the cant and hypocrisy that the foes of the Catholics
-had, at different times, played off about the <em>conscientious scruples</em>
-of the King, the King had now explicitly and cheerfully
-<em>given his consent</em> to the bringing in of this bill.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_lxxx"></a>[lxxx]</span></p>
-
-<p>“The new ministry had nominally at its head <em>the late Duke of
-Portland</em>; but Perceval, who was <em>Chancellor of the Exchequer</em>,
-was, in fact, the master of the whole affair, co-operating, however,
-cordially with Eldon, who now again became Chancellor.
-The moment the dismission of the Whigs was resolved on, the
-other party set up the cry of “No Popery.” The walls and
-houses, not only of London, but of the country towns and villages,
-were covered with these words, sometimes in chalk and sometimes
-in print; the clergy and corporations were all in motion, even the
-cottages on the skirts of the commons, and the forests heard
-fervent <em>blessings</em> poured out on the head of the <em>good old King</em>
-for preserving the nation from a rekindling of the “<em>fires in
-Smithfield</em>!” Never was delusion equal to this! Never a people
-so deceived; never public credulity so great; never hypocrisy so
-profound and so detestably malignant as that of the deceivers!
-The mind shrinks back at the thought of an eternity of suffering,
-even as the lot of the deliberate murderer; but if the thought
-were to be endured, it would be as applicable to that awful sentence
-awarded to hypocrisy like this.”</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2 center" id="CORB_EX_3"><em>Extract 3.</em></p>
-
-<p>“The great and interesting question was, not whether the act
-(Regency Act) were agreeable to the laws and constitution of the
-country or not; not whether it was right or wrong thus to defer
-the full exercise of the Royal authority for a year; <em>but whether
-limited as the powers were, the Prince upon being invested
-with them, would take his old friends and companions, the
-Whigs, to be his ministers</em>.”—“Men in general unacquainted
-with the hidden motives that were at work no more expected that
-Perceval and Eldon would continue for one moment to be ministers
-under the Regent than they expected the end of the world.”</p>
-
-<p>“But a very solid reason for not turning out <span class="smcap">Perceval</span> was
-found in the power which he had with regard to the <span class="smcap">Princess</span>
-and the BOOK. He had, as has been before observed, the power
-of bringing her forward, and making her the triumphant rival of
-her husband. This power he had completely in his hands, backed
-as he was by the indignant feelings of an enterprizing, brave, and
-injured woman. But, it was necessary for him to do something<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_lxxxi"></a>[lxxxi]</span>
-to keep this great and terrific power in his own hands. If he lost
-the princess he lost his only prop; and, even without losing her,
-if he lost the book, or rather, if the secrets of the book escaped
-and became public, he then lost his power. It was therefore of
-the greatest importance to him that nobody should possess a copy
-of this book but <em>himself</em>!</p>
-
-<p>“The reader will now please to turn back to paragraph 73,
-which he will find in chap. 11. He will there find that Perceval
-ousted the Whigs by the means of the book, and not by the
-means of the catholic question, as the hoodwinked nation were
-taught to believe. The book had been purchased by Perceval
-himself; it had been printed, in a considerable edition, by Mr.
-Edwards, printer, in the Strand; the whole edition had been
-put into the hands of a bookseller; the day of publication was
-named, that being the 9th of March, 1807; but on the 7th of
-March, or thereabouts, the king determined upon turning out
-the Whigs and taking in Perceval. Instantly <span class="smcap">Perceval</span> suppressed
-THE BOOK; took the edition out of the hands of the
-booksellers, thinking that he had every copy in his own possession.
-The story has been in print about his having burned
-the books in the court yard of his country house; but be this as
-it may, he certainly appears to have thought that no one but
-himself had a copy of THE BOOK. In this however he was
-deceived; for several copies of this book, as many as four or five,
-at least, were in the hands of private individuals.”—“To get at
-these copies advertisements appeared in all the public papers, as
-soon as the Prince had determined to keep Perceval as his minister.
-These advertisements plainly enough described the contents
-of the book, and contained offers of high prices for the book to
-such persons as might have a copy to dispose of. In this manner
-the copies were bought up: one was sold for £300, one or two for
-£500 each, one for £1000, and the last for £1500.”</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2 center" id="CORB_EX_4"><em>Extract 4.—Of Mr. Perceval’s harshness and illiberality.</em></p>
-
-<p>—— ——“Thus Perceval really ruled the country in precisely
-what manner he pleased. Whole troops of victims to the libel
-law were crammed into jails, the corrupt part of the press was
-more audacious than ever, and the other part of it (never very
-considerable) was reduced nearly to silence. But human enjoyments<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_lxxxii"></a>[lxxxii]</span>
-of every description are of uncertain duration: political
-power, when founded on force, is of a nature still more mutable
-than human enjoyments in general; of which observations this
-haughty and insolent Perceval was destined, in the spring of
-1812, to afford to the world a striking, a memorable, and a most
-awful example. He had got possession of the highest office in
-the state; by <em>his secret</em>, relative to the Princess and her BOOK,
-had secured his influence with the Prince Regent for their joint
-lives; he had bent the proud necks of the landlords to fine, imprisonment,
-and transportation, if they attempted to make inroads
-on his system to support the all-corrupting paper-money; the
-press he had extinguished or had rendered the tool of his absolute
-will; the most eminent amongst the writers who opposed him,
-Cobbett (the author of this history,) Leigh and John Hunt,
-Finnerty, Drakard, Lovel, together with many more, were closely
-shut up in jail, for long terms, with heavy fines on their heads,
-and long bail at the termination of their imprisonment. Not content
-with all this, he meditated the complete subjugation of
-London to the control and command of a military force. Not
-only did he meditate this, but had the audacity to propose it to
-the parliament; and if his life had not been taken in the evening
-of the 11th of May, 1812, he, that very evening, was going to
-propose, in due form, a resolution for the establishment of a permanent
-army to be stationed in Marybonne-park, for the openly
-avowed purpose of <em>keeping the metropolis in awe</em>.”</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2 center" id="CORB_EX_5"><em>Extract 5.—Of Mr. Perceval’s unpopularity.</em></p>
-
-<p>“Upon the news of the death of Perceval arriving at Nottingham,
-at Leicester, at Truro, and indeed all over the country,
-demonstrations of joy were shown by the ringing of bells, the
-making of bonfires, and the like; and at Nottingham particularly,
-soldiers were called out to disperse the people upon the occasion.”——“At
-the place of execution, the prisoner (Bellingham)
-thanked God for having enabled him to meet his fate with so much
-fortitude and resignation. At the moment when the hangman
-was making the usual preparations; at the moment that he was
-going out of the world, at the moment when he was expecting
-every breath to be his last, his ears were saluted with—<em>God bless
-you, God bless you, God Almighty bless you, God Almighty<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_lxxxiii"></a>[lxxxiii]</span>
-bless you</em>! issuing from the lips of many thousands of persons.”——“With
-regard to the fact of the offender going out of the
-world amidst the blessings of the people, I, the author of this
-history, can vouch for its truth, having been an eye and ear witness
-of the awful and most memorable scene, standing, as I did,
-at the window of that prison out of which he went to be executed,
-and into which I had been put in consequence of a prosecution
-ordered by this very Perceval, and the result of which prosecution
-was a sentence to be imprisoned <em>two years</em> amongst felons in
-Newgate, to pay <em>a thousand pounds</em> to the Prince Regent at the
-end of the two years, and to be held in bonds for <em>seven years</em>
-afterwards; all which was executed upon me to the very letter,
-except that I rescued myself from the society of the felons by a
-cost of twenty guineas a week, for the <em>hundred and four weeks</em>;
-and all this I had to suffer for having published a paragraph, in
-which I expressed my indignation at the flogging of English local
-militiamen, at the town of Ely, in England, <em>under a guard of
-Hanoverian bayonets</em>. From this cause, I was placed in a
-situation to witness the execution of this unfortunate man. The
-crowd was assembled in the open space just under the window at
-which I stood. I saw the anxious looks, I saw the half horrified
-countenances; I saw the mournful tears run down; and I heard
-the unanimous blessings.”</p>
-
-<p>“The nation was grown heartily tired of the war; it despaired
-of seeing an end to it without utter ruin to the country; the expenditure
-was arrived at an amount that frightened even loan-mongers
-and stock-jobbers; and the shock given to people’s confidence
-by Perceval’s recent acts, which had proclaimed to the
-whole world the fact of the depreciation of the paper-money;
-these things made even the pretended exclusively loyal secretly
-rejoice at his death, which they could not help hoping would lead
-to some very material change in the managing of the affairs of the
-country.”</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2 center" id="CORB_EX_6"><em>Extract 6.—Of Mr. Hamlyn, the Tinman.</em></p>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote">Cobbett’s Register.</span>
-“I shall now address you, though it need not be much at
-length, upon the subject of lord Castlereagh’s conduct. The
-business was brought forward by lord Archibald Hamilton, who
-concluded his speech with moving the following resolutions: ‘1º.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_lxxxiv"></a>[lxxxiv]</span>
-That it appears to the House, from the evidence on the table,
-that lord viscount Castlereagh, in the year 1805, shortly after he
-had quitted the situation of President of the Board of Control,
-and being a Privy Councillor and Secretary of State, did place
-at the disposal of lord Clancarty, a member of the same board,
-the nomination to a writership, in order to facilitate his procuring
-a seat in Parliament. 2º. That it was owing to a disagreement
-among the subordinate parties, that this transaction did not take
-effect; and 3º., that by this conduct lord Castlereagh had been
-guilty of a gross violation of his duty as a servant of the Crown;
-an abuse of his patronage as President of the Board of Control;
-and an attack upon the purity of that House.’”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, but what did the House agree to? Why, to this:
-‘Resolved, that it is the duty of this House to maintain a <em>jealous
-guard</em> over the <em>purity of election</em>; but considering that the
-attempt of lord viscount Castlereagh to interfere in the election of
-a member <em>had not been successful</em>, this House does not consider
-it necessary to enter into any criminal proceedings against him.’”</p>
-
-<p>“Now, then, let us see what was done in the case of Philip
-Hamlyn, the tinman of Plymouth, who offered a bribe to Mr.
-Addington, when the latter was minister. The case was this: in
-the year 1802, Philip Hamlyn, a tinman of Plymouth, wrote a
-letter to Mr. Henry Addington, the first Lord of the Treasury and
-Chancellor of the Exchequer, offering him the sum of £2000 to
-give him, Hamlyn, the place of Land Surveyor of Customs at
-Plymouth. In consequence of this, a criminal information was
-filed against the said Hamlyn, by <em>Mr. Spencer Perceval</em>, who was
-then the King’s Attorney General, and who, in pleading against
-the offender, asserted <em>the distinguished purity of persons in
-power in the present day</em>. The tinman was found guilty; he
-was sentenced to pay a fine of £100 to the King, and to be
-imprisoned for three months. His business was ruined, and he
-himself died, in a few months after his release from prison.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hamlyn confessed his guilt; he stated, in his affidavit, that
-he sincerely repented of his crime; that he was forty years
-of age; that his business was the sole means of supporting
-himself and family; that a severe judgment might be the
-total ruin of himself and that family; and that, therefore, he
-threw himself upon, and implored, the mercy of his prosecutors<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_lxxxv"></a>[lxxxv]</span>
-and the Court. In reference to this, Mr. Perceval, <em>the present
-Chancellor of the Exchequer</em>, observe, said: ‘The circumstances
-which the defendant discloses, respecting his own situation
-in life and of his family are all of them topics, very well
-adapted to affect the private feelings of individuals, and as far as
-that consideration goes, nothing further need be said; but, there
-would have been no prosecution at all, in this case, upon the
-ground of personal feeling; it was set on foot upon grounds of a
-public nature, and the spirit in which the prosecution originated,
-still remains; it is, therefore, submitted to your lordships, not on
-a point of individual feeling, but of <span class="allsmcap">PUBLIC JUSTICE</span>, in which
-case your lordships will consider how far the affidavits ought
-to operate in mitigation of punishment.’—“For lord Archibald
-Hamilton’s motion, the speakers were, lord A. Hamilton, Mr.
-C. W. Wynn, lord Milton, Mr. W. Smith, Mr. Grattan, Mr.
-Ponsonby, sir Francis Burdett, Mr. Whitbread, and Mr. Tierney.
-<em>Against it</em>, lord Castlereagh himself, lord Binning, Mr. Croker,
-Mr. <span class="smcap">Perceval</span>, (who prosecuted Hamlyn,) Mr. Banks, Mr.
-G. Johnstone, Mr. H. Lascelles, Mr. Windham, and Mr.
-Canning.”</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2 center" id="CORB_EX_7"><em>Extract 7.—Of Mr. Quentin Dick.</em></p>
-
-<p>(On the 11th of May, 1809, Mr. Maddocks made a charge against
-Mr. Perceval and lord Castlereagh, relative to the selling of a seat
-in Parliament to Mr. Quentin Dick, and to the influence exercised
-with Mr. Dick, as to his voting upon the recent important question.)
-Mr. Maddocks in the course of his speech said:—“I affirm,
-then, that Mr. Dick <em>purchased a seat in the House of Commons</em> for
-the borough of Cashel, through the agency of the Hon. Henry Wellesley,
-who acted for, and on behalf of, the Treasury; that upon a
-<em>recent question</em> of the last importance, when Mr. Dick had determined
-to vote according to his conscience, the noble lord, Castlereagh,
-did intimate to that gentleman the necessity of either his
-<em>voting with the government, or resigning his seat in that house</em>:
-and that Mr. Dick, sooner than vote against principle, did make
-choice of the latter alternative, and vacate his seat accordingly.
-To this transaction I charge the right honourable gentleman, <em>Mr.
-Perceval, as being privy and having connived at it</em>. This I
-will <span class="allsmcap">ENGAGE TO PROVE BY WITNESSES AT YOUR BAR</span>, if the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_lxxxvi"></a>[lxxxvi]</span>
-House will give me leave to call them.” Mr. Perceval argued
-against receiving the charge at all, putting it to the House,
-“<em>whether</em> <span class="allsmcap">AT SUCH A TIME</span> <em>it would be wise to warrant such
-species of charges as merely introductory to the agitation of
-the great question of reform, he left it to the House to determine</em>:
-but as far as he might be allowed to judge, he rather
-thought that it would be more consistent with what was due from
-him to the House and to the public, <em>if he</em> <span class="allsmcap">FOR THE PRESENT</span>
-<em>declined putting in the plea</em> (he could so conscientiously put in)
-<em>until that House had come to a determination on the propriety
-of entertaining that charge or not</em>.”</p>
-
-<p>The House voted <em>not</em> to entertain the charge, and Mr. Ponsonby
-and others declared, in the course of the debate, that such transactions
-ought not to be inquired into, because they “were notorious,”
-and had become “as glaring as the noon-day sun.”</p>
- </div>
-
-
-<p class="p2">Now let the younger Mr. Perceval grapple with this
-historian and public writer, whose opinions he has invoked,
-whose “<em>true English spirit and feeling</em>” he has eulogised.
-Let him grapple with these extracts from his works, which,
-however, are but a tithe of the charges Mr. Cobbett has
-brought against his father. For my part, I have given my
-proofs, and reasons, and authorities, and am entitled to
-assert, that my public character of Mr. Perceval, the
-minister, is, historically, “<em>fair, just, and true</em>.”</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<p class="p4 pfs150 lsp3">HISTORY</p>
-<p class="p2 pfs60">OF THE</p>
-<p class="p1 pfs150 p4b">WAR IN THE PENINSULA.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_1"></a>[Pg 1]</span></p>
-
-<p class="p1 pfs150 lsp3">HISTORY</p>
-<p class="p2 pfs70">OF THE</p>
-<p class="p1 pfs150">PENINSULAR WAR.</p>
-
-<hr class="r30" />
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="BOOK_XVII">BOOK XVII.</h2>
-
-<h3 id="CHAPTER_BXVII_I">CHAPTER I.</h3>
-
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="sidenote7">1812.</span>
-Great and surprising as the winter campaign had
-been, its importance was not understood, and therefore
-not duly appreciated by the English ministers.
-But the French generals saw with anxiety that lord
-Wellington, having snapped the heavy links of the
-chain which bound him to Lisbon, had acquired
-new bases of operation on the Guadiana, the
-Agueda, and the Douro, that he could now choose
-his own field of battle, and Spain would feel the
-tread of his conquering soldiers. Those soldiers with
-the confidence inspired by repeated successes, only
-demanded to be led forward, but their general had
-still to encounter political obstacles, raised by the
-governments he served.</p>
-
-<p>In Spain, the leading men, neglecting the war at
-hand, were entirely occupied with intrigues, with
-the pernicious project of reducing their revolted
-colonies, or with their new constitution. In Portugal,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_2"></a>[2]</span>
-and in the Brazils, a jealous opposition to
-the general on the part of the native authorities had
-kept pace with the military successes. In England
-the cabinet, swayed by Mr. Perceval’s narrow
-policy, was still vacillating between its desire to
-conquer and its fear of the expense. There also
-the Whigs greedy of office and dexterous in parliamentary
-politics, deafened the country with their
-clamours, while the people, deceived by both parties
-as to the nature of the war, and wondering
-how the French should keep the field at all, were,
-in common with the ministers, still doubtful, if their
-commander was truly a great man or an impostor.</p>
-
-<p>The struggle in the British cabinet having ended
-with the resignation of lord Wellesley, the consequent
-predominance of the Perceval faction, left small
-hopes of a successful termination to the contest in
-the Peninsula. Wellington had, however, carefully
-abstained from political intrigues, and his brother’s
-retirement, although a subject of regret, did not affect
-his own personal position; he was the General of
-England, untrammelled, undegraded by factious ties,
-and responsible to his country only for his actions.
-The ministers might, he said, relinquish or continue
-the war, they might supply his wants, or defraud
-the hopes of the nation by their timorous economy,
-his efforts must be proportioned to his means; if
-the latter were great, so would be his actions,
-under any circumstances he would do his best, yet
-he was well assured the people of England would
-not endure to forego triumph at the call of a niggard
-parsimony. It was in this temper that he had
-undertaken the siege of Badajos, in this temper he
-had stormed it, and meanwhile political affairs in
-England were brought to a crisis.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_3"></a>[3]</span></p>
-
-<p>Lord Wellesley had made no secret of Mr. Perceval’s
-mismanagement of the war, and the public
-mind being unsettled, the Whigs were invited by the
-Prince Regent, his year of restrictions having now
-expired, to join a new administration. But the
-heads of that faction would not share with Mr.
-Perceval, and he, master of the secrets relating to
-the detestable persecution of the Princess of Wales,
-was too powerful to be removed. However, on the
-11th of May, Perceval was killed in the house of
-Commons, and this act, which was a horrible
-crime, but politically no misfortune either to
-England or the Peninsula, produced other negociations,
-upon a more enlarged scheme with regard
-both to parties and to the system of government.
-Personal feelings again prevailed. Lord Liverpool
-would not unite with lord Wellesley, the Grey and
-Grenville faction would not serve their country
-without having the disposal of all the household
-offices, and lord Moira, judging a discourtesy to
-the Prince Regent too high a price to pay for their
-adhesion, refused that condition. The materials of
-a new cabinet were therefore drawn from the dregs
-of the Tory faction, and lord Liverpool became
-prime minister.</p>
-
-<p>It was unfortunate that a man of lord Wellesley’s
-vigorous talent should have been rejected for lord
-Liverpool, but this remnant of a party being too
-weak to domineer, proved less mischievous with
-respect to the Peninsula than any of the preceding
-governments. There was no direct personal interest
-opposed to lord Wellington’s wishes, and the
-military policy of the cabinet yielding by degrees
-to the attraction of his ascending genius, was finally
-absorbed in its meridian splendour. Many practical<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_4"></a>[4]</span>
-improvements had also been growing up in
-the official departments, especially in that of war
-and colonies, where colonel Bunbury, the under-secretary,
-a man experienced in the wants of an
-army on service, had reformed the incredible disorders
-which pervaded that department during the
-first years of the contest. The result of the political
-crisis was therefore comparatively favourable
-to the war in the Peninsula, the story of which
-shall now be resumed.</p>
-
-<p>It has been shewn how the danger of Gallicia,
-and the negligence of the Portuguese and Spanish
-authorities with reference to Almeida and Ciudad
-Rodrigo, stopped the invasion of Andalusia, and
-brought the allies back to Beira. But if Wellington,
-pursuing his first plan, had overthrown Soult on
-the banks of the Guadalquivir and destroyed the
-French arsenal at Seville, his campaign would have
-ranked amongst the most hardy and glorious that
-ever graced a general; and it is no slight proof of
-the uncertainty of war, that combinations, so extensive
-and judicious, should have been marred by the
-negligence of a few secondary authorities, at points
-distant from the immediate scenes of action. The
-English general had indeed under-estimated the
-force opposed to him, both in the north and south;
-but the bravery of the allied troops, aided by the
-moral power of their recent successes, would have
-borne that error, and in all other particulars his
-profound military judgment was manifest.</p>
-
-<p>Yet to obtain a true notion of his views, the various
-operations which he had foreseen and provided
-against must be considered, inasmuch as they shew
-the actual resources of the allies, the difficulty of
-bringing them to bear with due concert, and the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_5"></a>[5]</span>
-propriety of looking to the general state of the war,
-previous to each of Wellington’s great movements.
-For his calculations were constantly dependent upon
-the ill-judged operations of men, over whom he had
-little influence, and his successes, sudden, accidental,
-snatched from the midst of conflicting political
-circumstances, were as gems brought up from the
-turbulence of a whirlpool.</p>
-
-<p>Castaños was captain-general of Gallicia, as well
-as of Estremadura, and when Ciudad Rodrigo fell, lord
-Wellington, expecting from his friendly feeling some
-efficient aid, had counselled him upon all the probable
-movements of the enemy during the siege of
-Badajos.</p>
-
-<p>First. He supposed Marmont might march into
-Estremadura, either with or without the divisions
-of Souham and Bonnet. In either case, he advised
-that Abadia should enter Leon, and, according to
-his means, attack Astorga, Benavente, Zamora, and
-the other posts fortified by the enemy in that kingdom;
-and that Carlos d’España, Sanchez, Saornil,
-in fine all the partidas in Castile and the Asturias,
-and even Mendizabel, who was then in the Montaña
-St. Ander, should come to Abadia’s assistance. He
-promised also that the regular Portuguese cavalry,
-under Silveira and Bacellar, should pass the Spanish
-frontier. Thus a force of not less than twenty-five
-thousand men would have been put in motion on
-the rear of Marmont, and a most powerful diversion
-effected in aid of the siege of Badajos and the
-invasion of Andalusia.</p>
-
-<p>The next operation considered, was that of an
-invasion of Gallicia, by five divisions of the army
-of Portugal, the three other divisions, and the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_6"></a>[6]</span>
-cavalry, then in the valley of the Tagus and about
-Bejar, being left to contend, in concert with Soult,
-for Badajos. To help Abadia to meet such an
-attack, Bacellar and Silveira had orders to harass
-the left flank and rear of the French, with both
-infantry and cavalry, as much as the nature of the
-case would admit, regard being had to the safety
-of their raw militia, and to their connection with the
-right flank of the Gallician army, whose retreat was
-to be by Orense.</p>
-
-<p>Thirdly. The French might invade Portugal north
-of the Douro. Abadia was then to harass their
-right flank and rear, while the Portuguese opposed
-them in front; and whether they fell on Gallicia
-or Portugal, or Estremadura, Carlos d’España, and
-the Partidas, and Mendizabel, would have an open
-field in Leon and Castile.</p>
-
-<p>Lastly, the operation which really happened was
-considered, and to meet it lord Wellington’s arrangements
-were, as we have seen, calculated to
-cover the magazines on the Douro, and the Mondego,
-and to force the enemy to take the barren
-difficult line of country, through Lower Beira, towards
-Castelo Branco, while Abadia and the Guerilla
-chiefs entered Castile and Leon on his rear.
-Carlos d’España had also been ordered to break
-down the bridges on the Yeltes, and the Huebra, in
-front of Ciudad Rodrigo, and that of Barba de
-Puerco on the Agueda to the left of that fortress.
-Marmont would thus have been delayed two days,
-and the magazines both at Castelo Branco and Celorico
-saved by the near approach of the allied army.</p>
-
-<p>España did none of these things, neither did
-Abadia nor Mendizabel operate in a manner to be<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_7"></a>[7]</span>
-felt by the enemy, and their remissness, added to
-the other faults noticed in former observations, entirely
-marred Wellington’s defensive plan in the
-north, and brought him back to fight Marmont.
-And when that general had passed the Agueda in
-retreat, the allied army wanting the provisions
-which had been so foolishly sacrificed at Castelo
-Branco, was unable to follow; the distant magazines
-on the Douro and the Mondego were its only
-resource; then also it was found that Ciudad and
-Almeida were in want, and before those places
-could be furnished, and the intermediate magazines
-on the lines of communication restored, it was too
-late to march against Andalusia. For the harvest
-which ripens the beginning of June in that province
-and a fortnight later in Estremadura, would
-have enabled the army of Portugal to follow the
-allies march by march.</p>
-
-<p>Now Marmont, as Napoleon repeatedly told him,
-had only to watch lord Wellington’s movements,
-and a temporary absence from Castile would have
-cost him nothing of any consequence, because the
-army of the north would have protected the great
-communication with France. The advantages of
-greater means, and better arrangements for supply,
-on which Wellington had calculated, would thus
-have been lost, and moreover, the discontented state
-of the garrison of Ciudad Rodrigo, and the approach
-of a new battering train from France, rendered it dangerous
-to move far from that fortress. The invasion
-of Andalusia, judicious in April, would in the latter
-end of May have been a false movement; and the
-more so that Castaños having, like his predecessors,
-failed to bring forward the Gallician army, it was
-again made painfully evident, that in critical<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_8"></a>[8]</span>
-circumstances no aid could be obtained from that
-quarter.</p>
-
-<p>Such being the impediments to an invasion of
-Andalusia, it behoved the English general to adopt
-some other scheme of offence more suitable to the
-altered state of affairs. He considered that as the
-harvest in Leon and Castile, that is to say, in the
-districts north of the Gredos and Gata mountains,
-was much later than in Estremadura and Andalusia,
-he should be enabled to preserve his commissariat
-advantages over the French in the field for a
-longer period in the north than in the south. And
-if he could strike a decisive blow against Marmont,
-he would relieve Andalusia as securely as by a
-direct attack, because Madrid would then fall, and
-Soult, being thus cut off from his communications
-with France, would fear to be hemmed in on all
-sides. Wherefore to make the duke of Ragusa
-fight a great battle, to calculate the chances, and
-prepare the means of success, became the immediate
-objects of lord Wellington’s thoughts.</p>
-
-<p>The French general might be forced to fight by
-a vigorous advance into Castile, but a happy result
-depended upon the relative skill of the generals,
-the number and goodness of the troops. Marmont’s
-reputation was great, yet hitherto the essays
-had been in favour of the Englishman’s talents.
-The British infantry was excellent, the cavalry well
-horsed, and more numerous than it had ever been.
-The French cavalry had been greatly reduced by
-drafts made for the Russian contest, by the separation
-of the army of the north from that of Portugal,
-and by frequent and harassing marches. Marmont
-could indeed be reinforced with horsemen from the
-army of the centre, and from the army of the north,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_9"></a>[9]</span>
-but his own cavalry was weak, and his artillery
-badly horsed, whereas the allies’ guns were well
-and powerfully equipped. Every man in the British
-army expected victory, and this was the time to
-seek it, because, without pitched battles the French
-could never be dispossessed of Spain, and they
-were now comparatively weaker than they had
-yet been, or were expected to be; for such was
-the influence of Napoleon’s stupendous genius,
-that his complete success in Russia, and return
-to the Peninsula with overwhelming forces, was
-not doubted even by the British commander.
-The time, therefore, being propitious, and the
-chances favourable, it remained only to combine
-the primary and secondary operations in such a
-manner, that the French army of Portugal, should
-find itself isolated for so long as would enable the
-allies to force it singly into a general action. If the
-combinations failed to obtain that great result, the
-march of the French succouring corps, would nevertheless
-relieve various parts of Spain, giving
-fresh opportunities to the Spaniards to raise new
-obstacles, and it is never to be lost sight of, that
-this principle was always the base of Wellington’s
-plans. Ever, while he could secure his final
-retreat into the strong holds of Portugal without
-a defeat, offensive operations, beyond the frontiers,
-could not fail to hurt the French.</p>
-
-<p>To effect the isolating of Marmont’s army, the
-first condition was to be as early in the field as the
-rainy season would permit, and before the coming
-harvest enabled the other French armies to move in
-large bodies. But Marmont could avail himself,
-successively, of the lines of the Tormes and the
-Douro to protract the campaign until the ripening<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_10"></a>[10]</span>
-of the harvest enabled reinforcements to join him,
-and hence the security of the allies’ flanks and rear
-during the operations, and of their retreat, if overpowered,
-was to be previously looked to. Soult,
-burning to revenge the loss of Badajos, might attack
-Hill with superior numbers, or detach a force across
-the Tagus, which, in conjunction with the army of
-the centre, now directed by Jourdan, could advance
-upon Portugal by the valley of the Tagus, and so
-turn the right flank of the allied army in Castile.
-Boats and magazines supplied from Toledo and
-Madrid, were already being collected at the fort of
-Lugar Nueva, near Almaraz, and from hence, as
-from a place of arms, the French could move upon
-Coria, Placencia, and Castelo Branco, menacing
-Abrantes, Celorico, Ciudad Rodrigo, and Almeida,
-while detachments from the army of the north reinforced
-the army of Portugal. But to obviate this
-last danger Wellington had planned one of those
-enterprizes, which as they are successful, principally
-because of their exceeding boldness, are beheld
-with astonishment when achieved, and are
-attributed to madness when they fail.</p>
-
-
-<h4>SURPRISE OF ALMARAZ.</h4>
-
-<p>For a clear understanding of this event, the
-reader must call to mind, 1º. that the left bank of
-the Tagus, from Toledo to Almaraz, is lined with
-rugged mountains, the ways through which, impracticable
-for an army, are difficult even for small
-divisions; 2º. that from Almaraz to the frontier of
-Portugal, the banks, although more open, were still
-difficult, and the Tagus was only to be crossed at
-certain points, to which bad roads leading through
-the mountains descended. But from Almaraz to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_11"></a>[11]</span>
-Alcantara, all the bridges had been long ruined,
-and those of Arzobispo and Talavera, situated between
-Almaraz and Toledo, were of little value,
-because of the ruggedness of the mountains above
-spoken of. Soult’s pontoon equipage had been captured
-in Badajos, and the only means of crossing
-the Tagus, possessed by the French, from Toledo to
-the frontier of Portugal, was a boat-bridge laid
-down at Almaraz by Marmont, and to secure which
-he had constructed three strong forts and a bridge-head.</p>
-
-<p>The first of these forts, called Ragusa, was a
-magazine, containing many stores and provisions,
-and it was, although not finished, exceedingly
-strong, having a loopholed stone tower, twenty-five
-feet high within, and being flanked without by a
-field-work near the bridge.</p>
-
-<p>On the left bank of the Tagus the bridge had a
-fortified head of masonry, which was again flanked
-by a redoubt, called Fort Napoleon, placed on a
-height a little in advance. This redoubt, though<span class="sidenote">Jones’s Sieges.</span>
-imperfectly constructed, inasmuch as a wide berm,
-in the middle of the scarp, offered a landing place
-to troops escalading the rampart, was yet strong
-because it contained a second interior defence or
-retrenchment, with a loopholed stone tower, a ditch,
-draw-bridge, and palisades.</p>
-
-<p>These two forts, and the bridge-head, were armed
-with eighteen guns, and they were garrisoned by above
-a thousand men, which seemed sufficient to insure
-the command of the river; but the mountains on
-the left bank still precluded the passage of an army
-towards Lower Estremadura, save by the royal road
-to Truxillo, which road, at the distance of five miles
-from the river, passed over the rugged Mirabete<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_12"></a>[12]</span>
-ridge, and to secure the summit of the mountain
-the French had drawn another line of works,
-across the throat of the pass. This line consisted
-of a large fortified house, connected by
-smaller posts, with the ancient watch-tower of
-Mirabete, which itself contained eight guns, and
-was surrounded by a rampart twelve feet high.</p>
-
-<p>If all these works and a road, which Marmont, following
-the traces of an ancient Roman way, was
-now opening across the Gredos mountains had been
-finished, the communication of the French, although
-circuitous, would have been very good and secure.
-Indeed Wellington fearing the accomplishment, intended
-to have surprised the French at Almaraz
-previous to the siege of Badajos, when the redoubts
-were far from complete, but the Portuguese government
-neglected to furnish the means of transporting
-the artillery from Lisbon, and he was baffled.
-General Hill was now ordered to attempt it
-with a force of six thousand men, including four
-hundred cavalry, two field brigades of artillery, a
-pontoon equipage, and a battering train of six iron
-twenty-four pound howitzers.</p>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote7">May.</span>
-The enterprize at all times difficult was become
-one of extreme delicacy. When the army was
-round Badajos, only the resistance of the forts themselves
-was to be looked for; now Foy’s division of
-the army of Portugal had returned to the valley of
-the Tagus, and was in no manner fettered, and
-d’Armagnac, with troops from the army of the centre,
-occupied Talavera. Drouet also was, with eight or
-nine thousand men of the army of the south, at
-Hinojosa de Cordoba, his cavalry was on the road<span class="sidenote9">See Plan, No. 1.</span>
-to Medellin, he was nearer to Merida than
-Hill was to Almaraz, he might intercept the latter’s<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_13"></a>[13]</span>
-retreat, and the king’s orders were imperative that
-he should hang upon the English army in Estremadura.
-Soult could also detach a corps from<span class="sidenote">Joseph’s Correspondence, MSS.</span>
-Seville by St. Ollala to fall upon sir William Erskine,
-who was posted with the cavalry and the
-remainder of Hill’s infantry, near Almendralejo.
-However lord Wellington placed general Graham
-near Portalegre, with the first and sixth divisions,
-and Cotton’s cavalry, all of which had crossed the
-Tagus for the occasion, and thus including Erskine’s
-corps, above twenty thousand men were ready to
-protect Hill’s enterprize.</p>
-
-<p>Drouet by a rapid march might still interpose
-between Hill and Erskine, and beat them in detail
-before Graham could support them, wherefore the
-English general made many other arrangements to
-deceive the enemy. First, he chose the moment of
-action when Soult having sent detachments in various
-directions, to restore his communications in Andalusia,
-had marched himself with a division to Cadiz,
-and was consequently unfavourably placed for a
-sudden movement. Secondly, by rumours adroitly
-spread, and by demonstrations with the Portuguese
-militia of the Alemtejo, he caused the French to
-believe that ten thousand men were moving down
-the Guadiana, towards the Niebla, preparatory to the
-invasion of Andalusia, a notion upheld by the assembling
-of so many troops under Graham, by the pushing
-of cavalry parties towards the Morena, and by restoring
-the bridge at Merida, with the avowed intention
-of sending Hill’s battering and pontoon train,
-which had been formed at Elvas, to Almendralejo.
-Finally, many exploring officers, taking the roads
-leading to the province of Cordoba, made ostentatious
-inquiries about the French posts at Belalcazar<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_14"></a>[14]</span>
-and other places, and thus every thing seemed to
-point at Andalusia.</p>
-
-<p>The restoration of the bridge at Merida proving
-unexpectedly difficult, cost a fortnight’s labour,
-for two arches having been destroyed the opening
-was above sixty feet wide, and large timber
-was scarce. Hill’s march was thus dangerously
-delayed, but on the 12th of May, the repairs
-being effected and all else being ready, he quitted
-Almendralejo, passed the Guadiana, at Merida,
-with near six thousand men and twelve field-pieces,
-and joined his pontoons and battering train. These
-last had come by the way of Montijo, and formed
-a considerable convoy, nearly fifty country carts,
-besides the guns and limber carriages, being employed
-to convey the pontoons, the ladders, and
-the ammunition for the howitzers.</p>
-
-<p>The 13th the armament reached the Burdalo
-river on the road to Truxillo; the 14th it was
-at Villa Mesias; the 15th at Truxillo. Meanwhile,
-to mislead the enemy on the right bank of the
-Tagus the guerillas of the Guadalupe mountains
-made demonstrations at different points between
-Almaraz and Arzobispo, as if they were seeking
-a place to cast a bridge that Hill might join lord
-Wellington. General Foy was deceived by these
-operations, and though his spies at Truxillo had
-early informed him of the passage of the Guadiana
-by the allies, they led him to believe that Hill<span class="sidenote">Foy’s Official Correspondence, MSS.</span>
-had fifteen thousand men, and that two brigades
-of cavalry were following in his rear; one report
-even stated that thirty thousand men had entered
-Truxillo, whereas there were less than six thousand
-of all arms.</p>
-
-<p>Hill having reached Jaraicejo early on the 16th,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_15"></a>[15]</span>
-formed his troops in three columns, and made a
-night march, intending to attack by surprise and
-at the same moment, the tower of Mirabete, the
-fortified house in the pass, and the forts at the
-bridge of Almaraz. The left column, directed
-against the tower, was commanded by general
-Chowne. The centre column, with the dragoons
-and the artillery, moved by the royal road,
-under the command of general Long. The right
-column, composed of the 50th, 71st, and 92d
-regiments, under the direction of Hill in person,
-was intended to penetrate by the narrow and
-difficult way of La Cueva, and Roman Gordo
-against the forts at the bridge. But the day broke
-before any of the columns reached their destination,
-and all hopes of a surprise were extinguished.
-This untoward beginning was unavoidable on
-the part of the right and centre column, because
-of the bad roads; but it would appear that some
-negligence had retarded general Chowne’s column,
-and that the castle of Mirabete might have been
-carried by assault before day-light.</p>
-
-<p>The difficulty, great before, was now much increased.
-An attentive examination of the French defences
-convinced Hill that to reduce the works in the
-pass, he must incur more loss than was justifiable,
-and finish in such plight that he could not afterwards
-carry the forts at the bridge, which were the
-chief objects of his expedition. Yet it was only
-through the pass of Mirabete that the artillery
-could move against the bridge. In this dilemma,
-after losing the 17th and part of the 18th in
-fruitless attempts to discover some opening through
-which to reach the valley of Almaraz with his guns,
-he resolved to leave them on the Sierra with the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_16"></a>[16]</span>
-centre column, and to make a false attack upon
-the tower with general Chowne’s troops while he
-himself, with the right column, secretly penetrated
-by the scarcely practicable line of La Cueva and
-Roman Gordo to the bridge, intent, with infantry
-alone, to storm works which were defended by
-eighteen pieces of artillery and powerful garrisons!</p>
-
-<p>This resolution was even more hardy, and bold,
-than it appears without a reference to the general
-state of affairs. Hill’s march had been one of
-secrecy, amidst various divisions of the enemy;
-he was four days’ journey distant from Merida,
-which was his first point of retreat; he expected
-that Drouet would be reinforced, and advance
-towards Medellin, and hence, whether defeated or
-victorious at Almaraz, that his own retreat would
-be very dangerous; exceedingly so if defeated,
-because his fine British troops could not be repulsed
-with a small loss, and he should have to fall back
-through a difficult country, with his best soldiers
-dispirited by failure, and burthened with numbers
-of wounded men. Then harassed on one
-side by Drouet, pursued by Foy and D’Armagnac
-on the other, he would have been exposed to the
-greatest misfortunes, every slanderous tongue would
-have been let loose on the rashness of attacking
-impregnable forts, and a military career, hitherto
-so glorious, might have terminated in shame. But
-general Hill being totally devoid of interested
-ambition, was necessarily unshaken by such fears.</p>
-
-<p>The troops remained concealed in their position
-until the evening of the 18th, and then the general,
-reinforcing his own column with the 6th Portuguese
-regiment, a company of the 60th rifles, and the
-artillery-men of the centre column, commenced<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_17"></a>[17]</span>
-the descent of the valley. His design was to storm
-Fort Napoleon before day-light, and the march was
-less than six miles, but his utmost efforts could
-only bring the head of the troops to the fort, a
-little before day-light, the rear was still distant,
-and it was doubtful if the scaling-ladders, which
-had been cut in halves to thread the short narrow
-turns in the precipitous descent, would serve for an
-assault. Fortunately some small hills concealed
-the head of the column from the enemy, and at that
-moment general Chowne commenced the false attack
-on the castle of Mirabete. Pillars of white smoke
-rose on the lofty brow of the Sierra, the heavy
-sound of artillery came rolling over the valley,
-and the garrison of Fort Napoleon, crowding on
-the ramparts, were anxiously gazing at these portentous
-signs of war, when, quick and loud, a
-British shout broke on their ears, and the gallant
-50th regiment, aided by a wing of the 71st, came
-bounding over the nearest hills.</p>
-
-<p>The French were surprised to see an enemy so
-close while the Mirabete was still defended, yet
-they were not unprepared, for a patrole of English
-cavalry had been seen from the fort on the 17th
-in the pass of Roman Gordo; and in the evening
-of the 18th a woman of that village had carried
-very exact information of Hill’s numbers and intentions
-to Lugar Nueva. This intelligence had caused
-the commandant Aubert to march in the night with
-reinforcements to Fort Napoleon, which was therefore
-defended by six companies, including the 39th
-French and the voltigeurs of a foreign regiment.
-These troops were ready to fight, and when the
-first shout was heard, turning their heads, they,
-with a heavy fire of musketry and artillery, smote<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_18"></a>[18]</span>
-the assailants in front, while the guns of Fort
-Ragusa took them in flank from the opposite side
-of the river; in a few moments, however, a rise
-of ground, at the distance of only twenty yards
-from the ramparts, covered the British from the
-front fire, and general Howard, in person, leading
-the foremost troops into the ditch, commenced the
-escalade. The great breadth of the berm kept
-off the ends of the shortened ladders from the
-parapet, but the soldiers who first ascended, jumped
-on to the berm itself, and drawing up the ladders
-planted them there, and thus, with a second
-escalade, forced their way over the rampart; then,
-closely fighting, friends and enemies went together
-into the retrenchment round the stone tower. Colonel
-Aubert was wounded and taken, the tower was
-not defended, and the garrison fled towards the
-bridge-head, but the victorious troops would not
-be shaken off, and entered that work also in one
-confused mass with the fugitives, who continued
-their flight over the bridge itself. Still the British
-soldiers pushed their headlong charge, slaying the
-hindmost, and they would have passed the river if
-some of the boats had not been destroyed by stray
-shots from the forts, which were now sharply cannonading
-each other, for the artillery-men had turned
-the guns of Napoleon on Fort Ragusa.</p>
-
-<p>Many of the French leaped into the water and
-were drowned, but the greatest part were made
-prisoners, and to the amazement of the conquerors,
-the panic spread to the other side of the river;
-the garrison of Fort Ragusa, although perfectly
-safe, abandoned that fort also and fled with the
-others along the road to Naval Moral. Some
-grenadiers of the 92d immediately swam over and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_19"></a>[19]</span>
-brought back several boats, with which the bridge
-was restored, and Fort Ragusa was gained. The
-towers and other works were then destroyed,
-the stores, ammunition, provisions, and boats
-were burned in the course of the day, and in the
-night the troops returned to the Sierra above,
-carrying with them the colours of the foreign
-regiment, and more than two hundred and fifty
-prisoners, including a commandant and sixteen
-other officers. The whole loss on the part of the
-British was about one hundred and eighty men, and
-one officer of artillery was killed by his own mine,
-placed for the destruction of the tower; but the only
-officer slain in the actual assault was captain Candler,
-a brave man, who fell while leading the grenadiers
-of the 50th on to the rampart of Fort Napoleon.</p>
-
-<p>This daring attack was executed with a decision
-similar to that with which it had been planned.
-The first intention of general Hill was, to have
-directed a part of his column against the bridge-head,
-and so to have assailed both works together,
-but when the difficulties of the road marred this
-project, he attacked the nearest work with the leading
-troops, leaving the rear to follow as it could.
-This rapidity was an essential cause of the success,
-for Foy hearing on the 17th that the allies were
-at Truxillo, had ordered D’Armagnac to reinforce
-Lugar Nueva with a battalion, which being at Naval<span class="sidenote">Foy’s Official Correspondence, MSS.</span>
-Moral the 18th, might have entered Fort Ragusa early
-in the morning of the 19th; but instead of marching
-before day-break, this battalion did not move
-until eleven o’clock, and meeting the fugitives on
-the road, caught the panic and returned.</p>
-
-<p>The works at Mirabete being now cut off from
-the right bank of the Tagus, general Hill was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_20"></a>[20]</span>
-preparing to reduce them with his heavy artillery,
-when a report, from sir William Erskine, caused
-him, in conformity with his instructions, to commence
-a retreat on Merida, leaving Mirabete blockaded
-by the guerillas of the neighbourhood. It appeared
-that Soult, being at Chiclana, heard of the allies’
-march the 19th, and then only desired Drouet to make
-a diversion in Estremadura without losing his communication
-with Andalusia; for he did not perceive
-the true object of the enterprize, and thinking he
-had to check a movement, which the king told him
-was made for the purpose of reinforcing Wellington
-in the north, resolved to enforce Hill’s stay
-in Estremadura. In this view he recalled his own
-detachments from the Niebla, where they had just
-dispersed a body of Spaniards at Castillejos, and
-then forming a large division at Seville, he purposed
-to strengthen Drouet and enable him to fight
-a battle. But that general, anticipating his orders,
-had pushed an advanced guard of four thousand
-men to Dom Benito the 17th, and his cavalry
-patroles passing the Guadiana on the 18th had
-scoured the roads to Miajadas and Merida, while
-Lallemand’s dragoons drove back the British outposts
-from Ribera, on the side of Zafra.</p>
-
-<p>Confused by these demonstrations, sir William
-Erskine immediately reported to Graham, and to
-Hill, that Soult himself was in Estremadura with
-his whole army, whereupon Graham came up to
-Badajos, and Hill, fearful of being cut off, retired, as
-I have said, from Mirabete on the 21st, and on the
-26th reached Merida unmolested. Drouet then withdrew
-his advanced guards, and Graham returned to
-<ins class="corr" id="tn-20" title="Transcriber’s Note—Original text: 'Castello'">
-Castelo</ins> de Vide. Notwithstanding this error Wellington’s
-precautions succeeded, for if Drouet had<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_21"></a>[21]</span>
-been aware of Hill’s real object, instead of making
-demonstrations with a part of his force, he would
-with the whole of his troops, more than ten thousand,
-have marched rapidly from Medellin to fall on
-the allies as they issued out of the passes of Truxillo,
-and before Erskine or Graham could come to their
-aid; whereas acting on the supposition that the intention
-was to cross the Tagus, his demonstrations
-merely hastened the retreat, and saved Mirabete.
-To meet Hill in the right place, would, however,
-have required very nice arrangements and great
-activity, as he could have made his retreat by the
-road of Caceres as well as by that of Merida.</p>
-
-<p>Lord Wellington was greatly displeased that this
-false alarm, given by Erskine, should have rendered
-the success incomplete; yet he avoided any public
-expression of discontent, lest the enemy, who
-had no apparent interest in preserving the post of
-Mirabete, should be led to keep it, and so embarrass
-the allies when their operations required a
-restoration of the bridge of Almaraz. To the ministers
-however he complained, that his generals, stout
-in action, personally, as the poorest soldiers, were
-commonly so overwhelmed with the fear of responsibility
-when left to themselves, that the slightest
-movement of the enemy deprived them of their
-judgment, and they spread unnecessary alarm far
-and wide. But instead of expressing his surprise,
-he should rather have reflected on the cause of this
-weakness. Every British officer of rank knew, that
-without powerful interest, his future prospects, and
-his reputation for past services, would have withered
-together under the first blight of misfortune; that
-a selfish government would instantly offer him up, a
-victim to a misjudging public and a ribald press<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_22"></a>[22]</span>
-with whom success is the only criterion of merit.
-English generals are and must be prodigal of their
-blood to gain a reputation, but they are necessarily
-timid in command, when a single failure, even without
-a fault, consigns them to an old age of shame
-and misery. It is however undeniable that sir
-William Erskine was not an able officer.</p>
-
-<p>On the other side the king was equally discontented
-with Soult, whose refusal to reinforce Drouet,
-he thought had caused the loss of Almaraz, and he
-affirmed that if Hill had been more enterprising,
-the arsenal of Madrid might have fallen as well as
-the dépôt of Almaraz, for he thought that general
-had brought up his whole corps instead of a division
-only six thousand strong.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_23"></a>[23]</span><br /></p>
-
-<h3 id="CHAPTER_BXVII_II">CHAPTER II.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="sidenote7">1812. April.</span>
-While the Anglo-British army was thus cleansing
-and strengthening its position on the frontier of
-Portugal, the progress of the war in other parts had
-not been so favourable to the common cause. It
-has already been shewn that Gallicia, in the latter
-part of 1811, suffered from discord, poverty, and ill
-success in the field; that an extraordinary contribution
-imposed upon the province, had been resisted
-by all classes, and especially at Coruña the
-seat of Government; finally that the army torn by
-faction was become hateful to the people. In this
-state of affairs Castaños having, at the desire of
-lord Wellington, assumed the command, removed
-the seat of Government to St. Jago, leaving the
-troops in the Bierzo under the marquis of Portazgo.</p>
-
-<p>Prudent conduct and the personal influence of the
-new captain-general soothed the bitterness of faction,
-and stopped, or at least checked for the moment,
-many of the growing evils in Gallicia, and
-the regency at Cadiz assigned an army of sixty
-thousand men for that province. But the revenues
-were insufficient even to put the few troops already
-under arms in motion, and Castaños, although desirous
-to menace Astorga while Marmont was on
-the Agueda, could not, out of twenty-two thousand
-men, bring even one division into the field. Nevertheless,
-so strange a people are the Spaniards, that
-a second expedition against the colonies, having
-with it all the field-artillery just supplied by England,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_24"></a>[24]</span>
-would have sailed from Vigo but for the prompt
-interference of sir Howard Douglas.</p>
-
-<p>When Castaños saw the penury of his army, he
-as usual looked to England for succour, at the same
-time, however, both he and the Junta made unusual
-exertions to equip their troops, and the condition
-of the soldiers was generally ameliorated. But it
-was upon the efforts of the Partidas that the British
-agent chiefly relied. His system, with respect to
-those bodies, has been before described, and it is
-certain that under it, greater activity, more perfect
-combination, more useful and better timed exertions,
-had marked their conduct, and their efforts
-directed to the proper objects, were kept in some
-subordination to the operations of the allies. This
-was however so distasteful to the regular officers,
-and to the predominant faction, always fearful of
-the priestly influence over the allies, that sir Howard
-was offered the command of six thousand troops to
-detach him from the Guerilla system; and the Partidas
-of the northern provinces would now have
-been entirely suppressed, from mere jealousy, by
-the general government, if lord Wellington and sir
-H. Wellesley had not strenuously supported the
-views of Douglas which were based on the following
-state of affairs.</p>
-
-<p>The French line of communication extending
-from Salamanca to Irun, was never safe while the
-Gallician and Asturian forces, the English squadrons,
-and the Partidas in the Montaña, in Biscay,
-in the Rioja, and in the mountains of Burgos and
-Leon, menaced it from both sides. The occupation
-of the Asturias, the constant presence of a division
-in the Montaña, the employment of a corps to
-threaten Gallicia, and the great strength of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_25"></a>[25]</span>
-army of the north, were all necessary consequences
-of this weakness. But though the line of communication
-was thus laboriously maintained, the lines
-of correspondence, in this peculiar war of paramount
-importance, were, in despite of numerous fortified
-posts, very insecure, and Napoleon was always
-stimulating his generals to take advantage of each
-period of inactivity, on the part of the British army,
-to put down the partidas. He observed, that without
-English succours they could not remain in
-arms, that the secret of their strength was to be
-found on the coast, and that all the points, which
-favoured any intercourse with vessels, should be
-fortified. And at this time so anxious was he for the
-security of his correspondence, that he desired, if necessary,
-the whole army of the north should be employed
-merely to scour the lines of communication.</p>
-
-<p>In accordance with these views, Santona, the
-most important point on the coast, had been rendered
-a strong post in the summer of 1811, and<span class="sidenote9">See <a href="#i_b_581fp_6">Plan, No. 6.</a></span>
-then Castro, Portagalete at the mouth of the Bilbao
-river, Bermeo, Lesquito, and Guetaria, were by
-degrees fortified. This completed the line eastward
-from Santander to St. Sebastian, and all churches,
-convents, and strong houses, situated near the mouths
-of the creeks and rivers between those places were
-entrenched. The partidas being thus constantly intercepted,
-while attempting to reach the coast, were
-nearly effaced in the latter end of 1811, and a considerable
-part of the army of the north was, in consequence,
-rendered disposable for the aid of the army
-of Portugal. But when Bonet, because of the
-siege of Ciudad Rodrigo, evacuated the Asturias,
-the French troops in the Montaña were again exposed
-to the enterprizes of the seventh army, which<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_26"></a>[26]</span>
-had been immediately succoured by Douglas, and
-which, including guerillas, was said to be twenty-three
-thousand strong. Wherefore Napoleon had
-so early as March directed that the Asturias should
-be re-occupied, and one of Bonet’s brigades, attached
-to the army of the north, rejoined him in consequence;
-but the pass of Pajares being choked with
-snow, Bonet, who was then on the Orbijo, neglected
-this order until the approach of finer weather.</p>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote7">May.</span>
-In May, Marmont having returned from Portugal,
-the emperor’s order was reiterated, and the French
-troops on the Orbijo, being augmented to fifteen
-thousand drew the attention of the Gallicians to that
-quarter, while Bonet, passing the mountains of Leon,
-with eight thousand men, re-occupied Oviedo,
-Grado, and Gihon, and established small posts
-communicating through the town of Leon, with the
-army of Portugal. Thus a new military line was
-established which interrupted the Gallicians’ communications
-with the partidas, the chain of sea-port
-defences was continued to Gihon, a constant intercourse
-with France was maintained, and those convoys
-came safely by water, which otherwise would
-have had to travel by land escorted by many troops
-and in constant danger.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile Marmont, having distributed his division
-in various parts of Leon, was harassed by the
-partidas, especially Porlier’s, yet he proceeded diligently
-with the fortifying of Toro and Zamora, on
-the Douro, and converted three large convents at
-Salamanca into so many forts capable of sustaining
-a regular siege; the works of Astorga and Leon
-were likewise improved, and strong posts were established
-at Benavente, La Baneza, Castro-Contrigo,
-and intermediate points. The defensive lines of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_27"></a>[27]</span>
-Tormes and the Douro were thus strengthened
-against the British general, and as four thousand
-men sufficed to keep the Gallician forces of the
-Bierzo and Puebla Senabria in check, the vast and
-fertile plains of Leon, called the <em>Tierras de Campos</em>,
-were secured for the French, and their detachments
-chased the bands from the open country.</p>
-
-<p>Sir Howard Douglas observing the success of the
-enemy in cutting off the Partidas from the coast,
-and the advantage they derived from the water
-communication; considering also that, if lord Wellington
-should make any progress in the coming
-campaign, new lines of communication with the
-sea would be desirable, proposed, that a powerful
-squadron with a battalion of marines and a battery
-of artillery, should be secretly prepared for a littoral
-warfare on the Biscay coast. This suggestion
-was approved of, and sir Home Popham was sent
-from England, in May, with an armament, well
-provided with scaling-ladders, arms, clothing, and
-ammunition for the Partidas, and all means to effect
-sudden disembarkations. But the ministers were
-never able to see the war in its true point of view,
-they were always desponding, or elated, and sanguine,
-beyond what reason warranted in either case.
-Popham was ordered not only to infest the coast
-but, if possible, to seize some point, and hold it
-permanently as an entrance into Biscay, by which
-the French positions might be turned, if, as in 1808,
-they were forced to adopt the line of the Ebro!
-Now at this period three hundred thousand French
-soldiers were in the Peninsula, one hundred and
-twenty thousand were in the northern provinces,
-and, without reckoning the army of the centre
-which could also be turned in that direction, nearly<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_28"></a>[28]</span>
-fifty thousand were expressly appropriated to the
-protection of this very line of communication, on
-which a thousand marines were to be permanently
-established, in expectation of the enemy being driven
-over the Ebro by a campaign which was not yet
-commenced!</p>
-
-<p>While Marmont was in Beira, the activity of the
-seventh army, and of the Partidas, in the Montaña,
-was revived by the supplies which sir Howard
-Douglas, taking the opportunity of Bonet’s absence,
-had transmitted to them through the Asturian
-ports. The ferocity of the leaders was remarkable.
-Mina’s conduct was said to be very revolting;
-and on the 16th of April the curate Merino
-coming from the mountains of Espinosa, to the
-forests between Aranda de Duero, and Hontorica
-Valdearados, took several hundred prisoners, and
-hanged sixty of them, in retaliation for three members
-of the local junta, who had been put to death
-by the French; he executed the others also in the
-proportion of ten for each of his own soldiers who
-had been shot by the enemy. The ignorance and
-the excited passions of the Guerilla chiefs, may
-be pleaded in mitigation of their proceedings, but
-to the disgrace of England, these infamous executions
-by Merino were recorded with complacency,
-in the newspapers, and met with no public disapprobation.</p>
-
-<p>There are occasions, when retaliation, applied to
-men of rank, may stop the progress of barbarity, yet
-the necessity should be clearly shewn, and the exercise
-restricted to such narrow limits, that no reasonable
-ground should be laid for counter-retaliation.
-Here, sixty innocent persons were deliberately
-butchered to revenge the death of three, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_29"></a>[29]</span>
-no proof offered that even those three were slain contrary
-to the laws of war; and though it is not to be
-doubted that the French committed many atrocities,
-some in wantonness, some in revenge, such
-savage deeds as the curate’s are inexcusable. What
-would have been said if Washington had hanged
-twenty English gentlemen, of family, in return for
-the death of captain Handy; or if sir Henry Clinton
-had caused twenty American officers, to die,
-for the execution of André? Like atrocities are,
-however, the inevitable consequence of a Guerilla
-system not subordinate to the regular government
-of armies, and ultimately they recoil upon the
-helpless people of the country, who cannot fly
-from their enemies. When the French occupied a
-district, famine often ensued, because to avoid distant
-forages they collected large stores of provisions
-from a small extent of country, and thus
-the Guerilla system, while it harassed the French,
-without starving them, both harassed and starved
-the people. And many of the chiefs of bands,
-besides their robberies, when they dared not otherwise
-revenge affronts or private feuds, would slay
-some prisoners, or stragglers, so as to draw down
-the vengeance of the French on an obnoxious
-village, or district. This in return produced associations
-of the people, for self-defence in many
-places, by which the enemy profited.</p>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote7">March.</span>
-Soon after this exploit a large convoy having
-marched from Burgos towards France, Merino
-endeavoured to intercept it, and Mendizabel, who
-notwithstanding his defeat by Bonet, had again
-gathered twelve hundred cavalry, came from the
-Liebana, and occupied the heights above Burgos.
-The French immediately placed their baggage and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_30"></a>[30]</span>
-followers in the castle, and recalled the convoy,
-whereupon the Spaniards, dispersing in bands,
-destroyed the fortified posts of correspondence,
-at Sasamon, and Gamonal, and then returned to
-the Liebana. But Bonet had now re-occupied the
-Asturias, the remnant of the Spanish force, in that
-quarter, fled to Mendizabel, and the whole shifted
-as they could in the hills. Meanwhile Mina displayed
-great energy. In February he repulsed an
-attack near Lodosa, and having conveyed the prisoners
-taken at Huesca to the coast, returned to
-Aragon and maintained a distant blockade of Zaragoza
-itself. In March he advanced, with a detachment,
-to Pina, and captured one of Suchet’s convoys
-going to Mequinenza; but having retired, with his
-booty, to Robres, a village on the eastern slopes of
-the Sierra de Alcubierre, he was there betrayed to
-general Pannetier, who with a brigade of the
-army of the Ebro, came so suddenly upon him
-that he escaped death with great difficulty.</p>
-
-<p>He reappeared in the Rioja, and although hotly
-chased by troops from the army of the north,
-escaped without much loss, and, having five thousand
-men, secretly gained the defiles of Navas
-Tolosa, behind Vittoria, where on the 7th of April,
-he defeated with great loss a Polish regiment,
-which was escorting the enormous convoy that had
-escaped the curate and Mendizabel at Burgos.
-The booty consisted of treasure, Spanish prisoners,
-baggage, followers of the army, and officers retiring
-to France. All the Spanish prisoners, four
-hundred in number, were released and joined Mina,
-and, it is said, that one million of francs fell into
-his hands, besides the equipages, arms, stores, and
-a quantity of church plate.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_31"></a>[31]</span></p>
-
-<p>On the 28th he captured another convoy going
-from Valencia to France, but general Abbé, who
-had been recently made governor of Navarre, now
-directed combined movements from Pampeluna,
-Jacca, and Sangüesa, against him. And so vigorously
-did this general, who I have heard Mina
-declare to be the most formidable of all his opponents,
-urge on the operations, that after a series
-of actions, on the 25th, 26th, and 28th of May,
-the Spanish chief, in bad plight, and with the
-utmost difficulty, escaped by Los Arcos to Guardia,
-in the Rioja. Marshal Victor seized this opportunity
-to pass into France, with the remains of<span class="sidenote7">May.</span>
-the convoy shattered on the 7th, and all the
-bands in the north were discouraged. However,
-Wellington’s successes, and the confusion attending
-upon the departure of so many French troops for
-the Russian war, gave a powerful stimulus to the
-partizan chiefs in other directions. The Empecinado,
-ranging the mountains of Cuenca and
-Guadalaxara, pushed his parties close to Madrid;
-Duran entered Soria, and raised a contribution in
-the lower town; Villa Campa, Bassecour, and
-Montijo, coming from the mountains of Albarracin,
-occupied Molino and Orejuella, and invested Daroca;
-the Catalonian Gayan, taking post in the
-vicinity of Belchite, made excursions to the very<span class="sidenote9">See <a href="#i_b_581fp_6">Plan, No. 6.</a></span>
-gates of Zaragoza; the Frayle, haunting the mountains
-of Alcañiz and the Sierra de Gudar, interrupted
-Suchet’s lines of communication by Morella
-and Teruel, and along the right bank of the Ebro
-towards Tortoza. Finally, Gay and Miralles infested
-the Garriga on the left bank.</p>
-
-<p>It was to repress these bands that the army of
-the Ebro, containing twenty thousand men, of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_32"></a>[32]</span>
-whom more than sixteen thousand were under arms,
-was formed by drafts from Suchet’s army, and
-given to general Reille. That commander immediately
-repaired to Lerida, occupied Upper Aragon
-with his own division, placed Severoli’s division
-between Lerida and Zaragoza, and general Frere’s
-between Lerida, Barcelona, and Taragona; but his
-fourth division, under Palombini, marched direct
-from Valencia towards the districts of Soria and
-Calatayud, to form the link of communication
-between Suchet and Caffarelli. The latter now commanded
-the army of the north, but the imperial
-guards, with the exception of one division, had
-quitted Spain, and hence, including the government’s
-and the reserve of Monthion, this army
-was reduced to forty-eight thousand under arms.
-The reserve at Bayonne was therefore increased
-to five thousand men, and Palombini was destined
-finally to reinforce Caffarelli, and even to march, if
-required, to the aid of Marmont in Leon. However
-the events of the war soon caused Reille to
-repair to Navarre, and broke up the army of the
-Ebro, wherefore it will be clearer to trace the operations
-of these divisions successively and separately,
-and in the order of the provinces towards
-which they were at first directed.</p>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote7">February.</span>
-Palombini having left a brigade at the entrenched
-bridge of Teruel, relieved Daroca on the 23d of
-February, and then deceiving Villa Campa, Montijo,
-and Bassecour, who were waiting about the passes
-of Toralva to fall on his rear-guard, turned them
-by the Xiloca, and reached Calatayud. This
-effected, he fortified the convent of La Peña,
-which, as its name signifies, was a rocky eminence,
-commanding that city and forming a part of it.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_33"></a>[33]</span>
-But on the 4th of March, having placed his<span class="sidenote7">March.</span>
-baggage and artillery in this post, under a guard
-of three hundred men, he dispersed his troops
-to scour the country and to collect provisions,
-and the partidas, seeing this, recommenced operations.
-Villa Campa cut off two companies at
-Campillo on the 8th, and made a fruitless attempt
-to destroy the Italian colonel Pisa at Ateca. Five
-hundred men were sent against him, but he drew
-them towards the mountains of Albarracin, and
-destroyed them at Pozonhonda on the 28th;
-then marching another way, he drove the Italians
-from their posts of communication as far as the
-town of Albarracin on the road to Teruel, nor
-did he regain the mountains until Palombini
-came up on his rear and killed some of his men.
-The Italian general then changing his plan,
-concentrated his division on the plains of Hused,
-where he suffered some privations, but remained
-unmolested until the 14th of April, when he again
-marched to co-operate with Suchet in a combined
-attempt to destroy Villa Campa. The Spanish
-chief evaded both by passing over to the southern
-slopes of the Albarracin mountains, and before
-the Italians could return to Hused, Gayan, in
-concert with the alcalde of Calatayud, had exploded
-a plot against the convent of La Peña.</p>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote7">April.</span>
-Some of the Italian officers, including the commandant,
-having rashly accepted an invitation to a
-feast, were sitting at table, when Gayan appeared on
-a neighbouring height; the guests were immediately
-seized, and many armed citizens ran up to surprise
-the convent, and sixty soldiers were made prisoners,
-or killed in the tumult below; but the historian,
-Vacani, who had declined to attend the feast, made<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_34"></a>[34]</span>
-a vigorous defence, and on the 1st of May general
-St. Pol and colonel Schiazzetti, coming from Hused,
-and Daroca, raised the siege. Schiazzetti marched
-in pursuit, and as his advanced guard was surprised
-at Mochales by a deceit of the alcalde, he
-slew the latter, whereupon the Spaniards killed the
-officers taken at the feast of Calatayud.</p>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote7">May.</span>
-Gayan soon baffled his pursuers, and then moved
-by Medina Celi and Soria to Navarre, thinking to
-surprise a money convoy going to Burgos for the
-army of Portugal, but being followed on one side
-by a detachment from Hused, and met on the
-other by Caffarelli, he was driven again to the hills
-above Daroca. Here he renewed his operations
-in concert with Villa Campa and the Empecinado,
-who came up to Medina Celi, while Duran descended
-from the Moncayo hills, and this menacing
-union of bands induced Reille, in May, to detach
-general Paris, with a French regiment and a troop
-of hussars, to the aid of Palombini. Paris moved
-by Calatayud, while Palombini briskly interposing
-between Duran and Villa Campa, drove the one
-towards Albarracin and the other towards Soria;
-and in June, after various marches, the two French
-generals uniting, dislodged the Empecinado from
-Siguenza, chasing him so sharply that his band
-dispersed and fled to the Somosierra.</p>
-
-<p>During these operations, Mina was pressed by Abbé,
-but Duran entering Tudela by surprise, destroyed
-the artillery parc, and carried off a battering train of
-six guns. Palombini was only a few marches from
-Madrid, and the king, alarmed by lord Wellington’s
-preparations for opening the campaign, ordered him
-to join the army of the centre, but these orders
-were intercepted, and the Italian general retraced<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_35"></a>[35]</span>
-his steps, to pursue Duran. He soon recovered the<span class="sidenote7">June.</span>
-guns taken at Tudela, and drove the Spanish chief
-through the Rioja into the mountains beyond the
-sources of the Duero; then collecting boats, he
-would have passed the Ebro, for Caffarelli was
-on the Arga, with a division of the army of the
-north, and a brigade had been sent by Reille to
-the Aragon river with the view of destroying
-Mina. This chief, already defeated by Abbé, was
-in great danger, when a duplicate of the king’s orders
-having reached Palombini, he immediately recommenced
-his march for the capital, which saved Mina.
-Caffarelli returned to Vittoria, and the Italians
-reaching Madrid the 21st of July, became a part
-of the army of the centre, having marched one hundred
-and fifty miles in seven days without a halt.
-Returning now to the other divisions of the army
-of the Ebro, it is to be observed, that their movements
-being chiefly directed against the Catalans,
-belong to the relation of that warfare.</p>
-
-
-<h4>OPERATIONS IN ARAGON AND CATALONIA.</h4>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote">See Vol. IV Book XV.</span>
-After the battle of Altafulla, the fall of Peniscola,
-and the arrival of Reille’s first division on
-the Ebro, Decaen, who had succeeded Macdonald
-in Upper Catalonia, spread his troops along the
-coast, with a view to cut off the communication
-between the British navy and the interior, where
-the Catalan army still held certain positions.</p>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote7">February.</span>
-Lamarque, with a division of five thousand men,
-first seized and fortified Mataro, and then driving
-Milans from Blanes, occupied the intermediate
-space, while detachments from Barcelona fortified
-Moncada, Mongat, and Molino del Rey, thus
-securing the plain of Barcelona on every side.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_36"></a>[36]</span></p>
-
-<p>The line from Blanes to Cadagués, including
-Canets, St. Filieu, Palamos, and other ports, was
-strengthened, and placed under general Bearman.</p>
-
-<p>General Clement was posted in the vicinity of
-Gerona, to guard the interior French line of march
-from Hostalrich to Figueras.</p>
-
-<p>Tortoza, Mequinenza, and Taragona were garrisoned
-by detachments from Severoli’s division,
-which was quartered between Zaragoza and Lerida,
-and in communication with Bourke’s and Pannetier’s
-brigades of the first division of the army of reserve.</p>
-
-<p>General Frere’s division was on the communication
-between Aragon and Catalonia, and there was
-a division under general Quesnel, composed partly
-of national guards, in the Cerdaña. Finally there
-was a moveable reserve, of six or eight thousand
-men, with which Decaen himself marched from
-place to place as occasion required; but the supreme
-command of Valencia, Aragon, and Catalonia
-was with Suchet.</p>
-
-<p>The Catalans still possessed the strong holds of
-Cardona, Busa, Sceu d’Urgel, and the Medas
-islands, and they had ten thousand men in the
-field. Lacy was at Cardona with Sarzfield’s division,
-and some irregular forces; colonel Green was
-organizing an experimental corps at Montserrat,
-near which place Erolles was also quartered; Rovira
-continued about the mountains of Olot; Juan Claros,
-who occupied Arenis de Mar when the French were
-not there, was now about the mountains of Hostalrich;
-Milans, Manso, and the Brigand Gros, being
-driven from the coast line, kept the hills near
-Manreza; Gay and Miralles were on the Ebro.
-But the communication with the coast being cut off,
-all these chiefs were in want of provisions and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_37"></a>[37]</span>
-stores, and the French were forming new roads
-along the sea-line, beyond the reach of the English
-ship guns.</p>
-
-<p>Lacy thus debarred of all access to the coast,
-feeding his troops with difficulty, and having a
-great number of prisoners and deserters to maintain
-in Cardona, and Busa, because Coupigny
-refused to receive them in the Balearic isles, Lacy,
-I say, disputing with the Junta, and the generals,
-and abhorred by the people, in his spleen desired
-captain Codrington to cannonade all the sea-coast
-towns in the possession of the French, saying he
-would give the inhabitants timely notice; but he
-did not do so, and when Codrington reluctantly
-opened his broadsides upon Mataro, many of the
-people were slain. The Catalans complained
-loudly of this cruel, injudicious operation, and hating<span class="sidenote">Capt. Codrington’s papers, MSS.</span>
-Lacy, affected Erolles more than ever, and
-the former sent him with a few men to his
-native district of Talarn, ostensibly to raise recruits,
-and make a diversion in Aragon, but really
-to deprive him of his division and reduce his
-power.</p>
-
-<p>The distress in the Catalan army now became so
-great, that Sarzfield was about to force his way to
-the coast, and embark his division to commence
-a littoral warfare, when Erolles having quickly<span class="sidenote7">March.</span>
-raised and armed a new division entered Aragon,
-whereupon Sarzfield followed him. The baron
-having entered the valley of Venasque, advanced
-to Graus, menacing all the district between Fraga
-and Huesca; but those places were occupied by
-detachments from Bourke’s brigade of the army of
-the Ebro, and at this moment Severoli arrived from
-Valencia, whereupon the Spaniards <ins class="corr" id="tn-37" title="Transcriber’s Note—Original text: 'instead of faling'">
-instead of falling</ins><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_38"></a>[38]</span>
-back upon Venasque, retired up the valley of
-the Isabena, to some heights above Roda, a village
-on the confines of Aragon.</p>
-
-<p>Erolles had not more than a thousand regular
-infantry, three guns, and two hundred cavalry, for
-he had left five hundred in the valley of Venasque,
-and Bourke knowing this, and encouraged by the
-vicinity of Severoli, followed hastily from Benavarre,
-with about two thousand men of all arms,
-thinking Erolles would not stand before him.
-But the latter’s position besides being very steep
-and rough in front, was secured on both flanks by
-precipices, beyond which, on the hills, all the
-partidas of the vicinity were gathered; he expected
-aid also from Sarzfield, and was obliged to abide a
-battle or lose the detachment left in the valley of
-Venasque. Bourke keeping two battalions in reserve
-attacked with the third, but he met with a
-stubborn opposition, and after a long skirmish, in
-which he lost a hundred and fifty men, and Erolles
-a hundred, was beaten, and being wounded himself,
-retreated to Monza, in great confusion.
-This combat was very honorable to Erolles, but
-it was exposed to doubt and ridicule, at the time,
-by the extravagance of his public despatch; for he
-affirmed, that his soldiers finding their muskets too
-hot, had made use of stones, and in this mixed
-mode of action had destroyed a thousand of the
-enemy!</p>
-
-<p>Severoli now advanced, and Erolles being still unsupported
-by Sarzfield, retired to Talarn, whereupon
-the Italian general returned to Aragon. Meanwhile
-Lacy who had increased his forces, approached
-Cervera, while Sarzfield, accused by Erolles of
-having treacherously abandoned him, joined with<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_39"></a>[39]</span>
-Gay and Miralles, occupying the hills about Taragona,
-and straitening that place for provisions.
-Milans and Manso also uniting, captured a convoy<span class="sidenote7">April.</span>
-at Arenis de Mar, and the English squadron intercepted
-several vessels going to Barcelona.</p>
-
-<p>Decaen observing this fresh commotion came
-down from Gerona with his reserve. He relieved
-Taragona on the 28th of April, and then marched
-with three thousand men upon Lerida, but on the
-way, hearing that Sarzfield was at Fuentes Rubino,
-near Villa Franca, he took the road of Braffin and
-Santa Coloma instead of Momblanch, and suddenly
-turning to his right defeated the Spanish general,
-and then continued his march by Cervera towards
-Lerida. Lacy in great alarm immediately abandoned<span class="sidenote7">May.</span>
-Lower Catalonia and concentrated Manso’s,
-Milans’, Green’s, and Sarzfield’s divisions, in the
-mountains of Olot, and as they were reduced in
-numbers he reinforced them with select Somatenes,
-called the Companies of Preferencia. After a time
-however seeing that Decaen remained near Lerida,
-he marched rapidly against the convent of Mataro,
-with five thousand men and with good hope, for the
-garrison consisted of only five hundred, the works
-were not strong, and captain Codrington, who had
-anchored off Mataro at Lacy’s desire, lent some<span class="sidenote">Capt. Codrington’s papers, MSS.</span>
-ship guns; but his sailors were forced to drag them
-to the point of attack, because Lacy and Green had,
-in breach of their promise, neglected to provide
-means of transport.</p>
-
-<p>The wall of the convent gave way in a few hours,
-but on the 5th, Lacy, hearing that Decaen was
-coming to succour the place, broke up the siege
-and buried the English guns without having any
-communication with captain Codrington. The<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_40"></a>[40]</span>
-French found these guns and carried them into the
-convent, yet Lacy, to cover his misconduct, said in
-the official gazette, that they were safely re-embarked.</p>
-
-<p>After this disreputable transaction, Manso, who
-alone had behaved well, retired with Milans to
-Vich, Lacy went to Cardona, the French sent a
-large convoy into Barcelona, and the men of
-Erolles’ ancient division were, to his great discontent,
-turned over to Sarzfield, who took post
-near Molina del Rey, and remained there until the<span class="sidenote7">June.</span>
-5th of June, when a detachment from Barcelona
-drove him to the Campo de Taragona. On the
-14th of the same month, Milans was defeated near
-Vich by a detachment from the Ampurdan, and
-being chased for several days suffered considerably.
-Lamarque followed Sarzfield into the Campo and
-defeated him again on the 24th, near Villa Nueva
-de Sitjes, and this time the Spanish general was
-wounded, yet made his way by Santa Coloma de
-Querault and Calaf to Cardona where he rejoined
-Lacy. Lamarque then joined Deacen in the plains
-of Lerida, where all the French moveable forces
-were now assembled, with a view to gather the
-harvest; a vital object to both parties, but it was
-attained by the French.</p>
-
-<p>This with Lacy’s flight from Mattaro, the several
-defeats of Milans, and Sarzfield, and the discontent
-of Erolles, disturbed the whole principality;
-and the general disquietude was augmented
-by the increase of all the frauds and
-oppressions, which both the civil and military
-authorities under Lacy, practised with impunity.
-Every where there was a disinclination to serve in
-the regular army. The Somatene argued, that<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_41"></a>[41]</span>
-while he should be an ill-used soldier, under a bad
-general, his family would either become the victims
-of French revenge or starve, because the pay of
-the regular troops was too scanty, were it even
-fairly issued, for his own subsistence; whereas,
-remaining at home, and keeping his arms, he could
-nourish his family by his labour, defend it from
-straggling plunderers, and at the same time always
-be ready to join the troops on great occasions. In
-some districts the people, seeing that the army<span class="sidenote">Codrington’s papers, MSS.</span>
-could not protect them, refused to supply the partidas
-with food, unless upon contract not to molest
-the French in their vicinity. The spirit of resistance
-would have entirely failed, if lord Wellington’s
-successes at Ciudad and Badajos, and
-the rumour that an English army was coming to
-Catalonia, had not sustained the hopes of the
-people.</p>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote7">July.</span>
-Meanwhile the partidas in the north, being aided
-by Popham’s expedition, obliged Reille to remove
-to Navarre, that Caffarelli might turn his whole
-attention to the side of Biscay, and the Montaña.
-Decaen then received charge of the Lower as well
-as of the Upper Catalonia, which weakened his
-position; and at the same time some confusion was
-produced, by the arrival of French prefects and
-councillors of state, to organize a civil administration.
-This measure, ostensibly to restrain military
-licentiousness, had probably the ultimate object of
-preparing Catalonia for an union with France,
-because the Catalans who have peculiar customs
-and a dialect of their own, scarcely call themselves
-Spaniards. Although these events embarrassed
-the French army, the progress of the invasion was
-visible in the altered feelings, of the people whose<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_42"></a>[42]</span>
-enthusiasm was stifled by the folly and corruption,
-with which their leaders aided the active hostility
-of the French.</p>
-
-<p>The troops were reduced in number, distressed for
-provisions, and the soldiers deserted to the enemy,
-a thing till then unheard of in Catalonia, nay, the
-junta having come down to the coast were like to
-have been delivered up to the French, as a peace
-offering. The latter passed, even singly, from
-one part to the other, and the people of the sea-coast<span class="sidenote">Codrington’s papers, MSS.</span>
-towns readily trafficked with the garrison of
-Barcelona, when neither money nor threats could
-prevail on them to supply the British squadron.
-Claros and Milans were charged with conniving at
-this traffic, and of exacting money for the landing
-of corn, when their own people and soldiers were
-starving. But to such a degree was patriotism
-overlaid by the love of gain, that the colonial produce,
-seized in Barcelona, and other parts, was
-sold, by the enemy, to French merchants, and the
-latter undertook both to carry it off, and pay with
-provisions on the spot, which they successfully
-executed by means of Spanish vessels, corruptly
-licensed for the occasion by Catalan authorities.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the people generally accused the
-junta of extreme indolence, and Lacy, of treachery;
-and tyranny because of his arbitrary conduct in
-all things, but especially that after proclaiming a
-general rising, he had disarmed the Somatenes,
-and suppressed the independent bands. He had
-quarreled with the British naval officers, was the
-avowed enemy of Erolles, the secret calumniator
-of Sarzfield, and withal a man of no courage or
-enterprize in the field. Nor was the story of his
-previous life, calculated to check the bad opinion<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_43"></a>[43]</span>
-generally entertained of him. It was said that,
-being originally a Spanish officer, he was banished,
-for an intrigue, to the Canaries, from whence he
-deserted to the French, and again deserted to his
-own countrymen, when the war of independence
-broke out.</p>
-
-<p>Under this man, the frauds, which characterize
-the civil departments of all armies in the field,
-became destructive, and the extent of the mischief
-may be gathered from a single fact. Notwithstanding
-the enormous supplies granted by England,
-the Catalans paid nearly three millions sterling,
-for the expense of the war, besides contributions
-in kind, and yet their soldiers were
-always distressed for clothing, food, arms, and
-ammunition.</p>
-
-<p>This amount of specie might excite doubt, were
-it not that here, as in Portugal, the quantity of
-coin accumulated from the expenditure of the
-armies and navies was immense. But gold is not
-always the synonyme of power in war, or of happiness
-in peace. Nothing could be more wretched
-than Catalonia. Individually the people were exposed
-to all the licentiousness of war, collectively
-to the robberies, and revenge, of both friends and
-enemies. When they attempted to supply the<span class="sidenote">Codrington’s papers, MSS.</span>
-British vessels, the French menaced them with
-death; when they yielded to such threats, the
-English ships menaced them with bombardment,
-and plunder. All the roads were infested with
-brigands, and in the hills large bands of people,
-whose families and property had been destroyed,
-watched for straggling Frenchmen and small
-escorts, not to make war but to live on the booty;
-when this resource failed they plundered their own<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_44"></a>[44]</span>
-countrymen. While the land was thus harassed,
-the sea swarmed with privateers of all nations,
-differing from pirates only in name; and that no
-link in the chain of infamy, might be wanting,<span class="sidenote">Codrington’s papers, MSS.</span>
-the merchants of Gibraltar, forced their smuggling
-trade at the ports, with a shameless disregard for
-the rights of the Spanish government. Catalonia
-seemed like some huge carcass, on which all manner
-of ravenous beasts, all obscene birds, and all
-reptiles had gathered to feed.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_45"></a>[45]</span><br /></p>
-
-<h3 id="CHAPTER_BXVII_III">CHAPTER III.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<h4>OPERATIONS IN VALENCIA AND MURCIA.</h4>
-
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="sidenote7">1812. April.</span>
-Suchet having recovered his health was again at
-the head of the troops, but the king’s military authority
-was so irksome to him, that he despatched an
-officer to represent the inconvenience of it to the
-Emperor, previous to that monarch’s departure for
-Russia. The answer in some degree restored his
-independence; he was desired to hold his troops
-concentrated, and move them in the manner most
-conducive to the interests of his own command.
-Hence, when Joseph, designing to act against lord
-Wellington in Estremadura, demanded the aid of
-one division, Suchet replied that he must then
-evacuate Valencia; and as the natural line of retreat
-for the French armies would, during the
-contemplated operations, be by the eastern provinces,
-it would be better to abandon Andalusia
-first! an answer calculated to convince Joseph that
-his authority in the field was still but a name.</p>
-
-<p>Suchet, from a natural disposition towards order,
-and because his revenue from the fishery of the
-Albufera depended upon the tranquillity of the
-province, took infinite pains to confirm his power;
-and his mode of proceeding, at once prudent and
-firm, was wonderfully successful. Valencia, although
-one of the smallest provinces in Spain, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_46"></a>[46]</span>
-not naturally fertile, was, from the industry of the
-inhabitants, one of the richest. Combining manufactures
-with agriculture, it possessed great resources,
-but they had been injured by the war,
-without having been applied to its exigencies; and
-the people expected that a bloody vengeance would
-be taken for Calvo’s murder of the French residents at
-the commencement of the contest. Their fears were
-soon allayed: discipline was strictly preserved, and
-Suchet, having suppressed the taxes imposed by
-the Spanish government, substituted others, which,
-being more equal, were less onerous. To protect
-the people from oppression in the collection, he
-published in every corner his demands, authorising
-resistance to contributions which were not named
-in his list and demanded by the proper officers;
-and he employed the native authorities, as he had
-done in Aragon. Thus, all impolitic restrictions
-upon the industry and traffic of the country being
-removed, the people found the government of the
-invaders less oppressive than their own.</p>
-
-<p>Napoleon, in expectation of Suchet’s conquest, had
-however imposed a war contribution, as a punishment
-for the death of the French residents, so heavy,
-that his lieutenant imagined Valencia would be
-quite unable to raise the sum; yet the emperor,
-who had calculated the Valencians’ means by a
-comparison with those of Aragon, would not rescind
-the order. And so exact was his judgement, that
-Suchet, by accepting part payment, in kind, and
-giving a discount for prompt liquidation, satisfied
-this impost in one year, without much difficulty, and
-the current expenses of the army were provided for
-besides; yet neither did the people suffer as in other
-provinces, nor was their industry so cramped, nor<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_47"></a>[47]</span>
-their property so injured, as under their own
-government. Valencia therefore remained tranquil,
-and, by contrast, the mischief of negligence and
-disorder was made manifest.</p>
-
-<p>The advantages derived from the conquest were
-even extended to the province of Aragon, and to
-the court of Joseph, for the contributions were
-diminished in the former, and large sums were
-remitted to the latter to meet Napoleon’s grant of
-one-fifth of the war contributions in favour of the
-intrusive government. This prosperous state of<span class="sidenote7">May.</span>
-French affairs in Valencia was established also in the
-face of an enemy daily increasing in strength. For
-the regent, Abispal, had given Blake’s command
-to his own brother Joseph O’Donel, who collecting
-the remains of the armies of Murcia and Valencia,
-had raised new levies, and during Suchet’s illness
-formed a fresh army of twelve or fourteen thousand
-men in the neighbourhood of Alicant. In the
-Balearic Isles also Roche and Whittingham’s divisions
-were declared ready to take the field, and
-fifteen hundred British troops, commanded by
-general Ross, arrived at Carthagena. To avoid
-the fever there, these last remained on shipboard,
-and were thus more menacing to the enemy than
-on shore, because they seemed to be only awaiting
-the arrival of a new army, which the French knew
-to be coming from Sicily to the eastern coast of
-Spain. And as the descent of this army was the
-commencement of a remarkable episode in the
-history of the Peninsular War, it is proper to give
-an exact account of its origin and progress.</p>
-
-<p>Sir John Stuart had been succeeded, in Sicily,
-by lord William Bentinck, a man of resolution,
-capacity, and spirit, just in his actions, and abhorring<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_48"></a>[48]</span>
-oppression, but of a sanguine, impetuous
-disposition. Being resolved to ameliorate the condition
-of the Sicilian people, after surmounting
-many difficulties, he removed the queen from
-power, vested the direction of affairs in the crown
-prince, obtained from the barons a renunciation of
-their feudal privileges, and caused a representative
-constitution to be proclaimed. Believing then that
-the court was submissive because it was silent;
-that the barons would adhere to his system, because
-it gave them the useful power of legislation, in lieu
-of feudal privileges alloyed by ruinous expenses
-and the degradation of courtiers; because it gave
-them the dignity of independence at the cost only
-of maintaining the rights of the people and restoring
-the honour of their country:—believing
-thus, he judged that the large British force hitherto
-kept in Sicily, as much to overawe the court as
-to oppose the enemy, might be dispensed with;
-and that the expected improvement of the Sicilian
-army, and the attachment of the people to the new
-political system, would permit ten thousand men
-to be employed in aid of lord Wellington, or in
-Italy. In January, therefore, he wrote of these
-projects to the English ministers, and sent his
-brother to lord Wellington to consult upon the best
-mode of acting.</p>
-
-<p>Such an opportune offer to create a diversion on
-the left flank of the French armies was eagerly
-accepted by Wellington, who immediately sent
-engineers, artificers, and a battering train complete,
-to aid the expected expedition. But lord William
-Bentinck was soon made sensible, that in large communities
-working constitutions are the offspring, and
-not the generators, of national feelings and habits.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_49"></a>[49]</span>
-They cannot be built like cities in the desert, nor
-cast, as breakwaters, into the sea of public corruption,
-but gradually, and as the insect rocks come up
-from the depths of the ocean, they must arise, if
-they are to bear the storms of human passions.</p>
-
-<p>The Sicilian court opposed lord William with
-falsehood and intrigue, the constitution was secretly
-thwarted by the barons, the Neapolitan
-army, a body composed of foreigners of all nations,
-was diligently augmented, with a view to overawe
-both the English and the people; the revenues and
-the subsidy were alike misapplied, and the native
-Sicilian army, despised and neglected, was incapable
-of service. Finally, instead of going to
-Spain himself, with ten thousand good troops, lord
-William could only send a subordinate general
-with six thousand—British, Germans, Calabrese,
-Swiss, and Sicilians; the British and Germans
-only, being either morally or militarily well organised.
-To these, however, Roche’s and Whittingham’s
-levies, represented to be twelve or fourteen
-thousand strong, were added, the Spanish
-government having placed them at the disposition
-of general Maitland, the commander of the expedition.
-Thus, in May, twenty thousand men were
-supposed ready for a descent on Catalonia, to
-which quarter lord Wellington recommended they
-should proceed.</p>
-
-<p>But now other objects were presented to lord
-William Bentinck’s sanguine mind. The Austrian
-government, while treating with Napoleon, was
-secretly encouraging insurrections in Italy, Croatia,
-Dalmatia, the Venetian states, the Tyrol, and
-Switzerland. English, as well as Austrian agents,
-were active to organise a vast conspiracy against<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_50"></a>[50]</span>
-the French emperor, and there was a desire, especially
-on the part of England, to create a kingdom
-for one of the Austrian archdukes. Murat
-was discontented with France, the Montenegrins
-were in arms on the Adriatic coast, and the prospect
-of a descent upon Italy in unison with the wishes
-of the people, appeared so promising to lord
-William Bentinck, that supposing himself to have
-a discretionary power, he stopped the expedition
-to Catalonia, reasoning thus.</p>
-
-<p>“In Spain, only six thousand middling troops can
-be employed on a secondary operation, and for a limited
-period, whereas twelve thousand British soldiers,
-and six thousand men composing the Neapolitan
-army of Sicily, can land in Italy, a grand theatre,
-where success will most efficaciously assist Spain.
-The obnoxious Neapolitan force being thus removed,
-the native Sicilian army can be organised, and the
-new constitution established with more certainty.”
-The time, also, he thought critical for Italy, not
-so for Spain, which would suffer but a temporary
-deprivation, seeing that failure in Italy would not
-preclude after aid to Spain.</p>
-
-<p>Impressed with these notions, which, it must
-be confessed, were both plausible and grand, he
-permitted the expedition, already embarked, to sail
-for Palma in Sardinia, and Mahon in Minorca, yet
-merely as a blind, because, from those places, he
-could easily direct the troops against Italy, and
-meanwhile they menaced the French in Spain.
-But the conception of vast and daring enterprises,
-even the execution of them up to a certain point,
-is not very uncommon, they fail only by a little!
-that little is, however, the essence of genius, the
-phial of wit, which, held to Orlando’s nostril,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_51"></a>[51]</span>
-changed him from a frantic giant to a perfect
-commander.</p>
-
-<p>It was in the consideration of such nice points
-of military policy that lord Wellington’s solid
-judgement was always advantageously displayed.
-Neither the greatness of this project nor the apparent
-facility of execution weighed with him. He
-thought the recovery of Italy by the power of the
-British arms would be a glorious, and might be
-a feasible exploit, but it was only in prospect,
-Spain was the better field, the war in the Peninsula
-existed; years had been devoted to the establishment
-of a solid base there, and experience
-had proved that the chance of victory was not
-imaginary. England could not support two armies.
-The principle of concentration of power on an important
-point was as applicable here as on a field
-of battle, and although Italy might be the more
-vital point, it would be advisable to continue the
-war already established in Spain: nay it would
-be better to give up Spain, and direct the whole
-power of England against Italy, rather than undertake
-double operations, on such an extensive
-scale, at a moment when the means necessary to
-sustain one were so scanty.</p>
-
-<p>The ministers, apparently convinced by this
-reasoning, forbad lord William Bentinck to proceed,
-and they expressed their discontent at his conduct.
-Nevertheless their former instructions had unquestionably
-conferred on him a discretionary power
-to act in Italy, and so completely had he been
-misled by their previous despatches, that besides
-delaying the expedition to Spain, he had placed
-twelve hundred men under admiral Fremantle, to
-assist the Montenegrins. And he was actually<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_52"></a>[52]</span>
-entangled in a negotiation with the Russian admiral,
-Greig, relative to the march of a Russian army;
-a march planned, as it would appear, without the
-knowledge of the Russian court, and which, from
-the wildness of its conception and the mischief it
-would probably have effected, deserves notice.</p>
-
-<p>While the Russian war was still uncertain, admiral
-Tchtchagoff, who commanded sixty thousand
-men on the Danube, proposed to march with them,
-through Bosnia and the ancient Epirus, to the
-mouths of the Cattaro, and, there embarking, to
-commence the impending contest with France in
-Italy. He was, however, without resources, and
-expecting to arrive in a starving and miserable
-condition on the Adriatic, demanded, through
-admiral Greig, then commanding a squadron in
-the Mediterranean, that lord William Bentinck
-should be ready to supply him with fresh arms,
-ammunition, and provisions, and to aid him with
-an auxiliary force. That nobleman saw at a glance
-the absurdity of this scheme, but he was falsely
-informed that Tchtchagoff, trusting to his good will,
-had already commenced the march; and thus he
-had only to choose between aiding an ally, whose
-force, if it arrived at all, and was supplied by
-England, would help his own project, or permit
-it, to avoid perishing, to ravage Italy, and so change
-the people of that country from secret friends into
-deadly enemies. It would be foreign to this history
-to consider what effect the absence of Tchtchagoff’s
-army during the Russian campaign would have
-had upon Napoleon’s operations, but this was the
-very force whose march to the Beresina afterwards
-obliged the emperor to abandon Smolensko, and
-continue the retreat to Warsaw.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_53"></a>[53]</span></p>
-
-<p>It was in the midst of these affairs, that the
-English minister’s imperative orders to look only to
-the coast of Spain arrived. The negociation with
-the Russians was immediately stopped, the project
-of landing in Italy was relinquished, and the expedition,
-already sent to the Adriatic, was recalled.
-Meanwhile the descent on Catalonia had been delayed,
-and as a knowledge of its destination, had
-reached Suchet through the French minister of war,
-and through the rumours rife amongst the Spaniards,
-all his preparations to meet it were matured. Nor
-was this the only mischief produced by the
-English minister’s want of clear views and decided
-system of policy. Lord William Bentinck had
-been empowered to raise money on bills for his
-own exigences, and being desirous to form a military
-chest for his project in Italy, he had invaded
-lord Wellington’s money markets. With infinite
-trouble and difficulty that general had just opened
-a source of supply at the rate of five shillings and
-four-pence, to five shillings and eight-pence the
-dollar, when lord William Bentinck’s agents offering
-six shillings and eight-pence, swept four millions
-from the markets, and thus, as shall be hereafter
-shewn, seriously embarrassed lord Wellington’s
-operations in the field.</p>
-
-<p>This unhappy commencement of the Sicilian expedition
-led to other errors, and its arrival on the
-coast of Spain, did not take place, until after the
-campaign in Castile had commenced; but as its proceedings
-connected the warfare of Valencia immediately
-with that of Catalonia, and the whole with
-lord Wellington’s operations, they cannot be properly
-treated of in this place. It is, however, worthy of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_54"></a>[54]</span>
-observation, how an illiberal and factious policy,
-inevitably recoils upon its authors.</p>
-
-<p>In 1807 sir John Moore, with that sagacity and
-manliness which distinguished his career through
-life, had informed the ministers, that no hope of a
-successful attack on the French in Italy, could be
-entertained while the British army upheld the tyrannical
-system of the dissolute and treacherous
-Neapolitan court in Sicily. And as no change for
-the better could be expected while the queen was
-allowed to govern, he proposed, that the British
-cabinet should either relinquish Sicily, or, assuming
-the entire controul of the island, seize the queen
-and send her to her native Austria. This he judged
-to be the first step necessary to render the large
-British army in Sicily available for the field,
-because the Sicilian people could then be justly
-governed, and thus only could the organization of
-an effective native force attached to England, and
-fitted to offer freedom to Italy be effected.</p>
-
-<p>He spoke not of constitutions but of justice to the
-people, and hence his proposal was rejected as a
-matter of Jacobinism. Mr. Drummond, the English
-plenipotentiary, even betrayed it to the queen,
-a woman not without magnanimity, yet so capable
-of bloody deeds, that, in 1810, she secretly proposed
-to Napoleon the perpetration of a second
-Sicilian vespers upon the English. The emperor,
-detesting such guilt, only answered by throwing
-her agent into prison, yet the traces of the conspiracy
-were detected by the British authorities in
-1811; and in 1812 lord William Bentinck was
-forced to seize the government, in the manner
-before recommended by Moore, and did finally<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_55"></a>[55]</span>
-expel the queen by force. But because these measures
-were not resorted to in time, he was now,
-with an army of from twenty-five to thirty thousand
-men, sixteen thousand of which were British,
-only able to detach a mixed force of six thousand
-to aid lord Wellington. And at the same time the
-oppression of Ireland required that sixty thousand
-fine soldiers should remain idle at home, while
-France, with a Russian war on hand, was able to
-over-match the allies in Spain. Bad government is
-a scourge with a double thong!</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_56"></a>[56]</span><br /></p>
-
-<h3 id="CHAPTER_BXVII_IV">CHAPTER IV.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<h4>OPERATIONS IN ANDALUSIA AND ESTREMADURA.</h4>
-
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="sidenote7">1812. April.</span>
-A short time previous to Hill’s enterprize against
-Almaraz, Soult, after driving Ballesteros from the
-Ronda, and restoring the communication with
-Grenada, sent three thousand men into the Niebla;
-partly to interrupt the march of some Spaniards
-coming from Cadiz to garrison Badajos, partly to
-menace Penne Villemur and Morillo, who still
-lingered on the Odiel against the wishes of Wellington.
-The French arguments were more effectual.
-Those generals immediately filed along the
-frontier of Portugal towards Estremadura, they
-were hastily followed by the Spanish troops sent
-from Cadiz, and the militia of the Algarves were
-called out, to defend the Portuguese frontier.
-Soult then remained on the defensive, for he expected
-the advance of lord Wellington, which the
-approach of so many troops, the seeming reluctance
-of the Spaniards to quit the Niebla, the
-landing of fresh men from Cadiz at Ayamonte, and
-the false rumours purposely set afloat by the British
-general seemed to render certain. Nor did the
-surprize of Almaraz, which he thought to be
-aimed at the army of the south and not against the
-army of Portugal, alter his views.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_57"></a>[57]</span></p>
-
-<p>The great advantage which lord Wellington had
-gained by the fall of Ciudad Rodrigo and Badajos
-was now very clearly illustrated; for, as he could
-at will advance either against the north or the south
-or the centre, the French generals in each quarter
-expected him, and they were anxious that the
-others should regulate their movements accordingly.
-None would help the other, and the secret plans
-of all were paralyzed until it was seen on which
-side the thunderbolt would fall. This was of most
-consequence in the south, for Soult’s plans were
-vast, dangerous, and ripe for execution.</p>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote7">May.</span>
-After the fall of Badajos he judged it unwise to
-persevere in pushing a head of troops, into Estremadura,
-while his rear and flanks were exposed to
-attacks from Cadiz, Gibraltar, and Murcia; but it
-was essential, he thought, to crush Ballesteros
-before his forces should be increased, and this was
-not to be effected, while that general could flee to
-Gibraltar on the one side, and Tarifa on the other.
-Whereupon Soult had resolved first to reduce
-Tarifa, with a view to the ruin of Ballesteros, and
-then to lay siege to Carthagena and Alicant, and
-he only awaited the development of Wellington’s
-menacing demonstrations against Andalusia to commence
-his own operations. Great and difficult his
-plan was, yet profoundly calculated to effect his
-main object, which was to establish his base so
-firmly in Andalusia that, maugre the forces in Cadiz
-and the Isla, he might safely enter upon and follow
-up regular offensive operations in Estremadura and
-against Portugal, instead of the partial uncertain
-expeditions hitherto adopted. In fine, he designed
-to make lord Wellington feel that there was a
-powerful army within a few marches of Lisbon.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_58"></a>[58]</span></p>
-
-<p>Thinking that Carthagena and Tarifa, and even
-Alicant must fall, with the aid of Suchet, which he
-expected, or that the siege of the first would bring
-down Hill’s corps, and all the disposable Spanish
-troops to save it, he desired that the army of
-Portugal, and the army of the centre, should
-operate so as to keep lord Wellington employed
-north of the Tagus. He could then by himself
-carry on the sieges he contemplated, and yet leave
-a force under Drouet on the edge of Estremadura,
-strong enough to oblige Hill to operate in the
-direction of Carthagena instead of Seville. And
-if this should happen as he expected, he proposed
-suddenly to concentrate all his finely organized and
-experienced troops, force on a general battle, and,
-if victorious, the preparations being made before
-hand, to follow up the blow by a rapid march
-upon Portugal, and so enter Lisbon; or by bringing
-Wellington in all haste to the defence of that
-capital, confine the war, while Napoleon was in
-Russia, to a corner of the Peninsula.</p>
-
-<p>This great project was strictly in the spirit of
-the emperor’s instructions. For that consummate
-commander had desired his lieutenants to make
-lord Wellington feel that his enemies were not
-passively defensive. He had urged them to press
-the allies close on each flank, and he had endeavoured
-to make Marmont understand that, although
-there was no object to be attained by entering the
-north-east of Portugal, and fighting a general
-battle on ground favourable to lord Wellington,
-it was contrary to all military principles, to withdraw
-several days’ march from the allies’ outposts,
-and by such a timid defensive system, to give the
-English general the power of choosing when<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_59"></a>[59]</span>
-and where to strike. Now the loss of Badajos,
-and the difficulty of maintaining a defensive war
-against the increasing forces of the allies in the
-south of Andalusia, rendered it extremely onerous
-for Soult to press Wellington’s flank in Estremadura;
-and it was therefore a profound modification
-of the emperor’s views, to urge the king and Marmont
-to active operation in the north, while he
-besieged Tarifa and Carthagena, keeping his army
-in mass ready for a sudden stroke in the field,
-if fortune brought the occasion, and if otherwise,
-sure of fixing a solid base for future operations
-against Portugal.</p>
-
-<p>The duke of Dalmatia wished to have commenced
-his operations by the siege of Tarifa in May, when
-Wellington’s return to Beira had relieved him from
-the fear of an immediate invasion of Andalusia, but
-the failure of the harvest in 1811 and the continual
-movements during the winter, had so reduced his
-magazines, both of provisions and ammunition, that
-he could not undertake the operation until the new
-harvest was ripe, and fresh convoys had replenished
-his exhausted stores. His soldiers were already on
-short allowance, and famine raged amongst the
-people of the country. Meanwhile his agents in
-Morocco had so firmly re-established the French
-interests there, that the emperor refused all supplies
-to the British, and even fitted out a squadron to
-insure obedience to his orders. To counteract this
-mischief, the Gibraltar merchant, Viali, who had
-been employed in the early part of the war by sir
-Hew Dalrymple, was sent by sir Henry Wellesley
-with a mission to the court of Fez, which failed,
-and it was said from the intrigues of the notorious
-Charmilly who was then at Tangier, and being connected<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_60"></a>[60]</span>
-by marriage with the English consul there,
-unsuspected: indeed from a mean hatred to sir
-John Moore, there were not wanting persons in
-power who endeavoured still to uphold this man.</p>
-
-<p>So far every thing promised well for Soult’s plans,
-and he earnestly demanded that all his detachments,
-and sufficient reinforcements, together with artillery,
-officers, money, and convoys of ammunition
-should be sent to him for the siege of Carthagena.
-Pending their arrival, to divert the attention of the
-allies, he repaired to Port St. Mary where the
-French had, from the circumstances of the war
-in Estremadura, been a long time inactive. He
-brought down with him a number of the Villantroy
-mortars, and having collected about thirty gun-boats
-in the Trocadero canal, commenced a serious
-bombardment of Cadiz on the 16th of May. While
-thus engaged, a sudden landing from English
-vessels was effected on the Grenada coast, Almeria
-was abandoned by the French, the people rose along
-the sea-line, and general Frere, advancing from
-Murcia, entrenched himself in the position of Venta
-de Bahul, on the eastern frontier of Grenada. He
-was indeed surprised and beaten with loss, and the
-insurrection on the coast was soon quelled, but
-these things delayed the march of the reinforcements
-intended for Drouet; meanwhile Hill surprised
-Almaraz, and Ballesteros, whose forces had subsisted
-during the winter and spring, upon the stores of
-Gibraltar, advanced against Conroux’s division then
-in observation at Bornos on the Guadalete.</p>
-
-<p>This Spanish general caused equal anxiety to
-Soult and to Wellington, because his proceedings
-involved one of those intricate knots, by which the
-important parts of both their operations were fastened.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_61"></a>[61]</span>
-Lord Wellington judged, that, while a large
-and increasing corps which could be aided by a
-disembarkation of five or six thousand men from
-the Isla de Leon, menaced the blockade of Cadiz
-and the communications between Seville and Grenada,
-Soult must keep a considerable body in observation,
-and consequently, Hill would be a match
-for the French in Estremadura. But the efficacy
-of this diversion, depended upon avoiding battles,
-seeing that if Ballesteros’ army was crushed, the
-French, reinforced in Estremadura, could drive Hill
-over the Tagus, which would inevitably bring Wellington
-himself to his succour. Soult was for the
-same reason as earnest to bring the Spanish general
-to action, as Wellington was to prevent a battle, and
-Ballesteros, a man of infinite arrogance, despised
-both. Having obtained money and supplies from
-Gibraltar to replace the expenditure of his former
-excursion against Seville, he marched with eight
-thousand men against Conroux, and that Frenchman,
-aware of his intention, induced him, by an appearance
-of fear, to attack an entrenched camp in a
-disorderly manner. On the 1st of June the battle
-took place, and Conroux issuing forth unexpectedly
-killed or took fifteen hundred Spaniards, and
-drove the rest to the hills, from whence they retreated
-to San Roque. How this victory was felt
-in Estremadura shall now be shewn.</p>
-
-<p>The loss of Almaraz had put all the French
-corps in movement. A division of Marmont’s army
-crossed the Gredos mountains, to replace Foy in
-the valley of the Tagus, and the latter general,
-passing that river by the bridge of Arzobispo moved
-through the mountains of Guadalupe, and succoured
-the garrison of Mirabete on the 26th of May. When<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_62"></a>[62]</span>
-he retired the partidas of the Guadalupe renewed
-the blockade, and Hill, now strongly reinforced by<span class="sidenote7">June.</span>
-lord Wellington, advanced to Zafra, whereupon
-Drouet, unable to meet him, fell back to Azagua.
-Hill, wishing to protect the gathering of the harvest,
-then detached Penne Villemur’s horsemen,
-from Llerena on the right flank, and general Slade,
-with the third dragoon guards and the royals,
-from Llera on the left flank; General Lallemande,
-having a like object, came forward with two regiments
-of French dragoons, on the side of Valencia
-de las Torres, whereupon Hill, hoping to cut him off,
-placed Slade’s dragoons in a wood with directions
-to await further orders. Slade hearing that
-Lallemand was so near, and no wise superior to
-himself in numbers, forgot his orders, advanced
-and drove the French cavalry with loss beyond the
-defile of Maquilla, a distance of eight miles; and
-through the pass also the British rashly galloped in
-pursuit, the general riding in the foremost ranks,
-and the supports joining tumultuously in the charge.</p>
-
-<p>But in the plain beyond stood Lallemand with
-his reserves well in hand. He broke the disorderly
-English mass thus rushing on him, killed or wounded
-forty-eight men, pursued the rest for six miles,
-recovered all his own prisoners, and took more than
-a hundred, including two officers, from his adversary;
-and the like bitter results will generally attend
-what is called “<em>dashing</em>” in war, which in other
-words means courage without prudence. Two days
-after this event the Austrian Strenowitz, whose exploits
-have been before noticed, marched with fifty
-men of the same regiments, to fetch off some of the
-English prisoners who had been left, by the French,
-under a slender guard in the village of Maquilla.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_63"></a>[63]</span>
-Eighty of the enemy met him on the march, yet by
-fine management he overthrew him, and losing only
-one man himself, killed many French, executed his
-mission, and returned with an officer and twenty
-other prisoners.</p>
-
-<p>Such was the state of affairs, when the defeat of
-Ballesteros at Bornoz, enabled Soult to reinforce
-Drouet, with Barois’s division of infantry and two
-divisions of cavalry; they marched across the
-Morena, but for reasons, to be hereafter mentioned,
-by the royal road of St. Ollala, a line of direction
-which obliged Drouet to make a flank march by his
-left towards Llerena to form his junction with them.
-It was effected on the 18th, and the allies then fell
-back gradually towards Albuera, where being
-joined by four Portuguese regiments from Badajos,
-and by the fifth Spanish army, Hill formed a line
-of battle furnishing twenty thousand infantry, two
-thousand five hundred cavalry, and twenty-four
-guns.</p>
-
-<p>Drouet had only twenty-one thousand men, of
-which three thousand were cavalry, with eighteen
-pieces of artillery; the allies were therefore the
-most numerous, but the French army was better
-composed, and battle seemed inevitable, for both
-generals had discretionary orders. However the
-French cavalry did not advance further than Almendralejo,
-and Hill who had shewn himself so daring
-at Aroyo Molino and Almaraz, now, with an uncommon
-mastery of ambition, refrained from an
-action which promised him unbounded fame, simply
-because he was uncertain whether the state of lord
-Wellington’s operations in Castile, then in full progress,
-would warrant one. His recent exploits had
-been so splendid that a great battle gained at this<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_64"></a>[64]</span>
-time would, with the assistance of envious malice,
-have placed his reputation on a level with Wellington’s.
-Yet he was habituated to command, and his
-adversary’s talents were moderate, his forbearance
-must therefore be taken as a proof of the purest
-patriotism.</p>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote7">July.</span>
-Early in July the French cavalry entered Almendralejo
-and Santa Marta, cut off two hundred
-Spanish horsemen, and surprised a small British
-cavalry post; Hill who had then received fresh
-instructions, and was eager to fight, quickly drove
-them with loss from both places. Drouet immediately
-concentrated his forces and retired to La
-Granja, and was followed by the allies, but the
-account of the transactions in Andalusia and Estremadura
-must be here closed, because those which
-followed belong to the general combinations. And
-as the causes of these last movements, and their
-effects upon the general campaign, are of an intricate
-nature, to avoid confusion the explanation of
-them is reserved for another place: meanwhile I
-will endeavour to describe that political chaos,
-amidst which Wellington’s army appeared as the
-ark amongst the meeting clouds and rising waters
-of the deluge.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_65"></a>[65]</span><br /></p>
-
-<h3 id="CHAPTER_BXVII_V">CHAPTER V.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<h4>POLITICAL SITUATION OF FRANCE.</h4>
-
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="sidenote7">1812.</span>
-The unmatched power of Napoleon’s genius was
-now being displayed in a wonderful manner. His
-interest, his inclination, and his expectation were
-alike opposed to a war with Russia, but Alexander
-and himself, each hoping that a menacing display
-of strength would reduce the other to negotiation,
-advanced, step by step, until blows could no longer
-be avoided. Napoleon, a man capable of sincere
-friendship, had relied too much and too long on
-the existence of a like feeling in the Russian emperor;
-and misled, perhaps, by the sentiment of
-his own energy, did not sufficiently allow for the
-daring intrigues of a court, where secret combinations
-of the nobles formed the real governing
-power.</p>
-
-<p>That the cabinet of Petersburgh should be, more
-than ordinarily subject to such combinations at
-this period, was the necessary consequence of the
-greatness of the interests involved in the treaties
-of Tilsit and Erfurth; the continental system
-had so deeply injured the fortunes of the Russian
-noblemen, that their sovereign’s authority in support
-of it was as nothing. During the Austrian war
-of 1809, when Alexander was yet warm from
-Napoleon’s society at Erfurth, the aid given to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_66"></a>[66]</span>
-France was a mockery, and a desire to join a northern
-confederation against Napoleon was even then
-scarcely concealed at St. Petersburgh, where the
-French ambassador was coldly treated. The royal
-family of Prussia were, it is true, at the same time,
-mortified by a reception which inclined them to side
-with France, against the wishes of their people and
-their ministers, but in Russia, Romanzow alone
-was averse to choose that moment to declare against
-Napoleon. And this was so certain that Austria,
-anticipating the explosion, was only undecided
-whether the king of Prussia should be punished
-or the people rewarded, whether she herself should
-befriend or plunder the Prussian monarchy.</p>
-
-<p>At that time also, the Russian naval commander,
-in the Adriatic, being ordered to sail to Ancona
-for the purpose of convoying Marmont’s troops
-from Dalmatia to Italy, refused, on the plea
-that his ships were not sea-worthy; yet secretly
-he informed the governor of Trieste that they
-would be in excellent order to assist an Austrian
-corps against the French! Admiral Tchtchagoff’s
-strange project of marching upon Italy from
-Bucharest has been already noticed, and it is
-remarkable that this expedition was to be conducted
-upon popular principles, the interests of the Sicilian
-court being to be made subservient to the wishes
-of the people. At a later period, in 1812, admiral
-Grieg proposed to place an auxiliary Russian army
-under either Wellington or lord William Bentinck,
-and it was accepted; but when the Russian ambassador
-in London was applied to upon the subject,
-he unequivocally declared that the emperor knew
-nothing of the matter!</p>
-
-<p>With a court so situated, angry negotiations<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_67"></a>[67]</span>
-once commenced rendered war inevitable, and the
-more especially that the Russian cabinet, which had
-long determined on hostilities though undecided
-as to the time of drawing the sword, was well
-aware of the secret designs and proceedings of
-Austria in Italy, and of Murat’s discontent. The
-Hollanders were known to desire independence,
-and the deep hatred which the people of Prussia
-bore to the French was a matter of notoriety.
-Bernadotte, who very early had resolved to cast
-down the ladder by which he rose, was the secret
-adviser of these practices against Napoleon’s power
-in Italy, and he was also in communication with
-the Spaniards. Thus Napoleon, having a war in
-Spain which required three hundred thousand
-men to keep in a balanced state, was forced, by
-resistless circumstances, into another and more
-formidable contest in the distant north, when the
-whole of Europe was prepared to rise upon his
-lines of communication, and when his extensive
-sea-frontier was exposed to the all-powerful navy
-of Great Britain.</p>
-
-<p>A conqueror’s march to Moscow, amidst such
-dangers, was a design more vast, more hardy, more
-astounding than ever before entered the imagination
-of man; yet it was achieved, and solely by the force
-of his genius. For having organised two hundred
-thousand French soldiers, as a pretorian guard, he
-stepped resolutely into the heart of Germany, and
-monarchs and nations bent submissively before him;
-secret hostility ceased, and, with the exception of
-Bernadotte, the crowned and anointed plotters quitted
-their work to follow his chariot-wheels. Dresden
-saw the ancient story of the King of Kings renewed
-in his person; and the two hundred thousand French<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_68"></a>[68]</span>
-soldiers arrived on the Niemen in company with
-two hundred thousand allies. On that river four
-hundred thousand troops, I have seen the imperial
-returns, were assembled by this wonderful man, all
-disciplined warriors, and, notwithstanding their
-different, national feelings, all proud of the unmatched
-genius of their leader. Yet, even in that
-hour of dizzy elevation, Napoleon, deeply sensible
-of the inherent weakness of a throne unhallowed
-by time, described by one emphatic phrase the delicacy
-of his political situation. During the passage
-of the Niemen, twelve thousand cuirassiers, whose
-burnished armour flashed in the sun while their
-cries of salutation pealed in unison with the
-thunder of the horses’ feet, were passing like a
-foaming torrent towards the river, when Napoleon
-turned and thus addressed Gouvion St. Cyr, whose
-republican principles were well known,</p>
-
-<p>“No monarch ever had such an army?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, sire.”</p>
-
-<p>“The French are a fine people; they deserve
-more liberty, and they shall have it, but, St. Cyr,
-no liberty of the press! That army, mighty as it
-is, could not resist the songs of Paris!”</p>
-
-<p>Such, then, was the nature of Napoleon’s power
-that success alone could sustain it; success which
-depended as much upon others’ exertions as upon
-his own stupendous genius, for Russia was far
-distant from Spain. It is said, I know not upon
-what authority, that he at one moment, had resolved
-to concentrate all the French troops in the Peninsula
-behind the Ebro during this expedition to Russia,
-but the capture of Blake’s force at Valencia changed
-his views. Of this design there are no traces in
-the movements of his armies, nor in the captured<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_69"></a>[69]</span>
-papers of the king, and there are some indications
-of a contrary design; for at that period several
-foreign agents were detected examining the lines
-of Torres Vedras, and on a Frenchman, who killed
-himself when arrested in the Brazils, were found
-papers proving a mission for the same object.
-Neither is it easy to discern the advantage of
-thus crowding three hundred thousand men on a
-narrow slip of ground, where they must have been
-fed from France, already overburthened with the
-expenses of the Russian war; and this when they
-were numerous enough, if rightly handled, to have
-maintained themselves on the resources of Spain,
-and near the Portuguese frontier for a year at least.</p>
-
-<p>To have given up all the Peninsula, west of the
-Ebro, would have been productive of no benefit,
-save what might have accrued from the jealousy
-which the Spaniards already displayed towards their
-allies; but if that jealousy, as was probable, had
-forced the British general away, he could have
-carried his army to Italy, or have formed in Germany
-the nucleus of a great northern confederation
-on the emperor’s rear. Portugal was therefore, in
-truth, the point of all Europe in which the British
-strength was least dangerous to Napoleon during
-the invasion of Russia; moreover, an immediate
-war with that empire was not a certain event
-previous to the capture of Valencia. Napoleon
-was undoubtedly anxious to avoid it while the
-Spanish contest continued; yet, with a far-reaching
-European policy, in which his English adversaries
-were deficient, he foresaw and desired to check
-the growing strength of that fearful and wicked
-power which now menaces the civilised world.</p>
-
-<p>The proposal for peace which he made to England<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_70"></a>[70]</span>
-before his departure for the Niemen is another
-circumstance where his object seems to have been
-misrepresented. It was called a device to reconcile
-the French to the Russian war; but they were
-as eager for that war as he could wish them to be,
-and it is more probable that it sprung from a secret
-misgiving, a prophetic sentiment of the consequent
-power of Russia, lifted, as she then would be
-towards universal tyranny, by the very arm which
-he had raised to restrain her. The ostensible
-ground of his quarrel with the emperor Alexander
-was the continental system; yet, in this proposal
-for peace, he offered to acknowledge the house of
-Braganza in Portugal, the house of Bourbon in
-Sicily, and to withdraw his army from the Peninsula,
-if England would join him in guaranteeing the crown
-of Spain to Joseph, together with a constitution to
-be arranged by a national Cortes. This was a
-virtual renunciation of the continental system for the
-sake of peace with England; and a proposal which
-obviated the charge of aiming at universal dominion,
-seeing that Austria, Spain, Portugal, and England
-would have retained their full strength, and the
-limits of his empire would have been fixed. The
-offer was made also at a time when the emperor
-was certainly more powerful than he had ever yet
-been, when Portugal was, by the avowal of Wellington
-himself, far from secure, and Spain quite
-exhausted. At peace with England, Napoleon
-could easily have restored the Polish nation, and
-Russia would have been repressed. Now, Poland
-has fallen, and Russia stalks in the plenitude of
-her barbarous tyranny.</p>
-
-<p><em>Political state of England.</em>—The new administration,
-despised by the country, was not the less<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_71"></a>[71]</span>
-powerful in parliament; its domestic proceedings
-were therefore characterised by all the corruption
-and tyranny of Mr. Pitt’s system, without his redeeming
-genius. The press was persecuted with
-malignant ferocity, and the government sought to
-corrupt all that it could not trample upon. Repeated
-successes had rendered the particular contest
-in the Peninsula popular with the ardent spirits of
-the nation, and war-prices passed for glory with
-the merchants, land-owners, and tradesmen; but
-as the price of food augmented faster than the
-price of labour, the poorer people suffered, they
-rejoiced, indeed, at their country’s triumphs because
-the sound of victory is always pleasing to warlike
-ears, but they were discontented. Meanwhile all
-thinking men, who were not biassed by factions,
-or dazzled by military splendour, perceived in the
-enormous expenses incurred to repress the democratic
-principle, and in the consequent transfer of
-property, the sure foundation of future reaction and
-revolution. The distresses of the working classes
-had already produced partial insurrections, and the
-nation at large was beginning to perceive that
-the governing powers, whether representative or
-executive, were rapacious usurpers of the people’s
-rights; a perception quickened by malignant prosecutions,
-by the insolent extravagance with which
-the public money was lavished on the family of
-Mr. Perceval, and by the general profusion at
-home, while lord Wellesley declared that the war
-languished for want of sustenance abroad.</p>
-
-<p>Napoleon’s continental system, although in the
-nature of a sumptuary law, which the desires of
-men will never suffer to exist long in vigour, was
-yet so efficient, that the British government was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_72"></a>[72]</span>
-forced to encourage, and protect, illicit trading,
-to the great detriment of mercantile morality.
-The island of Heligoland was the chief point of
-deposit for this commerce, and either by trading
-energy, or by the connivance of continental governments,
-the emperor’s system was continually baffled;
-nevertheless its effects will not quickly pass away;
-it pressed sorely upon the manufacturers at the
-time, and by giving rise to rival establishments on
-the continent, has awakened in Germany a commercial
-spirit by no means favourable to England’s
-manufacturing superiority.</p>
-
-<p>But ultimate consequences were never considered
-by the British ministers; the immediate object was
-to procure money, and by virtually making bank-notes
-a legal tender, they secured unlimited means
-at home, through the medium of loans and taxes,
-which the corruption of the parliament, insured to
-them, and which, by a reaction, insured the corruption
-of the parliament. This resource failed abroad.
-They could, and did, send to all the allies of England,
-enormous supplies in kind, because to do so,
-was, in the way of contracts, an essential part of the
-system of corruption at home; a system aptly described,
-as bribing one-half of the nation with the
-money of the other half, in order to misgovern
-both. Specie was however only to be had in comparatively
-small quantities, and at a premium
-so exorbitant, that even the most reckless politician
-trembled for the ultimate consequences.</p>
-
-<p>The foreign policy of the government was very
-simple, namely, to bribe all powers <ins class="corr" id="tn-72" title="Transcriber’s Note—Original text: 'to war down'">
-to wear down</ins> France. Hence to Russia every thing, save specie,
-was granted; and hence also, amicable relations
-with Sweden were immediately re-established, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_73"></a>[73]</span>
-the more readily that this power had lent herself
-to the violation of the continental system by permitting
-the entry of British goods at Stralsund;
-but wherever wisdom, or skill, was required,
-the English minister’s resources failed altogether.
-With respect to Sicily, Spain, and Portugal, this
-truth was notorious; and to preserve the political
-support of the trading interests at home, a degrading
-and deceitful policy, quite opposed to the
-spirit of lord Wellington’s counsels, was followed
-in regard to the revolted Spanish colonies.</p>
-
-<p>The short-sighted injustice of the system was however
-most glaring with regard to the United States
-of America. Mutual complaints, the dregs of the
-war of independence, had long characterised the intercourse
-between the British and American governments,
-and these discontents were turned into extreme
-hatred by the progress of the war with France.
-The British government in 1806 proclaimed, contrary
-to the law of nations, a blockade of the
-French coast, which could not be enforced. Napoleon,
-in return, issued the celebrated decrees of
-Berlin and Milan, which produced the no less celebrated
-orders in council. The commerce of all
-neutrals was thus extinguished by the arrogance
-of the belligerents; but the latter very soon finding
-that their mutual convenience required some relaxation
-of mutual violence, granted licenses to
-each other’s ships, and by this scandalous evasion
-of their own policy, caused the whole of the evil
-to fall upon the neutral, who was yet called the
-friend of both parties.</p>
-
-<p>The Americans, unwilling to go to war with two
-such powerful states, were yet resolved not to submit<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_74"></a>[74]</span>
-to the tyranny of either; but the injustice of
-the English government was the most direct, and
-extended in its operations, and it was rendered
-infinitely more bitter by the violence used towards
-the seamen of the United States: not less than six
-thousand sailors, it was said, were taken from merchant
-vessels on the high seas, and forced to serve
-in the British men-of-war. Wherefore, after first<span class="sidenote">18th June, 1812.</span>
-passing retaliatory, or rather warning acts, called the
-non-intercourse, non-importation, and embargo acts,
-the Americans finally declared war, at the moment
-when the British government, alarmed at the consequences
-of their own injustice, had just rescinded
-the orders in council.</p>
-
-<p>The immediate effects of these proceedings on
-the contest in the Peninsula, shall be noticed in
-another place, but the ultimate effects on England’s
-prosperity have not yet been unfolded.
-The struggle prematurely told the secret of
-American strength, and it has drawn the attention
-of the world to a people, who, notwithstanding
-the curse of black slavery which clings to them,
-adding the most horrible ferocity to the peculiar
-baseness of their mercantile spirit, and rendering
-their republican vanity ridiculous, do in their
-general government uphold civil institutions, which
-have startled the crazy despotisms of Europe.</p>
-
-<p><em>Political state of Spain.</em>—Bad government is more
-hurtful than direct war; the ravages of the last are
-soon repaired, and the public mind is often purified,
-and advanced, by the trial of adversity, but the
-evils, springing from the former, seem interminable.
-In the Isla de Leon the unseemly currents of folly,
-although less raging than before, continued to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_75"></a>[75]</span>
-break open new channels and yet abandoned none
-of the old. The intrigues of the princess Carlotta
-were unremitted, and though the danger of provoking
-the populace of Cadiz, restrained and
-frightened her advocates in the Cortez, she opposed
-the English diplomacy, with reiterated, and
-not quite unfounded accusations, that the revolt
-of the colonies was being perfidiously fostered
-by Great Britain:—a charge well calculated to
-lower the influence of England, especially in
-regard to the scheme of mediation, which being<span class="sidenote7">April.</span>
-revived in April by lord Castlereagh, was received
-by the Spaniards with outward coldness,
-and a secret resolution to reject it altogether; nor
-were they in any want of reasons to justify their
-proceedings.</p>
-
-<p>This mediation had been commenced by lord
-Wellesley, when the quarrel between the mother
-country and the colonies was yet capable of
-adjustment; it was now renewed when it could
-not succeed. English commissioners were appointed
-to carry it into execution, the duke of Infantado
-was to join them on the part of Spain, and
-at first Mr. Stuart was to have formed part of the
-commission, Mr. Sydenham being to succeed him
-at Lisbon, but finally he remained in Portugal and
-Mr. Sydenham was attached to the commission,
-whose composition he thus described.</p>
-
-<p>“I do not understand a word of the Spanish
-language, I am unacquainted with the Spanish
-character, I know very little of Old Spain, and
-I am quite ignorant of the state of the colonies,
-yet I am part of a commission composed of men
-of different professions, views, habits, feelings, and
-opinions. The mediation proposed is at least a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_76"></a>[76]</span>
-year too late, it has been forced upon the government
-of Old Spain, I have no confidence in the
-ministers who employ me, and I am fully persuaded
-that they have not the slightest confidence
-in me.”</p>
-
-<p>The first essential object was to have Bardaxi’s
-secret article, which required England to join Old
-Spain if the mediation failed, withdrawn; but as
-this could not be done without the consent of the
-Cortez, the publicity thus given would have ruined
-the credit of the mediation with the colonists.
-Nor would the distrust of the latter have been unfounded,
-for though lord Wellesley had offered the
-guarantee of Great Britain to any arrangement
-made under her mediation, his successors would
-not do so!</p>
-
-<p>“They empower us,” said Mr. Sydenham, “to
-negociate and sign a treaty but will not guarantee
-the execution of it! My opinion is, that the
-formal signature of a treaty by plenipotentiaries is
-in itself a solemn guarantee, if there is good faith
-and fair dealing in the transaction; and I believe
-that this opinion will be confirmed by the authority
-of every writer on the law of nations. But this is
-certainly not the doctrine of our present ministers,
-they make a broad distinction between the ratification
-of a treaty and the intention of seeing it
-duly observed.”</p>
-
-<p>The failure of such a scheme was inevitable.
-The Spaniards wanted the commissioners to go first
-to the Caraccas, where the revolt being full blown,
-nothing could be effected; the British government
-insisted that they should go to Mexico, where the
-dispute had not yet been pushed to extremities.
-After much useless diplomacy, which continued<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_77"></a>[77]</span>
-until the end of the year, the negociation, as Mr.
-Sydenham had predicted, proved abortive.</p>
-
-<p>In March the new constitution of Spain had been
-solemnly adopted, and a decree settling the succession
-of the crown was promulgated. The infant
-Francisco de Paula, the queen of Etruria, and
-their respective descendants were excluded from
-the succession, which was to fall first to the princess
-Carlotta if the infant don Carlos failed of
-heirs, then to the hereditary princess of the Two
-Sicilies, and so on, the empress of France and her
-descendants being especially excluded. This exhibition
-of popular power, under the pretext of
-baffling Napoleon’s schemes, struck at the principle
-of legitimacy. And when the extraordinary
-Cortez decided that the ordinary Cortez, which
-ought to assemble every year, should not be convoked
-until October 1813, and thus secured to
-itself a tenure of power for two years instead of
-one, the discontent increased both at Cadiz and in
-the provinces, and a close connection was kept up
-between the malcontents and the Portuguese government,
-which was then the strong hold of arbitrary
-power in the Peninsula.</p>
-
-<p>The local junta of Estremadura adopted Carlotta’s
-claims, in their whole extent, and communicated on
-the subject, at first secretly with the Portuguese
-regency, and then more openly with Mr. Stuart.
-Their scheme was to remove all the acting provincial
-authorities, and to replace them with persons
-acknowledging Carlotta’s sovereignty; they even
-declared that they would abide by the new constitution,
-only so far as it acknowledged what they
-called legitimate power, in other words, the princess
-was to be sole regent. Nevertheless this party<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_78"></a>[78]</span>
-was not influenced by Carlotta’s intrigues, for they
-would not join her agents in any outcry against the
-British; they acted upon the simple principle of
-opposing the encroachments of democracy, and they
-desired to know how England would view their
-proceedings. The other provinces received the
-new constitution coldly, and the Biscayens angrily
-rejected it as opposed to their ancient privileges.
-In this state of public feeling, the abolition of the
-Inquisition, a design now openly agitated, offered a
-point around which all the clergy, and all that the
-clergy could influence, gathered against the Cortes,
-which was also weakened by its own factions; yet
-the republicans gained strength, and they were encouraged
-by the new constitution established in
-Sicily, which also alarmed their opponents, and
-the fear and distrust extended to the government
-of Portugal.</p>
-
-<p>However amidst all the varying subjects of interest
-the insane project of reducing the colonies
-by force, remained a favourite with all parties; nor
-was it in relation to the colonies only, that these
-men, who were demanding aid from other nations,
-in the names of freedom, justice, and humanity,
-proved themselves to be devoid of those attributes
-themselves. “The humane object of the abolition
-of the slave-trade has been frustrated,” said lord
-Castlereagh, “because not only Spanish subjects
-but Spanish public officers and governors, in various
-parts of the Spanish colonies, are instrumental to,
-and accomplices in the crimes of the contraband
-slave-traders of Great Britain and America, furnishing
-them with flags, papers, and solemn documents
-to entitle them to the privileges of Spanish cruizers,
-and to represent their property as Spanish.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_79"></a>[79]</span></p>
-
-<p>With respect to the war in Spain itself, all manner
-of mischief was abroad. The regular cavalry
-had been entirely destroyed, and when, with the
-secret permission of their own government, some
-distinguished Austrian officers, proffered their services
-to the regency, to restore that arm, they were
-repelled. Nearly all the field-artillery had been
-lost in action, the arsenals at Cadiz were quite exhausted,
-and most of the heavy guns on the works
-of the Isla were rendered unserviceable by constant
-and useless firing; the stores of shot were diminished
-in an alarming manner, no sums were appropriated
-to the support of the founderies, and when
-the British artillery officers made formal representations
-of this dangerous state of affairs, it only produced
-a demand of money from England to put the
-founderies into activity. To crown the whole,
-Abadia, recalled from Gallicia, at the express desire
-of sir Henry Wellesley because of his bad conduct,
-was now made minister of war.</p>
-
-<p>In Ceuta, notwithstanding the presence of a small
-British force, the Spanish garrison, the galley-slaves,
-and the prisoners of war who were allowed to range
-at large, joined in a plan for delivering that place
-to the Moors; not from a treacherous disposition in
-the two first, but to save themselves from starving,
-a catastrophe which was only staved off by frequent
-assistance from the magazines of Gibraltar. Ceuta
-might have been easily acquired by England
-at this period, in exchange for the debt due by
-Spain, and general Campbell urged it to lord Liverpool,
-but he rejected the proposal, fearing to awaken
-popular jealousy. The notion, however, came originally
-from the people themselves, and that jealousy
-which lord Liverpool feared, was already in full<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_80"></a>[80]</span>
-activity, being only another name for the democratic
-spirit rising in opposition to the aristocratic principle
-upon which England afforded her assistance to
-the Peninsula.</p>
-
-<p>The foreign policy of Spain was not less absurd
-than their home policy, but it was necessarily contracted.
-Castro, the envoy at Lisbon, who was
-agreeable both to the Portuguese and British authorities,
-was removed, and Bardaxi, who was opposed
-to both, substituted. This Bardaxi had been just
-before sent on a special mission to Stockholm, to
-arrange a treaty with that court, and he was referred
-to Russia for his answer, so completely subservient
-was Bernadotte to the czar. One point however
-was characteristically discussed by the Swedish
-prince and the Spanish envoy. Bardaxi demanded
-assistance in troops, and Bernadotte in reply asked
-for a subsidy, which was promised without hesitation,
-but security for the payment being desired,
-the negociation instantly dropped! A treaty of
-alliance was however concluded between Spain and
-Russia, in July, and while Bardaxi was thus pretending
-to subsidize Sweden, the unceasing solicitations
-of his own government had extorted from
-England a grant of one million of money, together
-with arms and clothing for one hundred thousand
-men, in return for which five thousand Spaniards
-were to be enlisted for the British ranks.</p>
-
-<p>To raise Spanish corps had long been a favourite
-project with many English officers, general Graham
-had deigned to offer his services, and great advantages
-were anticipated by those who still believed
-in Spanish heroism. Joseph was even disquieted,
-for the Catalans had formally demanded
-such assistance, and a like feeling was now expressed<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_81"></a>[81]</span>
-in other places, yet when it came to the
-proof only two or three hundred starving Spaniards
-of the poorest condition enlisted; they were recruited
-principally by the light division, were taught
-with care and placed with English comrades, yet the
-experiment failed, they did not make good soldiers.
-Meanwhile the regency demanded and obtained
-from England, arms, clothing, and equipments for
-ten thousand cavalry, though they had scarce five
-hundred regular horsemen to arm at the time, and had
-just rejected the aid of the Austrian officers in the organization
-of new corps. Thus the supplies granted
-by Great Britain continued to be embezzled or
-wasted; and with the exception of a trifling amelioration
-in the state of Carlos d’Españas’ corps effected
-by the direct interposition of Wellington, no public
-benefit seemed likely at first to accrue from the
-subsidy, for every branch of administration in Spain,
-whether civil or military, foreign or domestic, was
-cankered to the core. The public mischief was become
-portentous.</p>
-
-<p>Ferdinand living in tranquillity at Valençay was
-so averse to encounter any dangers for the recovery
-of his throne, that he rejected all offers of assistance
-to escape. Kolli and the brothers Sagas had been
-alike disregarded. The councellor Sobral, who
-while in secret correspondence with the allies, had
-so long lived at Victor’s head-quarters, and had
-travelled with that marshal to France, now proposed
-to carry the prince off, and he also was baffled as
-his predecessors had been. Ferdinand would listen
-to no proposal save through Escoiquez, who lived
-at some distance, and Sobral who judged this man
-one not to be trusted, immediately made his way to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_82"></a>[82]</span>
-Lisbon, fearful of being betrayed by the prince to
-whose succour he had come.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile Joseph was advancing towards the
-political conquest of the country, and spoke with
-ostentation, of assembling a cortes in his own interests;
-but this was to cover a secret intercourse with
-the cortes in the Isla de Leon where his partizans
-called “<i lang="es" xml:lang="es">Afrancesados</i>” were increasing: for many
-of the democratic party, seeing that the gulf which
-separated them from the clergy, and from England,
-could never be closed, and that the bad system of
-government, deprived them of the people’s support,
-were willing to treat with the intrusive monarch
-as one whose principles were more in unison with
-their own. Joseph secretly offered to adopt the
-new constitution, with some modifications, and as
-many of the cortes were inclined to accept his terms,
-the British policy was on the eve of suffering a
-signal defeat, when Wellington’s iron arm again
-fixed the destiny of the Peninsula.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_83"></a>[83]</span><br /></p>
-
-<h3 id="CHAPTER_BXVII_VI">CHAPTER VI.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<h4>POLITICAL STATE OF PORTUGAL.</h4>
-
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="sidenote7">1812.</span>
-The internal condition of this country was not improved.
-The government, composed of civilians,
-was unable, as well as unwilling to stimulate the
-branches of administration connected with military
-affairs, and the complaints of the army, reaching
-the Brazils, drew reprimands from the prince;
-but instead of meeting the evil with suitable laws,
-he only increased Beresford’s authority, which was
-already sufficiently great. Thus while the foreigner’s
-power augmented, the native authorities were
-degraded in the eyes of the people; and as their
-influence to do good dwindled, their ill-will increased,
-and their power of mischief was not lessened,
-because they still formed the intermediate link
-between the military commander and the subordinate
-authorities. Hence what with the passive patriotism
-of the people, the abuses of the government,
-and the double dealing at the Brazils, the extraordinary
-energy of lord Wellington and Mr. Stuart
-was counterbalanced.</p>
-
-<p>The latter had foreseen that the regent’s concessions
-at the time of Borel’s arrest would produce
-but a momentary effect in Portugal, and all
-the intrigues at Rio Janeiro revived when lord
-Wellesley disgusted with Perceval’s incapacity,
-had quitted the British cabinet. But previous<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_84"></a>[84]</span>
-to that event, Mr. Sydenham, whose mission to
-Portugal has been noticed, had so strongly represented
-the evil effects of lord Strangford’s conduct,
-that lord Wellesley would have immediately dismissed
-him, if Mr. Sydenham, who was offered the
-situation, had not refused to profit from the effects
-of his own report. It was then judged proper to
-send lord Louvaine with the rank of ambassador,
-and he was to touch at Lisbon and consult with
-lord Wellington whether to press the prince’s return
-to Portugal, or insist upon a change in the regency;
-meanwhile a confidential agent, despatched direct
-to Rio Janeiro, was to keep lord Strangford in the
-strict line of his instructions until the ambassador
-arrived.</p>
-
-<p>But lord Louvaine was on bad terms with his
-uncle, the duke of Northumberland, a zealous friend
-to lord Strangford; and for a government, conducted
-on the principle of corruption, the discontent of a
-nobleman, possessing powerful parliamentary influence,
-was necessarily of more consequence than the
-success of the war in the Peninsula. Ere a fit
-successor to lord Strangford could be found, the
-prince regent of Portugal acceded to lord Wellington’s
-demands, and it was then judged expedient to
-await the effect of this change of policy. Meanwhile
-the dissensions, which led to the change of
-ministry arose, and occupied the attention of the
-English cabinet to the exclusion of all other affairs.
-Thus lord Strangford’s career was for some time
-uncontrolled, yet after several severe rebukes from
-lord Wellington and Mr. Stuart, it was at last
-arrested, by a conviction that his tenure of place
-depended upon their will.</p>
-
-<p>However, prior to this salutary check on the Brazilian<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_85"></a>[85]</span>
-intrigues, lord Wellesley had so far intimidated
-the prince regent of Portugal, that besides assenting
-to the reforms, he despatched Mr. DeLemos from Rio
-Janeiro, furnished with authority for Beresford to
-act despotically in all things connected with the
-administration of the army. Moreover lord Wellington
-was empowered to dismiss Principal Souza
-from the regency; and lord Castlereagh, following
-up his predecessor’s policy on this head, insisted
-that all the obnoxious members of the regency
-should be set aside and others appointed. And these
-blows at the power of the Souza faction, were accompanied
-by the death of Linhares, the head of
-the family, an event which paralyzed the court of
-Rio Janeiro for a considerable time; nevertheless
-the Souzas were still so strong, that Domingo Souza,
-now Count of Funchal, was appointed prime minister,
-although he retained his situation as ambassador
-to the English court, and continued to reside in
-London.</p>
-
-<p>Lord Wellington, whose long experience of Indian
-intrigues rendered him the fittest person possible to
-deal with the exactions, and political cunning of a
-people who so much resemble Asiatics, now opposed
-the removal of the obnoxious members from the
-regency. He would not even dismiss the Principal
-Souza; for with a refined policy he argued, that the
-opposition to his measures arose, as much from the
-national, as from the individual character of the
-Portuguese authorities, several of whom were under
-the displeasure of their own court, and consequently
-dependent upon the British power, for support
-against their enemies. There were amongst them
-also, persons of great ability, and hence no beneficial
-change could be expected, because the influence<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_86"></a>[86]</span>
-already gained would be lost with new men.
-The latter would have the same faults, with less
-talent, and less dependence on the British power,
-and the dismissed ministers would become active
-enemies. The patriarch would go to Oporto, where
-his power to do mischief would be greatly increased,
-and Principal Souza would then be made patriarch.
-It was indeed very desirable to drive this man,
-whose absurdity was so great as to create a suspicion
-of insanity, from the regency, but he could
-neither be persuaded, nor forced, to quit Portugal.
-His dismissal had been extorted from the prince by
-the power of the British government, he would
-therefore maintain his secret influence over the civil
-administration, he would be considered a martyr to
-foreign influence, which would increase his popularity,
-and his power would be augmented by the
-sanctity of his character as patriarch. Very little
-advantage could then be derived from a change,
-and any reform would be attributed to the English
-influence, against which the numerous interests,
-involved in the preservation of abuses, would instantly
-combine with active enmity.</p>
-
-<p>On the other hand, the government of Portugal had
-never yet laid the real nature of the war fairly before
-the people. The latter had been deceived, flattered,
-cajoled, their prowess in the field extolled beyond
-reason, and the enemy spoken of contemptuously;
-but the resources of the nation, which essentially
-consisted neither in its armies, nor in its revenue,
-nor in its boasting, but in the sacrificing of all interests
-to the prosecution of the contest, had never
-been vigorously used to meet the emergencies of
-the war. The regency had neither appealed to the
-patriotism of the population nor yet enforced sacrifices,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_87"></a>[87]</span>
-by measures, which were absolutely necessary,
-because as the English general honestly observed,
-no people would ever voluntarily bear such
-enormous, though necessary burthens; strong laws
-and heavy penalties could alone insure obedience.
-The Portuguese government relied upon England,
-and her subsidies, and resisted all measures which
-could render their natural resources more available.
-Their subordinates on the same principle executed
-corruptly and vexatiously, or evaded, the military
-regulations, and the chief supporters of all this mischief
-were the Principal and his faction.</p>
-
-<p>Thus dragged by opposing forces, and environed
-with difficulties, Wellington took a middle course.
-That is, he strove by reproaches and by redoubled
-activity, to stimulate the patriotism of the authorities;
-he desired the British ministers at Lisbon, and
-at Rio Janeiro, to paint the dangerous state of Portugal
-in vivid colours, and to urge the prince regent
-in the strongest manner, to enforce the reform of
-those gross abuses, which in the taxes, in the customs,
-in the general expenditure, and in the execution
-of orders by the inferior magistrates, were
-withering the strength of the nation. At the same
-time, amidst the turmoil of his duties in the field,
-sometimes actually from the field of battle itself, he
-transmitted memoirs upon the nature of these different
-evils, and the remedies for them; memoirs which
-will attest to the latest posterity the greatness and
-vigour of his capacity.</p>
-
-<p>These efforts, aided by the suspension of the
-subsidy, produced partial reforms, yet the natural
-weakness of character and obstinacy of the prince
-regent, were insurmountable obstacles to any general
-or permanent cure; the first defect rendered<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_88"></a>[88]</span>
-him the tool of the court intriguers, and the second
-was to be warily dealt with, lest some dogged conduct
-should oblige Wellington to put his often repeated
-threat, of abandoning the country, into execution.
-The success of the contest was in fact of
-more importance to England, than to Portugal, and
-this occult knot could neither be untied nor cut;
-the difficulty could with appliances be lessened,
-but might not be swept away; hence the British
-general involved in ceaseless disputes, and suffering
-hourly mortifications, the least of which would have
-broken the spirit of an ordinary man, had to struggle
-as he could to victory.</p>
-
-<p>Viewing the contest as one of life or death to
-Portugal, he desired to make the whole political
-economy of the state a simple provision for the
-war, and when thwarted, his reproaches were as
-bitter as they were just; nevertheless, the men to
-whom they were addressed, were not devoid of
-merit. In after times, while complaining that he
-could find no persons of talent in Spain, he admitted
-that amongst the Portuguese, Redondo possessed
-both probity and ability, that Nogueira was a statesman
-of capacity equal to the discussion of great
-questions, and that no sovereign in Europe had a
-better public servant than Forjas. Even the restless
-Principal disinterestedly prosecuted measures,
-for forcing the clergy to pay their just share of the
-imposts. But greatness of mind, on great occasions,
-is a rare quality. Most of the Portuguese considered
-the sacrifices demanded, a sharper ill than submission,
-and it was impossible to unite entire obedience
-to the will of the British authorities, with an
-energetic, original spirit, in the native government.
-The Souza faction was always violent and foolish;<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_89"></a>[89]</span>
-the milder opposition of the three gentlemen, above
-mentioned, was excusable. Lord Wellington, a
-foreigner, was serving his own country, pleasing his
-own government, and forwarding his own fortune,
-final success was sure to send him to England, resplendent
-with glory, and beyond the reach of Portuguese
-ill-will. The native authorities had no
-such prospects. Their exertions brought little of
-personal fame, they were disliked by their own
-prince, hated by his favourites, and they feared to
-excite the enmity of the people, by a vigour, which,
-being unpleasing to their sovereign, would inevitably
-draw evil upon themselves; from the French if
-the invasion succeeded, from their own court if the
-independence of the country should be ultimately
-obtained.</p>
-
-<p>But thus much conceded, for the sake of justice,
-it is yet to be affirmed, with truth, that the conduct
-of the Portuguese and Brazilian governments was
-always unwise, often base. Notwithstanding the
-prince’s concessions, it was scarcely possible to remedy
-any abuses. The Lisbon government substituting
-evasive for active opposition, baffled Wellington
-and Stuart, by proposing inadequate laws,
-or by suffering the execution of effectual measures
-to be neglected with impunity; and the treaty of
-commerce with England always supplied them a
-source of dispute, partly from its natural difficulties,
-partly from their own bad faith. The general’s
-labours were thus multiplied not abated by his new
-powers, and in measuring these labours, it is to be
-noted, so entirely did Portugal depend upon England,
-that Wellington instead of drawing provisions
-for his army from the country, in a manner fed the
-whole nation, and was often forced to keep the army<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_90"></a>[90]</span>
-magazines low, that the people might live. This is
-proved by the importation of rice, flour, beef, and
-pork from America, which increased, each year of
-the war, in a surprising manner, the price keeping
-pace with the quantity, while the importation of
-dried fish, the ordinary food of the Portuguese, decreased.</p>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote">Pitkin’s Statistic Tables.</span>
-In 1808 the supply of flour and wheat, from New
-York, was sixty thousand barrels. In 1811 six
-hundred thousand; in 1813, between seven and
-eight hundred thousand. Ireland, England, Egypt,
-Barbary, Sicily, the Brazils, parts of Spain, and
-even France, also contributed to the consumption,
-which greatly exceeded the natural means of Portugal;
-English treasure therefore either directly or
-indirectly, furnished the nation as well as the
-armies.</p>
-
-<p>The peace revenue of Portugal, including the
-Brazils, the colonies, and the islands, even in the
-most flourishing periods, had never exceeded thirty-six
-millions of cruzada novas; but in 1811, although
-Portugal alone raised twenty-five millions, this sum,
-added to the British subsidy, fell very short of the actual
-expenditure; yet economy was opposed by the local
-government, the prince was continually creating
-useless offices for his favourites, and encouraging
-law-suits and appeals to Rio Janeiro. The troops
-and fortresses were neglected, although the military
-branches of expense amounted to more than three-fourths
-of the whole receipts; and though Mr.
-Stuart engaged that England either by treaty or
-tribute would keep the Algerines quiet, he could
-not obtain the suppression of the Portuguese navy,
-which always fled from the barbarians. It was not
-until the middle of the year 1812, when admiral<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_91"></a>[91]</span>
-Berkeley, whose proceedings had at times produced
-considerable inconvenience, was recalled, that Mr.
-Stuart, with the aid of admiral Martin, who succeeded
-Berkeley, without a seat in the regency,
-effected this naval reform.</p>
-
-<p>The government, rather than adopt the measures
-suggested by Wellington, such as keeping up the
-credit of the paper-money, by regular payments
-of the interest, the fair and general collection of
-the “<em>Decima</em>,” and the repression of abuses in
-the custom-house, in the arsenal, and in the militia,
-always more costly than the line, projected the
-issuing of fresh paper, and endeavoured, by unworthy
-stock-jobbing schemes, to evade instead of
-meeting the difficulties of the times. To check
-their folly the general withheld the subsidy, and
-refused to receive their depreciated paper into the
-military chest; but neither did this vigorous proceeding
-produce more than a momentary return
-to honesty, and meanwhile, the working people
-were so cruelly oppressed that they would not
-labour for the public, except under the direction
-of British officers. Force alone could overcome
-their repugnance and force was employed, not to
-forward the defence of the country, but to meet
-particular interests and to support abuses. Such
-also was the general baseness of the Fidalgos, that
-even the charitable aid of money, received from
-England, was shamefully and greedily claimed
-by the rich, who insisted, that it was a donation
-to all and to be equally divided.</p>
-
-<p>Confusion and injustice prevailed every where,
-and Wellington’s energies were squandered on
-vexatious details; at one time he was remonstrating
-against the oppression of the working people, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_92"></a>[92]</span>
-devising remedies for local abuses; at another
-superintending the application of the English
-charities, and arranging the measures necessary to
-revive agriculture in the devastated districts; at
-all times endeavouring to reform the general administration,
-and in no case was he supported. Never
-during the war did he find an appeal to the patriotism
-of the Portuguese government answered frankly;
-never did he propose a measure which was accepted
-without difficulties. This opposition was at times
-carried to such a ridiculous extent, that when some
-Portuguese nobles in the French service took refuge
-with the curate Merino, and desired from their
-own government, a promise of safety, to which
-they were really entitled, the regency refused to
-give that assurance; nor would they publish an
-amnesty, which the English general desired for
-the sake of justice and from policy also, because
-valuable information as to the French army, could
-have been thus obtained. The authorities would
-neither say yes! nor no! and when general Pamplona
-applied to Wellington personally for some
-assurance, the latter could only answer that in
-like cases Mascarheñas had been hanged and
-Sabugal rewarded!</p>
-
-<p>To force a change in the whole spirit, and action
-of the government, seemed to some, the only remedy
-for the distemperature of the time; but this
-might have produced anarchy, and would have
-given countenance to the democratic spirit, contrary
-to the general policy of the British government.
-Wellington therefore desired rather to have
-the prince regent at Lisbon, or the Azores, whence
-his authority might, under the influence of England,
-be more directly used to enforce salutary<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_93"></a>[93]</span>
-regulations; he however considered it essential that
-Carlotta, whose intrigues were incessant, should
-not be with him, and, she on the other hand,
-laboured to come back without the prince, who
-was prevented from moving, by continued disturbances
-in the Brazils. Mr. Stuart, then despairing
-of good, proposed the establishment of a military
-government at once, but Wellington would not
-agree, although the mischief afloat clogged every
-wheel of the military machine.</p>
-
-<p>A law of king Sebastian, which obliged all
-gentlemen holding land to take arms was now
-revived, but desertion, which had commenced with
-the first appointment of British officers, increased;
-and so many persons sailed away in British vessels
-of war, to evade military service in their own
-country, that an edict was published to prevent
-the practice. Beresford checked the desertion for
-a moment, by condemning deserters to hard labour,
-and offering rewards to the country people to
-deliver them up; yet griping want renewed the
-evil at the commencement of the campaign, and
-the terrible severity of condemning nineteen at
-once to death, did not repress it. The cavalry,
-which had been at all times very inefficient, was
-now nearly ruined, the men were become faint-hearted,
-the breed of horses almost extinct, and
-shameful peculations amongst the officers increased
-the mischief: one guilty colonel was broke and his
-uniform stripped from his shoulders in the public
-square at Lisbon. However these examples produced
-fear and astonishment rather than correction,
-the misery of the troops continued, and the army,
-although by the care of Beresford it was again<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_94"></a>[94]</span>
-augmented to more than thirty thousand men under
-arms, declined in moral character and spirit.</p>
-
-<p>To govern armies in the field, is at all times
-a great and difficult matter; and in this contest
-the operations were so intimately connected with
-the civil administration of Portugal, Spain, and
-the Brazils, and the contest, being one of principles,
-so affected the policy of every nation of
-the civilised world, that unprecedented difficulties
-sprung up in the way of the general, and the
-ordinary frauds and embarrassments of war were
-greatly augmented. Napoleon’s continental system
-joined to his financial measures, which were quite
-opposed to debt and paper money, increased the
-pernicious effects of the English bank restriction;
-specie was abundant in France, but had nearly
-disappeared from England; it was only to be
-obtained from abroad, and at an incredible expense.
-The few markets left for British manufactures, and
-colonial produce, did not always make returns in
-the articles necessary for the war, and gold, absolutely
-indispensable in certain quantities, was only
-supplied, and this entirely from the incapacity of
-the English ministers, in the proportion of one-sixth
-of what was required, by an army which
-professed to pay for every thing. Hence continual
-efforts, on the part of the government, to force
-markets, hence a depreciation of value both in
-goods and bills; hence also a continual struggle,
-on the part of the general, to sustain a contest,
-dependant on the fluctuation of such a precarious
-system. Dependant also it was upon the prudence
-of three governments, one of which had just pushed
-its colonies to rebellion, when the French armies<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_95"></a>[95]</span>
-were in possession of four-fifths of the mother
-country; another was hourly raising up obstacles
-to its own defence though the enemy had just been
-driven from the capital; and the third was forcing a
-war with America, its greatest and surest market,
-when by commerce alone it could hope to sustain
-the struggle in the Peninsula.</p>
-
-<p>The failure of the preceding year’s harvest all
-over Europe had rendered the supply of Portugal
-very difficult. Little grain was to be obtained in
-any country of the north of Europe accessible to the
-British, and the necessity of paying in hard money
-rendered even that slight resource null. Sicily and
-Malta were thrown for subsistence upon Africa,
-where colonial produce was indeed available for
-commerce, yet the quantity of grain to be had
-there, was small, and the capricious nature of the
-barbarians rendered the intercourse precarious. In
-December 1811 there was only two months’ consumption
-of corn in Portugal for the population,
-although the magazines of the army contained
-more than three. To America therefore it was
-necessary to look. Now in 1810 Mr. Stuart had
-given treasury bills to the house of Sampayo for
-the purchase of American corn; but the disputes
-between England and the United States, the depreciation
-of English bills, from the quantity in
-the market, together with the expiration of the
-American bank charter, had prevented Sampayo
-from completing his commission, nevertheless, although
-the increasing bitterness of the disputes
-with America discouraged a renewal of this plan,
-some more bills were now given to the English
-minister at Washington, with directions to purchase
-corn, and consign it to Sampayo, to resell in Portugal<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_96"></a>[96]</span>
-as before, for the benefit of the military chest. Other
-bills were also sent to the Brazils, to purchase rice,
-and all the consuls in the Mediterranean were desired
-to encourage the exportation of grain and the
-importation of colonial produce. In this manner,
-despite of the English ministers’ incapacity, lord
-Wellington found resources to feed the population,
-to recover some of the specie expended by the
-army, and to maintain the war. But as the year
-advanced, the Non-intercourse-Act of Congress,
-which had caused a serious drain of specie from
-Portugal, was followed by an embargo for ninety
-days, and then famine, which already afflicted parts
-of Spain, menaced Portugal.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Stuart knew of this embargo before the
-speculators did, and sent his agents orders to buy
-up with hard cash, at a certain price, a quantity
-of grain which had lately arrived at Gibraltar.
-He could only forestall the speculators by a few
-days, the cost soon rose beyond his means in specie,
-yet the new harvest being nearly ripe, this
-prompt effort sufficed for the occasion, and happily
-so, for the American declaration of war followed,
-and American privateers were to take the place of
-American flour-ships. But as ruin seemed to approach,
-Stuart’s energy redoubled. His agents
-seeking for grain in all parts of the world, discovered
-that in the Brazils a sufficient quantity
-might be obtained in exchange for English manufactures,
-to secure Portugal from absolute famine;
-and to protect this traffic, and to preserve that with
-the United States, he persuaded the regency to declare
-the neutrality of Portugal, and to interdict the
-sale of prizes within its waters. He also, at Wellington’s
-desire, besought the English admiralty<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_97"></a>[97]</span>
-to reinforce the squadron in the Tagus, and to
-keep cruisers at particular stations. Finally he
-pressed the financial reforms in Portugal with the
-utmost vigour and with some success. His efforts
-were, however, strangely counteracted from quarters
-least expected. The English consul, in the Western
-Isles, with incredible presumption, publicly excited
-the Islanders to war with America, when Mr. Stuart’s
-efforts were directed to prevent such a calamity;
-the Admiralty neglecting to station cruisers in the
-proper places, left the American privateers free
-to range along the Portuguese and African coast;
-and the cupidity of English merchants broke down
-the credit of the English commissariat paper-money,
-which was the chief medium of exchange on the
-immediate theatre of war.</p>
-
-<p>This paper had arisen from a simple military
-regulation. Lord Wellington, on first assuming
-the command in 1809, found that all persons, gave
-their own vouchers in payment for provisions,
-whereupon he proclaimed, that none save commissaries
-should thus act; and that all local accounts
-should be paid within one month, in ready
-money, if it was in the chest, if not, with bills
-on the commissary-general. These bills soon became
-numerous, because of the scarcity of specie,
-yet their value did not sink, because they enabled
-those who had really furnished supplies, to prove
-their debts without the trouble of following the
-head-quarters; and they had an advantage over
-receipts, inasmuch as they distinctly pointed out
-the person who was to pay; they were also in
-accord with the customs of the country, for the
-people were used to receive government bills. The
-possessors were paid in rotation, whenever there<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_98"></a>[98]</span>
-was money; the small holders, who were the real
-furnishers of the army first, the speculators last, a
-regulation by which justice and the credit of the
-paper were alike consulted.</p>
-
-<p>In 1812, this paper sunk twenty per cent., from
-the sordid practices of English mercantile houses
-whose agents secretly depreciated its credit and
-then purchased it; and in this dishonesty they
-were aided by some of the commissariat, notwithstanding
-the vigilant probity of the chief commissary.
-Sums, as low as ten pence, payable in
-Lisbon, I have myself seen in the hands of poor
-country people on the frontiers. By these infamous
-proceedings the poorer dealers were ruined or forced
-to raise their prices, which hurt their sales and
-contracted the markets to the detriment of the
-soldiers; and there was much danger, that the
-people generally, would thus discover the mode
-of getting cash for bills by submitting to high
-discounts, which would soon have rendered the
-contest too costly to continue. But the resources
-of lord Wellington and Mr. Stuart were not exhausted.
-They contrived to preserve the neutrality
-of Portugal, and by means of licenses continued
-to have importations of American flour, until the
-end of the war; a very fine stroke of policy, for
-this flour was paid for with English goods, and
-resold at a considerable profit for specie which
-went to the military chest. They were less successful
-in supporting the credit of the Portuguese
-government paper; bad faith, and the necessities
-of the native commissariat, which now caused an
-extraordinary issue, combined to lower its credit.</p>
-
-<p>The conde de Funchal, Mr. Villiers, and Mr. Vansittart
-proposed a bank, and other schemes, such<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_99"></a>[99]</span>
-as a loan of one million and a half from the English
-treasury, which shall be treated more at length in
-another place. But lord Wellington ridiculing the
-fallacy of a government, with revenues unequal to its
-expenditure, borrowing from a government which
-was unable to find specie sufficient to sustain the
-war, remarked, that the money could not be realised
-in the Portuguese treasury, or it must be realised at
-the expense of a military chest, whose hollow sound
-already mocked the soldiers’ shout of victory.
-Again therefore he demanded the reform of abuses,
-and offered to take all the responsibility and odium
-upon himself, certain that the exigences of the
-war could be thus met, and the most vexatious
-imposts upon the poor abolished; neither did he
-fail to point out in detail the grounds of this conviction.
-His reasoning made as little impression
-upon Funchal, as it had done upon Linhares;
-money was no where to be had, and the general,
-after being forced to become a trader himself, now
-tolerated, for the sake of the resources it furnished,
-a contraband commerce, which he discovered Soult
-to have established with English merchants at
-Lisbon, exchanging the quicksilver of Almaden
-for colonial produce; and he was still to find in
-his own personal resources, the means of beating
-the enemy, in despite of the matchless follies of
-the governments he served. He did so, but complained
-that it was a hard task.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_100"></a>[100]</span><br /></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="BOOK_XVIII">BOOK XVIII.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<h3 id="CHAPTER_BXVIII_I">CHAPTER I.</h3>
-
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="sidenote7">1812. May.</span>
-In the foregoing book, the political state of the
-belligerents, and those great chains, which bound
-the war in the Peninsula to the policy of the American
-as well as to the European nations, have been
-shewn; the minor events of the war have also been
-narrated, and the point where the decisive struggle
-was to be made has been indicated; thus nought
-remains to tell, save the particular preparations of
-each adverse general ere the noble armies were
-dashed together in the shock of battle.</p>
-
-<p>Nearly three hundred thousand French still trampled
-upon Spain, above two hundred and forty
-thousand were with the eagles, and so successful
-had the plan of raising native soldiers proved, that
-forty thousand Spaniards well organized marched
-under the king’s banners.</p>
-
-<p>In May the distribution of this immense army,
-which however according to the French custom included
-officers and persons of all kinds attached to
-the forces, was as follows:—</p>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote"><a href="#NO_XVIII"><ins class="corr" id="tn-100" title="Transcriber’s Note—Original text: 'Appendix No. 1, Section 1.'">
-Appendix, No. 18.</ins></a></span>
-Seventy-six thousand, of which sixty thousand
-were with the eagles, composed the armies of Catalonia
-and Aragon, under Suchet, and they occupied
-Valencia, and the provinces whose name they bore.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_101"></a>[101]</span></p>
-
-<p>Forty-nine thousand men, of which thirty-eight
-thousand were with the eagles, composed the army
-of the north, under Caffarelli, and were distributed
-on the grand line of communication, from St. Sebastian
-to Burgos; but of this army two divisions of
-infantry and one of cavalry with artillery, were
-destined to reinforce Marmont.</p>
-
-<p>Nineteen thousand, of which seventeen thousand
-were with the eagles, composed the army of the
-centre, occupying a variety of posts in a circle
-round the capital, and having a division in La
-Mancha.</p>
-
-<p>Sixty-three thousand, of which fifty-six thousand
-were with the eagles, composed the army of the
-south, under Soult, occupying Andalusia and a part
-of Estremadura; but some of these troops were detained
-in distant governments by other generals.</p>
-
-<p>The army of Portugal, under Marmont, consisted
-of seventy thousand men, fifty-two thousand being
-with the eagles, and a reinforcement of twelve thousand
-men were in march to join this army from
-France. Marmont occupied Leon, part of Old
-Castile, and the Asturias, having his front upon the
-Tormes, and a division watching Gallicia.</p>
-
-<p>The numerous Spanish <i lang="es" xml:lang="es">juramentados</i> were principally
-employed in Andalusia and with the army of
-the centre, and the experience of Ocaña, of Badajos,
-and many other places, proved that for the intrusive
-monarch, they fought with more vigour than their
-countrymen did against him.</p>
-
-<p>In March Joseph had been appointed commander-in-chief
-of all the French armies, but the generals,
-as usual, resisted his authority. Dorsenne denied
-it altogether, Caffarelli, who succeeded Dorsenne,
-disputed even his civil power in the governments of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_102"></a>[102]</span>
-the north, Suchet evaded his orders, Marmont neglected
-them, and Soult firmly opposed his injudicious
-military plans. The king was distressed for<span class="sidenote">The King’s correspondence captured at Vittoria.</span>
-money, and he complained that Marmont’s army
-had consumed or plundered in three months, the
-whole resources of the province of Toledo and the
-district of Talavera, whereby Madrid and the army
-of the centre were famished. Marmont retorted by
-complaints of the wasteful extravagance of the
-king’s military administration in the capital. Thus
-dissensions were generated when the most absolute
-union was required.</p>
-
-<p>After the fall of Badajos Joseph judged that the
-allies would soon move, either against Marmont in
-Castile, against himself by the valley of the Tagus,
-or against Soult in Andalusia. In the first case he<span class="sidenote">King’s correspondence, MSS.</span>
-designed to aid Marmont, with the divisions of the
-north, with the army of the centre, and with fifteen
-thousand men to be drawn from the army of the
-south. In the second case to draw the army of
-Portugal and a portion of the army of the south
-into the valley of the Tagus, while the divisions
-from the army of the north entered Leon. In the
-third case, the half of Marmont’s army reinforced by
-a division of the army of the centre, was to pass the
-Tagus at Arzobispo and follow the allies. But the
-army of the centre was not ready to take the field,
-and Wellington knew it, Marmont’s complaint was
-just; waste and confusion prevailed at Madrid, and
-there was so little military vigour that the Empecinado,
-with other partida chiefs, pushed their excursions
-to the very gates of that capital.</p>
-
-<p>Joseph finally ordered Suchet to reinforce the army
-of the centre, and then calling up the Italian division
-of Palombini from the army of the Ebro, directed<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_103"></a>[103]</span>
-Soult to keep Drouet, with one-third of the army of
-the south, so far advanced in Estremadura as to
-have direct communication with general Trielhard
-in the valley of the Tagus; and he especially ordered
-that Drouet should pass that river if Hill
-passed it. It was necessary, he said, to follow the
-English army, and fight it with advantage of numbers,
-to do which required a strict co-operation of
-the three armies Drouet’s corps being the pivot.
-Meanwhile Marmont and Soult being each convinced,
-that the English general would invade their
-separate provinces, desired that the king would so
-view the coming contest, and oblige the other to
-regulate his movements thereby. The former complained,
-that having to observe the Gallicians, and
-occupy the Asturias, his forces were disseminated,
-and he asked for reinforcements to chase the partidas,
-who impeded the gathering of provisions in
-Castile and Leon. But the king, who over-rated the
-importance of Madrid, designed rather to draw more
-troops round the capital; and he entirely disapproved
-of Soult besieging Tarifa and Carthagena,
-arguing that if Drouet was not ready to pass the
-Tagus, the whole of the allies could unite on the
-right bank, and penetrate without opposition to the
-capital, or that lord Wellington would concentrate
-to overwhelm Marmont.</p>
-
-<p>The duke of Dalmatia would not suffer Drouet to
-stir, and Joseph, whose jealousy had been excited
-by the marshal’s power in Andalusia, threatened to
-deprive him of his command. The inflexible duke<span class="sidenote">Joseph’s correspondence captured at Vittoria, MSS.</span>
-replied that the king had already virtually done so
-by sending orders direct to Drouet, that he was
-ready to resign, but he would not commit a gross
-military error. Drouet could scarcely arrive in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_104"></a>[104]</span>
-time to help Marmont, and would be too weak for
-the protection of Madrid, but his absence would
-ruin Andalusia, because the allies whose force in
-Estremadura was very considerable could in five
-marches reach Seville and take it on the sixth;
-then communicating with the fleets at Cadiz they
-would change their line of operations without loss,
-and unite with thirty thousand other troops, British
-and Spanish, who were at Gibraltar, in the Isla, in
-the Niebla, on the side of Murcia, and under Ballesteros
-in the Ronda. A new army might also come
-from the ocean, and Drouet, once beyond the Tagus
-could not return to Andalusia in less than twelve
-days; Marmont could scarcely come there in a
-month; the force under his own immediate command
-was spread all over Andalusia, if collected it
-would not furnish thirty thousand sabres and bayonets,
-exclusive of Drouet, and the evacuation of the
-province would be unavoidable.</p>
-
-<p>The French misfortunes, he said, had invariably
-arisen from not acting in large masses, and the
-army of Portugal, by spreading too much to its
-right, would ruin this campaign as it had ruined
-the preceding one. “Marmont should leave one or
-two divisions on the Tormes, and place the rest of
-his army in position, on both sides of the pass of
-Baños, the left near Placentia, and the right, extending
-towards Somosierra, which could be occupied
-by a detachment. Lord Wellington could not
-then advance by the valley of the Tagus without
-lending his left flank; nor to the Tormes without
-lending his right flank. Neither could he attack
-Marmont with effect, because the latter could easily
-concentrate, and according to the nature of the
-attack secure his retreat by the valley of the Tagus,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_105"></a>[105]</span>
-or by the province of Avila, while the two divisions
-on the Tormes reinforced by two others from the
-army of the north would act on the allies’ flank.”
-For these reasons Soult would not permit Drouet to
-quit Estremadura, yet he promised to reinforce him
-and so to press Hill, that Graham whom he supposed
-still at Portalegre, should be obliged to bring
-up the first and sixth divisions. In fine he promised
-that a powerful body of the allies should be
-forced to remain in Estremadura, or Hill would be
-defeated and Badajos invested. This dispute raged
-during May and the beginning of June, and meanwhile
-the English general well acquainted from
-the intercepted letters with these dissensions, made
-his arrangements, so as to confirm each general in
-his own peculiar views.</p>
-
-<p>Soult was the more easily deceived, because he had
-obtained a Gibraltar newspaper, in which, so negligent
-was the Portuguese government, lord Wellington’s
-secret despatches to Forjas containing an account
-of his army and of his first designs against
-the south were printed, and it must be remembered
-that the plan of invading Andalusia was only relinquished
-about the middle of May. Hill’s exploit
-at Almaraz menaced the north and south alike, but
-that general had adroitly spread a report, that his
-object was to gain time for the invasion of Andalusia,
-and all Wellington’s demonstrations were calculated
-to aid this artifice and impose upon Soult.
-Graham indeed returned to Beira with the first and
-sixth divisions and Cotton’s cavalry; but as Hill
-was at the same time reinforced, and Graham’s
-march sudden and secret, the enemy were again
-deceived in all quarters. For Marmont and the
-king, reckoning the number of divisions, thought<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_106"></a>[106]</span>
-the bulk of the allies was in the north, and did not
-discover that Hill’s corps had been nearly doubled
-in numbers though his division seemed the same,
-while Soult not immediately aware of Graham’s departure,
-found Hill more than a match for Drouet,
-and still expected the allies in Andalusia.</p>
-
-<p>Drouet willing rather to obey the king than
-Soult, drew towards Medellin in June, but Soult, as
-we have seen, sent the reinforcements from Seville,
-by the road of Monasterio, and thus obliged him to
-come back. Then followed those movements and
-counter-movements in Estremadura, which have
-been already related, each side being desirous of
-keeping a great number of their adversaries in that
-province. Soult’s judgment was thus made manifest,
-for Drouet could only have crossed the Tagus
-with peril to Andalusia, whereas, without endangering
-that province, he now made such a powerful
-diversion for Marmont, that Wellington’s army in
-the north was reduced below the army of Portugal,
-and much below what the latter could be raised to,
-by detachments from the armies of the north, and
-of the centre. However in the beginning of June,
-while the French generals were still disputing, lord
-Wellington’s dispositions were completed, he had
-established at last an extensive system of gaining
-intelligence all over Spain, and as his campaign
-was one which posterity will delight to study, it is
-fitting to shew very exactly the foundation on which
-the operations rested.</p>
-
-<p>His political and military reasons for seeking a
-battle have been before shewn, but this design was
-always conditional; he would fight on advantage,
-but he would risk nothing beyond the usual chances
-of combat. While Portugal was his, every movement,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_107"></a>[107]</span>
-which obliged the enemy to concentrate was an advantage,
-and his operations were ever in subservience
-to this vital condition. His whole force
-amounted to nearly ninety thousand men, of which
-about six thousand were in Cadiz, but the Walcheren
-expedition was still to be atoned for: the sick
-were so numerous amongst the regiments which had
-served there, that only thirty-two thousand or a
-little more than half of the British soldiers, were
-under arms. This number, with twenty-four thousand
-Portuguese, made fifty-six thousand sabres
-and bayonets in the field; and it is to be remembered
-that now and at all times the Portuguese infantry
-were mixed with the British either by
-brigades or regiments; wherefore in speaking of
-English divisions in battle the Portuguese battalions
-are always included, and it is to their praise, that
-their fighting was such as to justify the use of the
-general term.</p>
-
-<p>The troops were organized in the following
-manner.</p>
-
-<p>Two thousand cavalry and fifteen thousand infantry,
-with twenty-four guns, were under Hill, who
-had also the aid of four garrison Portuguese regiments,
-and of the fifth Spanish army. Twelve
-hundred Portuguese cavalry were in the Tras Os
-Montes, under general D’Urban, and about three
-thousand five hundred British cavalry and thirty-six
-thousand infantry, with fifty-four guns, were
-under Wellington’s immediate command, which was
-now enlarged by three thousand five hundred Spaniards,
-infantry and cavalry, under Carlos D’España
-and Julian Sanchez.</p>
-
-<p>The bridge of Almaraz had been destroyed to
-lengthen the French lateral communications, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_108"></a>[108]</span>
-Wellington now ordered the bridge of Alcantara
-to be repaired to shorten his own. The breach
-in that stupendous structure was ninety feet wide,
-and one hundred and fifty feet above the water line.
-Yet the fertile genius of colonel Sturgeon furnished
-the means of passing this chasm, with heavy artillery,
-and without the enemy being aware of the
-preparations made until the moment of execution.
-In the arsenal of Elvas he secretly prepared a net-work
-of strong ropes, after a fashion which permitted
-it to be carried in parts, and with the beams,
-planking, and other materials it was transported
-to Alcantara on seventeen carriages. Straining
-beams were then fixed in the masonry, on each
-side of the broken arch, cables were stretched across
-the chasm, the net-work was drawn over, tarpaulin
-blinds were placed at each side, and the heaviest
-guns passed in safety. This remarkable feat procured
-a new, and short, internal line of communication,
-along good roads, while the enemy, by the
-destruction of the bridge at Almaraz, was thrown
-upon a long external line, and very bad roads.</p>
-
-<p>Hill’s corps was thus suddenly brought a fortnight’s
-march nearer to Wellington, than Drouet
-was to Marmont, if both marched as armies with
-artillery; but there was still a heavy drag upon
-the English general’s operations. He had drawn
-so largely upon Portugal for means of transport,
-that agriculture was seriously embarrassed, and
-yet his subsistence was not secured for more than
-a few marches beyond the Agueda. To remedy
-this he set sailors and workmen to remove obstructions
-in the Douro and the Tagus; the latter,
-which in Philip the Second’s time had been navigable
-from Toledo to Lisbon, was opened to Malpica,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_109"></a>[109]</span>
-not far from Alcantara, and the Douro was
-opened as high as Barca de Alba, below which
-it ceases to be a Spanish river. The whole land
-transport of the interior of Portugal was thus relieved;
-the magazines were brought up the Tagus,
-close to the new line of communication by Alcantara,
-on one side; on the other, the country vessels
-conveyed povisions to the mouth of the Douro, and
-that river then served to within a short distance
-of Almeida, Ciudad Rodrigo, and Salamanca. Still
-danger was to be apprehended from the American
-privateers along the coast, which the Admiralty
-neglected; and the navigation of the Douro was
-suddenly suspended by the overheated zeal of a
-commissary, who being thwarted by the delays
-of the boatmen, issued, of his own authority, an
-edict, establishing regulations, and pronouncing
-pains and penalties upon all those who did not
-conform to them. The river was immediately
-abandoned by the craft, and the government endeavoured
-by a formal protest, to give political
-importance to this affair, which was peculiarly
-vexatious, inasmuch as the boatmen were already
-so averse to passing the old points of navigation,
-that very severe measures were necessary to oblige
-them to do so.</p>
-
-<p>When this matter was arranged, Wellington had
-still to dread that if his operations led him far into
-Spain, the subsistence of his army would be insecure;
-for there were many objects of absolute
-necessity, especially meat, which could not be
-procured except with ready money, and not only
-was he unfurnished of specie, but his hopes of
-obtaining it were nearly extinguished, by the sweep
-lord William Bentinck had made in the Mediterranean<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_110"></a>[110]</span>
-money-market: moreover the English ministers
-chose this period of difficulty to interfere, and in
-an ignorant and injurious manner, with his mode
-of issuing bills to supply his necessities. His
-resolution to advance could not be shaken, yet
-before crossing the Agueda, having described his
-plan of campaign to lord Liverpool, he finished in
-these remarkable words.</p>
-
-<p>“I am not insensible to losses and risks, nor
-am I blind to the disadvantages under which I
-undertake this operation. My friends in Castile, and
-I believe no officer ever had better, assure me that
-we shall not want provisions even before the harvest
-will be reaped; that there exist concealed granaries
-which shall be opened to us, and that if we can
-pay for a part, credit will be given to us for the
-remainder, and they have long given me hopes that
-we should be able to borrow money in Castile
-upon British securities. In case we should be
-able to maintain ourselves in Castile, the general
-action and its results being delayed by the enemy’s
-manœuvres, which I think not improbable, I have
-in contemplation other resources for drawing supplies
-from the country, and I shall have at all
-events our own magazines at Almeida and Ciudad
-Rodrigo. <em>But with all these prospects I cannot
-reflect without shuddering upon the probability that
-we shall be distressed; nor upon the consequences
-which may result from our wanting money in the
-interior of Spain.</em>”</p>
-
-<p>In the contemplated operations lord Wellington
-did not fail to look both to his own and to his
-enemy’s flanks. His right was secured by the
-destruction of the forts, the stores, and boats at
-Almaraz; for the valley of the Tagus was exhausted<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_111"></a>[111]</span>
-of provisions, and full of cross rivers which required
-a pontoon train to pass if the French should
-menace Portugal seriously in that line: moreover
-he caused the fortress of Monte Santos, which
-covered the Portuguese frontier between the Tagus
-and Ciudad Rodrigo to be put into a state of
-defence, and the restoration of Alcantara gave Hill
-the power of quickly interfering. On the other
-side if Marmont, strengthened by Caffarelli’s
-division, should operate strongly against the allies’
-left, a retreat was open either upon Ciudad Rodrigo,
-or across the mountains into the valley of the Tagus.
-Such were his arrangements for his own interior
-line of operations, and to menace his enemy’s flanks
-his measures embraced the whole Peninsula.</p>
-
-<p>1º. He directed Silveira and D’Urban, who were
-on the frontier of Tras os Montes, to file along the
-Douro, menace the enemy’s right flank and rear,
-and form a link of connection with the Gallician
-army, with which Castaños promised to besiege
-Astorga, as soon as the Anglo-Portuguese should
-appear on the Tormes. Meanwhile sir Home Popham’s
-expedition was to commence its operations,
-in concert with the seventh Spanish army, on the
-coast of Biscay and so draw Caffarelli’s divisions
-from the succour of Marmont.</p>
-
-<p>2º. To hinder Suchet from reinforcing the king,
-or making a movement towards Andalusia, the Sicilian
-expedition was to menace Catalonia and Valencia,
-in concert with the Murcian army.</p>
-
-<p>3º. To prevent Soult overwhelming Hill, Wellington
-trusted, 1º. to the garrison of Gibraltar, and
-to the Anglo-Portuguese and Spanish troops, in the
-Isla de Leon; 2º. to insurrections in the kingdom
-of Cordoba, where Echevaria going from Cadiz, by<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_112"></a>[112]</span>
-the way of Ayamonte, with three hundred officers,
-was to organize the Partidas of that district, as
-Mendizabel had done those of the northern parts;
-3º. to Ballesteros’s army, but he ever dreaded the
-rashness of this general, who might be crushed in a
-moment, which would have endangered Hill and
-rendered any success in the north nugatory.</p>
-
-<p>It was this fear of Ballesteros’s rashness that
-caused Wellington to keep so strong a corps in
-Estremadura, and hence Soult’s resolution to prevent
-Drouet from quitting Estremadura, even though
-Hill should cross the Tagus, was wise and military.
-For though Drouet would undoubtedly have given
-the king and Marmont a vast superiority in Castile,
-the general advantage would have remained with
-Wellington. Hill could at any time have misled
-Drouet by crossing the bridge of Alcantara, and returning
-again, when Drouet had passed the bridge
-of Toledo or Arzobispo. The French general’s
-march would then have led to nothing, for either
-Hill could have joined Wellington, by a shorter
-line, and Soult, wanting numbers, could not have
-taken advantage of his absence from Estremadura;
-or Wellington could have retired within the Portuguese
-frontier, rendering Drouet’s movement to
-Castile a pure loss; or reinforcing Hill by the
-bridge of Alcantara, he could have gained a fortnight’s
-march and overwhelmed Soult in Andalusia.
-The great error of the king’s plan was that it depended
-upon exact co-operation amongst persons
-who jealous of each other were far from obedient to
-himself, and whose marches it was scarcely possible
-to time justly; because the armies were separated
-by a great extent of country and their lines of
-communication were external long and difficult,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_113"></a>[113]</span>
-while their enemy was acting on internal short and
-easy lines. Moreover the French correspondence,
-continually intercepted by the Partidas, was brought
-to Wellington, and the knowledge thus gained by
-one side and lost by the other caused the timely
-reinforcing of Hill in Estremadura, and the keeping
-of Palombini’s Italian division from Madrid for
-three weeks; an event which in the sequel proved
-of vital consequence, inasmuch as it prevented the
-army of the centre moving until after the crisis of
-the campaign had passed.</p>
-
-<p>Hill’s exploit at Almaraz, and the disorderly state
-of the army of the centre, having in a manner isolated
-the army of Portugal, the importance of Gallicia
-and the Asturias, with respect to the projected operations
-of lord Wellington, was greatly increased.
-For the Gallicians could either act in Castile upon
-the rear of Marmont, and so weaken the line of defence
-on the Douro; or, marching through the
-Asturias, spread insurrection along the coast to the
-Montaña de Santander and there join the seventh
-army. Hence the necessity of keeping Bonet in
-the Asturias, and watching the Gallician passes,
-was become imperative, and Marmont, following
-Napoleon’s instructions, had fortified the different
-posts in Castile, but his army was too widely spread,
-and, as Soult observed, was extended to its right
-instead of concentrating on the left near Baños.</p>
-
-<p>The duke of Ragusa had resolved to adopt the
-Tormes and Douro, as his lines of defence, and never
-doubting that he was the object of attack, watched
-the augmentation of Wellington’s forces and magazines
-with the utmost anxiety. He had collected considerable
-magazines himself, and the king had formed
-others for him at Talavera and Segovia, yet he did<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_114"></a>[114]</span>
-not approach the Agueda, but continued to occupy
-a vast extent of country for the convenience of feeding
-them until June. When he heard of the restoration
-of the bridge of Alcantara, and of magazines
-being formed at Caceres, he observed that the latter
-would be on the left of the Guadiana if Andalusia
-were the object; and although not well placed for
-an army acting against himself, were admirably
-placed for an army which having fought in
-Castile should afterwards operate against Madrid,
-because they could be transported at once to the
-right of the Tagus by Alcantara, and could be
-secured by removing the temporary restorations.
-Wherefore, judging that Hill would immediately
-rejoin Wellington, to aid in the battle, that, with
-a prophetic feeling he observed, would be fought
-near the Tormes, he desired Caffarelli to put the
-divisions of the army of the north in movement; and
-he prayed the king to have guns, and a pontoon
-train sent from Madrid that Drouet might pass at
-Almaraz and join him by the Puerto Pico.</p>
-
-<p>Joseph immediately renewed his orders to Soult,
-and to Caffarelli, but he only sent two small boats
-to Almaraz; and Marmont, seeing the allied army
-suddenly concentrated on the Agueda, recalled Foy
-from the valley of the Tagus, and Bonet from the
-Asturias. His first design was to assemble the army<span class="sidenote9">See <a href="#i_b_581fp_3">Plan, No. 3.</a></span>
-at Medina del Campo, Valladolid, Valdesillas, Toro,
-Zamora, and Salamanca, leaving two battalions and
-a brigade of dragoons at Benavente to observe the
-Gallicians. Thus the bulk of the troops would line
-the Duero, while two divisions formed an advanced
-guard, on the Tormes, and the whole could be concentrated
-in five days. His ultimate object was to
-hold the Tormes until Wellington’s whole army was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_115"></a>[115]</span>
-on that river, then to assemble his own troops on the
-Duero, and act so as to favour the defence of the forts
-at Salamanca until reinforcements from the north
-should enable him to drive the allies again within
-the Portuguese frontier; and he warned Caffarelli
-that the forts could not hold out more than fifteen
-days after they should be abandoned by the French
-army.</p>
-
-<p>Marmont was a man to be feared. He possessed
-quickness of apprehension and courage, moral and
-physical, scientific acquirements, experience of
-war, and great facility in the moving of troops; he
-was strong of body, in the flower of life, eager for
-glory, and although neither a great nor a fortunate
-commander, such a one as might bear the test of
-fire. His army was weak in cavalry but admirably
-organized, for he had laboured with successful diligence,
-to restore that discipline which had been so
-much shaken by the misfortunes of Massena’s campaign,
-and by the unceasing operations from the
-battle of Fuentes Onoro to the last retreat from Beira.
-Upon this subject a digression must be allowed, because
-it has been often affirmed, that the bad conduct
-of the French in the Peninsula, was encouraged by
-their leaders, was unmatched in wickedness, and peculiar
-to the nation. Such assertions springing from
-morbid national antipathies it is the duty of the historian
-to correct. All troops will behave ill, when ill-governed,
-but the best commanders cannot at times
-prevent the perpetration of the most frightful mischief;
-and this truth, so important to the welfare of
-nations, may be proved with respect to the Peninsular
-war, by the avowal of the generals on either side, and
-by their endeavours to arrest the evils which they deplored.
-When Dorsenne returned from his expedition<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_116"></a>[116]</span>
-against Gallicia, in the latter end of 1811, he reproached
-his soldiers in the following terms. “The<span class="sidenote">Intercepted French papers, MSS.</span>
-fields have been devastated and houses have been
-burned; these excesses are unworthy of the French
-soldier, they pierce the hearts of the most devoted
-and friendly of the Spaniards, they are revolting to
-honest men, and embarrass the provisioning of the
-army. The general-in-chief sees them with sorrow,
-and orders; that besides a permanent court-martial,
-there shall be at the head-quarters of each division,
-of every arm, a military commission which shall
-try the following crimes, and on conviction, sentence
-to death, without appeal; execution to be done on
-the spot, in presence of the troops.</p>
-
-<p>“1º. Quitting a post to pillage. 2º. Desertion
-of all kinds. 3º. Disobedience in face of the enemy.
-4º. Insubordination of all kinds. 5º. Marauding of
-all kinds. 6º. Pillage of all kinds.</p>
-
-<p>“<em>All persons military or others, shall be considered
-as pillagers, who quit their post or their ranks to enter
-houses, &amp;c. or who use violence to obtain from the inhabitants
-more than they are legally entitled to.</em></p>
-
-<p>“<em>All persons shall be considered deserters who
-shall be found without a passport beyond the advanced
-posts, and frequent patroles day and night shall be sent
-to arrest all persons beyond the outposts.</em></p>
-
-<p>“<em>Before the enemy when in camp or cantonments
-roll-calls shall take place every hour, and all persons
-absent without leave twice running shall be counted
-deserters and judged as such. The servants and sutlers
-of the camp are amenable to this as well as the
-soldier.</em>”</p>
-
-<p>This order Marmont, after reproaching his troops
-for like excesses, renewed with the following additions.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_117"></a>[117]</span></p>
-
-<p>“<em>Considering that the disorders of the army have
-arrived at the highest degree, and require the most
-vigorous measures of repression, it is ordered,</em></p>
-
-<p>“1º. <em>All non-commissioned officers and soldiers
-found a quarter of a league from their quarters, camp,
-or post without leave, shall be judged pillagers and tried
-by the military commission.</em></p>
-
-<p>“2º. <em>The gens-d’armes shall examine the baggage
-of all sutlers and followers and shall seize all effects
-that appear to be pillaged, and shall burn what will
-burn, and bring the gold and silver to the paymaster-general
-under a ‘<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">procès verbal</span>,’ and all persons
-whose effects have been seized as pillage to the amount
-of one hundred livres shall be sent to the military
-commission, and on conviction suffer death.</em></p>
-
-<p>“3º. <em>All officers who shall not take proper measures
-to repress disorders under their command shall
-be sent in arrest to head-quarters there to be judged.</em>”</p>
-
-<p>Then appointing the number of baggage animals
-to each company, upon a scale which coincides in a
-remarkable manner with the allowances in the
-British army, Marmont directed the overplus to be
-seized and delivered, under a legal process, to the
-nearest villages, ordering the provost-general to
-look to the execution each day, and report thereon.
-Finally, he clothed the provost-general with all the
-powers of the military commissions; and proof was
-soon given that his orders were not mere threats,
-for two captains were arrested for trial, and a soldier
-of the twenty-sixth regiment was condemned to
-death by one of the provisional commissions for
-stealing church vessels.</p>
-
-<p>Such was the conduct of the French, and touching
-the conduct of the English, lord Wellington, in
-the same month, wrote thus to lord Liverpool.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_118"></a>[118]</span></p>
-
-<p>“<em>The outrages committed by the British soldiers,
-belonging to this army, have become so enormous, and
-they have produced an effect on the minds of the people
-of the country, so injurious to the cause, and likely to
-be so dangerous to the army itself, that I request
-your Lordship’s early attention to the subject. I am
-sensible that the best measures to be adopted on this
-subject are those of prevention, and I believe there
-are few officers who have paid more attention to the
-subject than I have done, and I have been so far successful,
-as that few outrages are committed by the
-soldiers who are with their regiments, after the regiments
-have been a short time in this country.</em>”</p>
-
-<p>“<em>But in the extended system on which we are acting,
-small detachments of soldiers must be marched
-long distances, through the country, either as escorts,
-or returning from being escorts to prisoners, or
-coming from hospitals, &amp;c. and notwithstanding that
-these detachments are never allowed to march, excepting
-under the command of an officer or more, in proportion
-to its size, and that every precaution is taken
-to provide for the regularity of their subsistence,
-there is no instance of the march of one of these
-detachments that outrages of every description are not
-committed, and I am sorry to say with impunity.</em>”</p>
-
-<p>“<em>The guard-rooms are therefore crowded with
-prisoners, and the offences of which they have been
-guilty remain unpunished, to the destruction of the
-discipline of the army, and to the injury of the reputation
-of the country for justice. I have thought it
-proper to lay these circumstances before your lordship.
-I am about to move the army further forward
-into Spain, and I assure your lordship, that I have
-not a friend in that country, who has not written to
-me in dread of the consequences, which must result to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_119"></a>[119]</span>
-the army, and to the cause from a continuance of
-these disgraceful irregularities, which I declare I
-have it not in my power to prevent.</em>”</p>
-
-<p>To this should have been added, the insubordination,
-and the evil passions, awakened by the unchecked
-plunder of Ciudad Rodrigo and Badajos.
-But long had the English general complained of
-the bad discipline of his army, and the following
-extracts, from a letter dated a few months later,
-shew that his distrust at the present time was not
-ill-founded. After observing that the constitutions
-of the soldiers were so much shaken from disorders
-acquired by their service at Walcheren, or by their
-own irregularities, that a British army was almost a
-moving hospital, more than one-third or about
-twenty thousand men being sick, or attending upon
-the sick, he thus describes their conduct.</p>
-
-<p>“<em>The disorders which these soldiers have, are of a
-very trifling description, they are considered to render
-them incapable of serving with their regiments, but
-they certainly do not incapacitate them from committing
-outrages of all descriptions on their passage
-through the country, and in the last movements of the
-hospitals the soldiers have not only plundered the inhabitants
-of their property, but the hospital stores
-which moved with the hospitals, and have sold the
-plunder. And all these outrages are committed with
-impunity, no proof can be brought on oath before a
-court-martial that any individual has committed an
-outrage, and the soldiers of the army are becoming
-little better than a band of robbers.</em>” “<em>I have carried
-the establishment and authority of the provost-marshal
-as far as either will go; there are at this
-moment not less than one provost-marshal, and nineteen<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_120"></a>[120]</span>
-assistant provost-marshals, attached to the several
-divisions of cavalry and infantry and to the hospital
-stations, to preserve order, but this establishment is
-not sufficient, and I have not the means of increasing
-it.</em>”</p>
-
-<p>The principal remedies he proposed, were the
-admitting less rigorous proof of guilt, before courts
-martial; the forming a military police, <em>such as the
-French, and other armies possessed</em>; the enforcing
-more attention on the part of the officers to their
-duties; the increasing the pay and responsibility of
-the non-commissioned officers, and the throwing
-upon them the chief care of the discipline. But in
-treating this part of the subject he broached an
-opinion which can scarcely be sustained even by
-his authority. Assuming, somewhat unjustly, that
-the officers of his army were, from consciousness of
-like demerit, generally too lenient in their sentences
-on each other for neglect of duty, he says, “I am
-inclined to entertain the opinion that in the British
-army duties of inspection and control over the conduct
-and habits of the soldiers, the performance of
-which by somebody is the only effectual check to
-disorder and all its consequences, are imposed upon
-the subaltern officers of regiments, which duties
-British officers, being of the class of gentlemen in
-society, and being required to appear as such, have
-never performed <em>and which they will never perform</em>.
-It is very necessary, however, that the duties should
-be performed by somebody, and for this reason, and
-having observed the advantage derived in the
-guards, from the respectable body of non-commissioned
-officers in those regiments, who perform all
-the duties required from subalterns in the marching<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_121"></a>[121]</span>
-regiments, I had suggested to your lordship the expediency
-of increasing the pay of the non-commissioned
-officers in the army.”</p>
-
-<p>Now it is a strange assumption, that a gentleman
-necessarily neglects his duty to his country. When
-well taught, which was not always the case, gentlemen
-by birth generally performed their duties in
-the Peninsula more conscientiously than others,
-and the experience of every commanding officer
-will bear out the assertion. If the non-commissioned
-officers could do all the duties of subaltern
-officers, why should the country bear the useless
-expense of the latter? But in truth the system of
-the guards produced rather a medium goodness,
-than a superior excellence; the system of sir John
-Moore, founded upon the principle, that the officers
-should thoroughly know, and be responsible for the
-discipline of their soldiers, better bore the test of
-experience. All the British regiments of the light
-division were formed in the camps of Shorn-Cliff
-by that most accomplished commander; very many
-of the other acknowledged good regiments of the
-army had been instructed by him in Sicily; and
-wherever an officer, formed under Moore, obtained
-a regiment, whether British or Portuguese, that
-regiment was distinguished in this war for its discipline
-and enduring qualities; courage was common
-to all.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_122"></a>[122]</span><br /></p>
-
-<h3 id="CHAPTER_BXVIII_II">CHAPTER II.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<h4>CAMPAIGN OF 1812.</h4>
-
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="sidenote7">1812. June.</span>
-On the 13th of June, the periodic rains having
-ceased, and the field magazines being completed,
-Wellington passed the Agueda and marched towards
-the Tormes in four columns, one of which was composed
-of the Spanish troops. The 16th he reached
-the Valmusa stream, within six miles of Salamanca,
-and drove a French detachment across the Tormes.
-All the bridges, save that of Salamanca which was
-defended by the forts, had been destroyed, and
-there was a garrison in the castle of Alba de Tormes,
-but the 17th the allies passed the river above and
-below the town, by the deep fords of Santa Marta
-and Los Cantos, and general Henry Clinton invested
-the forts the same day with the sixth division.
-Marmont, with two divisions, and some cavalry,
-retired to Fuente el Sauco, on the road of Toro, followed
-by an advanced guard of the allies; Salamanca<span class="sidenote9">See <a href="#i_b_581fp_2">Plan, No. 2.</a></span>
-instantly became a scene of rejoicing, the
-houses were illuminated, and the people shouting,
-singing, and weeping for joy, gave Wellington their
-welcome while his army took a position on the
-mountain of San Cristoval about five miles in advance.</p>
-
-
-<h4>SIEGE OF THE FORTS AT SALAMANCA.</h4>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote">Jones’s Sieges.</span>
-Four eighteen-pounders had followed the army
-from Almeida, three twenty-four pound howitzers
-were furnished by the field-artillery, and the battering<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_123"></a>[123]</span>
-train used by Hill at Almaraz, had passed the
-bridge of Alcantara the 11th. These were the<span class="sidenote">Wellington’s despatches, MSS.</span>
-means of offence, but the strength of the forts had
-been under-rated; they contained eight hundred
-men, and it was said that thirteen convents and
-twenty-two colleges had been destroyed in their
-construction. San Vincente, so called from the large
-convent it enclosed, was the key-fort. Situated on
-a perpendicular cliff overhanging the Tormes, and
-irregular in form, but well flanked, it was separated
-by a deep ravine from the other forts, which
-were called St. Cajetano and La Merced. These
-were also on high ground, smaller than San Vincente,
-and of a square form, but with bomb-proofs,
-and deep ditches, having perpendicular scarps and
-counterscarps.</p>
-
-<p>In the night of the 17th colonel Burgoyne, the
-engineer directing the siege, commenced a battery,
-for eight guns, at the distance of two hundred and
-fifty yards from the main wall of Vincente, and as
-the ruins of the destroyed convents rendered it
-impossible to excavate, earth was brought from a
-distance; but the moon was up, the night short,
-the enemy’s fire of musketry heavy, the workmen
-of the sixth division were inexperienced, and at
-day-break the battery was still imperfect. Meanwhile
-an attempt had been made to attach the miner
-secretly to the counterscarp, and when the vigilance
-of a trained dog baffled this design, the enemy’s
-picquet was driven in, and the attempt openly
-made, yet it was rendered vain by a plunging fire
-from the top of the convent.</p>
-
-<p>On the 18th eight hundred Germans, placed in
-the ruins, mastered all the enemy’s fire save that
-from loop-holes, and colonel May, who directed<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_124"></a>[124]</span>
-the artillery service, then placed two field-pieces
-on a neighbouring convent, called San Bernardo,
-overlooking the fort, however these guns could not
-silence the French artillery.</p>
-
-<p>In the night, the first battery was armed, covering
-for two field-pieces as a counter-battery was raised
-a little to its right, and a second breaching battery
-for two howitzers, was constructed on the Cajetano
-side of the ravine.</p>
-
-<p>At day-break on the 19th seven guns opened,
-and at nine o’clock the wall of the convent was
-cut away to the level of the counterscarp. The
-second breaching battery, which saw lower down
-the scarp, then commenced its fire; but the iron
-howitzers proved unmeet battering ordnance, and
-the enemy’s musketry being entirely directed on
-this point, because the first battery, to save ammunition,
-had ceased firing, brought down a captain
-and more than twenty gunners. The howitzers
-did not injure the wall, ammunition was scarce,
-and as the enemy could easily cut off the breach
-in the night, the fire ceased.</p>
-
-<p>The 20th at mid-day, colonel Dickson arrived
-with the iron howitzers from Elvas, and the second
-battery being then reinforced with additional pieces,
-revived its fire, against a re-entering angle of the
-convent a little beyond the former breach. The
-wall here was soon broken through, and in an
-instant a huge cantle of the convent, with its roof,
-went to the ground, crushing many of the garrison
-and laying bare the inside of the building: carcasses
-were immediately thrown into the opening, to burn
-the convent, but the enemy undauntedly maintained
-their ground and extinguished the flames. A
-lieutenant and fifteen gunners were lost this day,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_125"></a>[125]</span>
-on the side of the besiegers, and the ammunition
-being nearly gone, the attack was suspended until
-fresh stores could come up from Almeida.</p>
-
-<p>During the progress of this siege, the general
-aspect of affairs had materially changed on both
-sides. Lord Wellington had been deceived as to
-the strength of the forts, and intercepted returns
-of the armies of the south and of Portugal now
-shewed to him, that they also were far stronger
-than he had expected; at the same time he heard
-of Ballesteros’s defeat at Bornos, and of Slade’s
-unfortunate cavalry action of Llera. He had calculated
-that Bonet would not quit the Asturias, and
-that general was in full march for Leon, Caffarelli
-also was preparing to reinforce Marmont, and thus the
-brilliant prospect of the campaign was suddenly
-clouded. But on the other hand Bonet had unexpectedly
-relinquished the Asturias after six days’
-occupation; three thousand Gallicians were in that
-province and in communication with the seventh
-army, and the maritime expedition under Popham
-had sailed for the coast of Biscay.</p>
-
-<p>Neither was the king’s situation agreeable. The
-Partidas intercepted his despatches so surely, that
-it was the 19th ere Marmont’s letter announcing
-Wellington’s advance, and saying that Hill also
-was in march for the north reached Madrid. Soult
-detained Drouet, Suchet refused to send more than
-one brigade towards Madrid, and Caffarelli, disturbed
-that Palombini should march upon the
-capital instead of Burgos, kept back the divisions
-promised to Marmont. Something was however
-gained in vigour, for the king, no longer depending
-upon the assistance of the distant armies, gave
-orders to blow up Mirabete and abandon La Mancha<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_126"></a>[126]</span>
-on one side, and the forts of Somosierra and Buitrago
-on the other, with a view to unite the army of the
-centre.</p>
-
-<p>A detachment of eight hundred men under
-colonel Noizet, employed to destroy Buitrago, was
-attacked on his return by the Empecinado with
-three thousand, but Noizet, an able officer, defeated
-him and reached Madrid with little loss.
-Palombini’s march was then hastened, and imperative
-orders directed Soult to send ten thousand men to
-Toledo. The garrison of Segovia was reinforced
-to preserve one of the communications with
-Marmont, that marshal was informed of Hill’s true
-position, and the king advised him to give battle
-to Wellington, for he supposed the latter to have
-only eighteen thousand English troops; but he had
-twenty-four thousand, and had yet left Hill so
-strong that he desired him to fight Drouet if occasion
-required.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile Marmont, who had remained in person
-at Fuente el Sauco, united there, on the 20th, four
-divisions of infantry and a brigade of cavalry,
-furnishing about twenty-five thousand men of all
-arms, with which he marched to the succour of
-the forts. His approach over an open country was
-descried at a considerable distance, and a brigade
-of the fifth division was immediately called off from
-the siege, the battering train was sent across the
-Tormes, and the army, which was in bivouac on the
-Salamanca side of St. Christoval, formed in order
-of battle on the top. This position of Christoval
-was about four miles long, and rather concave, the
-ascent in front steep, and tangled with hollow roads
-and stone enclosures, belonging to the villages, but
-the summit was broad, even, and covered with ripe<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_127"></a>[127]</span>
-corn; the right was flanked by the Upper Tormes,
-and the left dipped into the country bordering the
-Lower Tormes, for in passing Salamanca, that river
-makes a sweep round the back of the position. The
-infantry, the heavy cavalry, and the guns crowned
-the summit of the mountain, but the light cavalry
-fell back from the front to the low country on the left,
-where there was a small stream and a marshy flat.
-The villages of Villares and Monte Rubio were behind
-the left of the position; the village of Cabrerizos
-marked the extreme right, though the hill still
-trended up the river. The villages of Christoval,
-Castillanos, and Moresco, were nearly in a line,
-along the foot of the heights in front, the last was
-somewhat within the allies’ ground, and nothing
-could be stronger than the position, which completely
-commanded all the country for many miles;
-but the heat was excessive and there was neither
-shade, nor fuel to cook with, nor water nearer than
-the Tormes.</p>
-
-<p>About five o’clock in the evening the enemy’s
-horsemen approached, pointing towards the left of
-the position, as if to turn it by the Lower Tormes,
-whereupon the British light cavalry made a short
-forward movement and a partial charge took place;
-but the French opened six guns, and the British
-retired to their own ground near Monte Rubio and
-Villares. The light division which was held in
-reserve, immediately closed towards the left of the
-position until the French cavalry halted and then<span class="sidenote9">See <a href="#i_b_581fp_3">Plan, No. 3.</a></span>
-returned to the centre. Meanwhile the main body
-of the enemy bore, in one dark volume, against
-the right, and halting at the very foot of the position,
-sent a flight of shells on to the lofty summit;
-nor did this fire cease until after dark, when the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_128"></a>[128]</span>
-French general, after driving back all the outposts,
-obtained possession of Moresco, and established
-himself behind that village and Castellanos within
-gun-shot of the allies.</p>
-
-<p>The English general slept that night on the
-ground, amongst the troops, and at the first streak
-of light the armies were again under arms. Nevertheless,
-though some signals were interchanged
-between Marmont and the forts, both sides were
-quiet until towards evening, when Wellington
-detached the sixty-eighth regiment from the line, to
-drive the French from Moresco. This attack, made
-with vigour, succeeded, but the troops being recalled
-just as day-light failed, a body of French coming
-unperceived through the standing corn, broke into
-the village as the British were collecting their
-posts from the different avenues, and did considerable
-execution. In the skirmish an officer of the
-sixty-eighth, named Mackay, being suddenly surrounded,
-refused to surrender, and singly fighting
-against a multitude, received more wounds than
-the human frame was thought capable of sustaining,
-yet he still lives to shew his honourable scars.</p>
-
-<p>On the 22d three divisions, and a brigade of
-cavalry joined Marmont, who having now nearly
-forty thousand men in hand, extended his left and
-seized a part of the height in advance of the allies’
-right wing, from whence he could discern the
-whole of their order of battle, and attack their
-right on even terms. However general Graham
-advancing with the seventh division dislodged this
-French detachment with a sharp skirmish before it
-could be formidably reinforced, and that night
-Marmont withdrew from his dangerous position to
-some heights about six miles in his rear.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_129"></a>[129]</span></p>
-
-<p>It was thought that the French general’s tempestuous
-advance to Moresco with such an inferior
-force, on the evening of the 20th, should
-have been his ruin. Lord Wellington saw clearly
-enough the false position of his enemy, but he
-argued, that if Marmont came up to fight, it was
-better to defend a very strong position, than to
-descend and combat in the plain, seeing that the
-inferiority of force was not such as to insure the
-result of the battle being decisive of the campaign;
-and in case of failure, a retreat across the Tormes
-would have been very difficult. To this may be
-added, that during the first evening there was some
-confusion amongst the allies, before the troops of
-the different nations could form their order of battle.
-Moreover, as the descent of the mountain towards
-the enemy was by no means easy, because of the
-walls and avenues, and the two villages, which
-covered the French front, it is probable that
-Marmont, who had plenty of guns and whose
-troops were in perfect order and extremely ready
-of movement, could have evaded the action, until
-night. This reasoning, however, will not hold
-good on the 21st. The allies, whose infantry
-was a third more and their cavalry three times
-as numerous and much better mounted than the
-French, might have been poured down by all the
-roads passing over the position at day-break; then
-Marmont turned on both flanks and followed vehemently,
-could never have made his retreat to
-the Douro through the open country; but on the
-22d, when the French general had received his
-other divisions, the chances were no longer the
-same.</p>
-
-<p>Marmont’s new position was skilfully chosen;<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_130"></a>[130]</span>
-one flank rested on Cabeza Vellosa, the other at Huerta,
-the centre was at Aldea Rubia. He thus refused<span class="sidenote9">See <a href="#i_b_581fp_3">Plan, No. 3.</a></span>
-his right and abandoned the road of Toro to the
-allies, but he covered the road of Tordesillas, and
-commanded the fort of Huerta with his left; and
-he could in a moment pass the Tormes, and operate
-by the left bank to communicate with the forts.
-Wellington made corresponding dispositions, closing
-up his left towards Moresco, and pushing the light
-division along the salient part of his position to Aldea
-Lengua, where it overhung a ford, which was however
-scarcely practicable at this period. General
-Graham with two divisions was placed at the fords
-of Santa Marta, and the heavy German cavalry
-under general Bock crossed the Tormes to watch
-the ford of Huerta. By this disposition the allies
-covered Salamanca, and could operate on either
-side of the Tormes on a shorter line than the
-French could operate.</p>
-
-<p>The 23d the two armies again remained tranquil,
-but at break of day on the 24th some dropping
-pistol-shots, and now and then a shout, came
-faintly from the mist which covered the lower
-ground beyond the river; the heavy sound of
-artillery succeeded, and the hissing of the bullets
-as they cut through the thickened atmosphere,
-plainly told that the French were over the Tormes.
-After a time the fog cleared up, and the German
-horsemen were seen in close and beautiful order,
-retiring before twelve thousand French infantry,
-who in battle array were marching steadily onwards.
-At intervals, twenty guns, ranged in front,
-would start forwards and send their bullets whistling
-and tearing up the ground beneath the Germans,
-while scattered parties of light cavalry, scouting<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_131"></a>[131]</span>
-out, capped all the hills in succession, and peering
-abroad, gave signals to the main body. Wellington
-immediately sent Graham across the river
-by the fords of Santa Marta with the first and seventh
-divisions and Le Marchant’s brigade of English
-cavalry; then concentrating the rest of the army
-between Cabrerizos and Moresco, he awaited the
-progress of Marmont’s operation.</p>
-
-<p>Bock continued his retreat in the same fine and
-equable order, regardless alike of the cannonade
-and of the light horsemen on his flanks, until the
-enemy’s scouts had gained a height above Calvarisa
-Abaxo, from whence, at the distance of three miles,
-they for the first time, perceived Graham’s twelve
-thousand men, and eighteen guns, ranged on an
-order of battle, perpendicular to the Tormes.
-From the same point also Wellington’s heavy
-columns were to be seen, clustering on the height
-above the fords of Santa Marta, and the light
-division was descried at Aldea Lengua, ready
-either to advance against the French troops left
-on the position of Aldea Rubia, or to pass the river
-to the aid of Graham. This apparition made the
-French general aware of his error, whereupon hastily
-facing about, and repassing the Tormes he
-resumed his former ground.</p>
-
-<p>Wellington’s defensive dispositions on this occasion
-were very skilful, but it would appear that
-unwilling to stir before the forts fell, he had again
-refused the advantage of the moment; for it is not to
-be supposed that he misjudged the occasion, since the
-whole theatre of operation was distinctly seen from
-St. Christoval, and he had passed many hours in earnest
-observation; his faculties were indeed so fresh
-and vigorous, that after the day’s work he wrote a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_132"></a>[132]</span>
-detailed memoir upon the proposal for establishing
-a bank in Portugal, treating that and other financial
-schemes in all their bearings, with a master hand.
-Against the weight of his authority, therefore, any
-criticism must be advanced.</p>
-
-<p>Marmont had the easiest passage over the Tormes,
-namely, that by the ford of Huerta; the allies had
-the greatest number of passages and the shortest
-line of operations. Hence if Graham had been
-ordered vigorously to attack the French troops on
-the left bank, they must have been driven upon
-the single ford of Huerta, if not reinforced from
-the heights of Aldea Rubia. But the allies could<span class="sidenote9">See <a href="#i_b_581fp_2">Plan, No. 2.</a></span>
-also have been reinforced by the fords of Santa
-Marta and those of Cabrerizos, and even by that
-of Aldea Lengua, although it was not good at
-this early season. A partial victory would then
-have been achieved, or a general battle would have
-been brought on, when the French troops would
-have been disadvantageously cooped up in the
-loop of the Tormes and without means of escaping
-if defeated. Again, it is not easy to see how the
-French general could have avoided a serious defeat
-if Wellington had moved with all the troops on
-the right bank, against the divisions left on the hill
-of Aldea Rubia; for the French army would then
-have been separated, one part on the hither, one on
-the further bank of the Tormes. It was said at the
-time that Marmont hoped to draw the whole
-of the allies across the river, when he would
-have seized the position of Christoval, raised the
-siege and maintained the line of the Tormes. It may
-however be doubted that he expected Wellington
-to commit so gross an error. It is more likely that
-holding his own army to be the quickest of movement,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_133"></a>[133]</span>
-his object was to separate the allies’ force
-in the hopes of gaining some partial advantage to
-enable him to communicate with his forts, which
-were now in great danger.</p>
-
-<p>When the French retired to the heights at Aldea
-Rubia on the night of the 23d, the heavy guns
-had been already brought to the right of the Tormes,
-and a third battery, to breach San Cajetano, was
-armed with four pieces, but the line of fire being
-oblique, the practice, at four hundred and fifty
-yards, only beat down the parapet and knocked
-away the palisades. Time was however of vital
-importance, the escalade of that fort and La Merced
-was ordered, and the attack commenced at ten
-o’clock, but in half an hour failed with a loss
-of one hundred and twenty men and officers. The
-wounded were brought off the next day under
-truce and the enemy had all the credit of the fight,
-yet the death of general Bowes must ever be admired.
-That gallant man, whose rank might have
-excused his leading so small a force, being wounded
-early, was having his hurt dressed when he heard
-that the troops were yielding, and returning to the
-combat fell.</p>
-
-<p>The siege was now perforce suspended for want
-of ammunition, and the guns were sent across the
-river, but were immediately brought back in consequence
-of Marmont having crossed to the left
-bank. Certain works were meanwhile pushed forward
-to cut off the communication between the
-forts and otherwise to straiten them, and the miner
-was attached to the cliff on which La Merced stood.
-The final success was not however influenced by
-these operations, and they need no further notice.</p>
-
-<p>The 26th ammunition arrived from Almeida, the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_134"></a>[134]</span>
-second and third batteries were re-armed, the field-pieces
-were again placed in the convent of San
-Bernardo, and the iron howitzers, throwing hot
-shot, set the convent of San Vincente on fire in
-several places. The garrison again extinguished
-the flames, and this balanced combat continued
-during the night, but on the morning of the 27th
-the fire of both batteries being redoubled, the
-convent of San Vincente was in a blaze, the breach
-of San Cajetano was improved, a fresh storming
-party assembled, and the white flag waved from
-Cajetano. A negociation ensued, but lord Wellington,
-judging it an artifice to gain time, gave orders for
-the assault; then the forts fell, for San Cajetano
-scarcely fired a shot, and the flames raged so
-violently at San Vincente that no opposition could
-be made.</p>
-
-<p>Seven hundred prisoners, thirty pieces of artillery,
-provisions, arms, and clothing, and a secure
-passage over the Tormes, were the immediate fruits
-of this capture, which was not the less prized, that
-the breaches were found to be more formidable
-than those at Ciudad Rodrigo. The success of a
-storm would have been very doubtful if the garrison
-could have gained time to extinguish the flames in
-the convent of San Vincente, and as it was the allies
-had ninety killed; their whole loss since the passage
-of the Tormes was nearly five hundred men and
-officers, of which one hundred and sixty men with
-fifty horses, fell outside Salamanca, the rest in the
-siege.</p>
-
-<p>Marmont had allotted fifteen days as the term
-of resistance for these forts, but from the facility
-with which San Vincente caught fire, five would
-have been too many if ammunition had not failed.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_135"></a>[135]</span>
-His calculation was therefore false. He would
-however have fought on the 23d, when his force
-was united, had he not on the 22d received intelligence
-from Caffarelli, that a powerful body of
-infantry, with twenty-two guns and all the cavalry
-of the north, were actually in march to join him.
-It was this which induced him to occupy the
-heights of Villa Rubia, on that day, to avoid a<span class="sidenote">Confidential official reports, obtained from the French War-office, MSS.</span>
-premature action, but on the evening of the 26th
-the signals, from the forts, having indicated that
-they could still hold out three days, Marmont, from
-fresh intelligence, no longer expected Caffarelli’s
-troops, and resolved to give battle on the 28th.
-The fall of the forts, which was made known to
-him on the evening of the 27th, changed this determination,
-the reasons for fighting on such disadvantageous
-ground no longer existed, and hence,
-withdrawing his garrison from the castle of Alba
-de Tormes, he retreated during the night towards
-the Duero, by the roads of Tordesillas and Toro.</p>
-
-<p>Wellington ordered the works both at Alba and
-the forts of Salamanca to be destroyed, and following
-the enemy by easy marches, encamped on the
-Guarena the 30th. The next day he reached
-the Trabancos, his advanced guard being at Nava
-del Rey. On the 2d he passed the Zapardiel in
-two columns, the right marching by Medina del
-Campo, the left following the advanced guard
-towards Rueda. From this place the French rear-guard
-was cannonaded and driven upon the main
-body, which was filing over the bridge of Tordesillas.
-Some were killed and some made prisoners, not
-many, but there was great confusion, and a heavy
-disaster would have befallen the French if the
-English general had not been deceived by false<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_136"></a>[136]</span>
-information, that they had broken the bridge the
-night before. For as he knew by intercepted
-letters that Marmont intended to take a position
-near Tordesillas, this report made him suppose
-the enemy was already over the Duero, and hence
-he had spread his troops, and was not in sufficient
-force to attack during the passage of the river.</p>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote7">July.</span>
-Marmont, who had fortified posts at Zamora and<span class="sidenote9">See <a href="#i_b_581fp_3">Plan, No. 3.</a></span>
-Toro, and had broken the bridges at those places
-and at Puente Duero and Tudela, preserving only
-that of Tordesillas, now took a position on the
-right of the Duero. His left was at Simancas
-on the Pisuerga, which was unfordable, and the
-bridges at that place and Valladolid, were commanded
-by fortified posts. His centre was at
-Tordesillas, and very numerous, and his right was
-on some heights opposite to Pollos. Wellington
-indeed caused the third division to seize the ford
-at the last place which gave him a command of
-the river, because there was a plain between it
-and the enemy’s heights, but the ford itself was
-difficult and insufficient for passing the whole army.
-Head-quarters were therefore fixed at Rueda, and
-the forces were disposed in a compact form, the
-head placed in opposition to the ford of Pollos
-and the bridge of Tordesillas, the rear occupying
-Medina del Campo and other points on the Zapardiel
-and Trabancos rivers, ready to oppose the
-enemy if he should break out from the Valladolid
-side. Marmont’s line of defence, measured from
-Valladolid to Zamora, was sixty miles; from Simancas
-to Toro above thirty, but the actual line of occupation
-was not above twelve; the bend of the river
-gave him the chord, the allies the arc, and the
-fords were few and difficult. The advantage was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_137"></a>[137]</span>
-therefore on the side of the enemy, but to understand
-the true position of the contending generals
-it is necessary to know the secondary coincident
-operations.</p>
-
-<p>While the armies were in presence at Salamanca,
-Silveira had filed up the Duero, to the Esla river,
-menacing the French communications with Benavente.
-D’Urban’s horsemen had passed the Duero
-below Zamora on the 25th and cut off all intercourse
-between the French army and that place; but when
-Marmont fell back from Aldea Rubia, D’Urban recrossed
-the Duero at Fresno de la Ribera to avoid
-being crushed, yet immediately afterwards advanced
-beyond Toro to Castromonte, behind the right wing
-of the enemy’s new position. It was part of Wellington’s
-plan, that Castaños, after establishing the
-siege of Astorga, should come down by Benavente
-with the remainder of his army, and place himself in
-communication with Silveira. This operation, without
-disarranging the siege of Astorga, would have
-placed twelve or fifteen thousand men, infantry,
-cavalry, and artillery, behind the Esla, and with
-secure lines of retreat; consequently able to check
-all the enemy’s foraging parties, and reduce him
-to live upon his fixed magazines, which were
-scanty. The usual Spanish procrastination defeated
-this plan.</p>
-
-<p>Castaños, by the help of the succours received
-from England, had assembled fifteen thousand men
-at Ponteferada, under the command of Santocildes,
-but he pretended that he had no battering guns
-until sir Howard Douglas actually pointed them
-out in the arsenal of Ferrol, and shewed him how
-to convey them to the frontier. Then Santocildes
-moved, though slowly, and when Bonet’s retreat<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_138"></a>[138]</span>
-from the Asturias was known, eleven thousand men
-invested Astorga, and four thousand others marched
-to Benavente, but not until Marmont had called
-his detachment in from that place. The Spanish
-battering train only reached Villa Franca del Bierzo
-on the 1st of July. However the Guerilla chief,
-Marquinez, appeared about Palencia, and the other
-Partidas of Castile acting on a line from Leon to
-Segovia, intercepted Marmont’s correspondence with
-the king. Thus the immense tract called the
-<em>Campo de Tierras</em> was secured for the subsistence
-of the Gallician army; and to the surprise of the
-allies, who had so often heard of the enemy’s
-terrible devastations that they expected to find
-Castile a desert, those vast plains, and undulating
-hills, were covered with ripe corn or fruitful vines,
-and the villages bore few marks of the ravages
-of war.</p>
-
-<p>While the main body of the Gallicians was still
-at Ponte Ferrada, a separate division had passed
-along the coast road into the Asturias, and in concert
-with part of the seventh army had harassed
-Bonet’s retreat from that kingdom; the French
-general indeed forced his way by the eastern passes,
-and taking post the 30th of June at Reynosa and
-Aguilar del Campo, chased the neighbouring bands
-away, but this movement was one of the great
-errors of the campaign. Napoleon and Wellington<span class="sidenote">King’s papers captured at Vittoria, MSS.</span>
-felt alike the importance of holding the Asturias at
-this period. The one had ordered that they should
-be retained, the other had calculated that such<span class="sidenote">Wellington’s despatches, MSS.</span>
-would be the case, and the judgment of both was
-quickly made manifest. For the Gallicians, who
-would not have dared to quit the Bierzo if Bonet
-had menaced their province by Lugo, or by the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_139"></a>[139]</span>
-shore line, invested Astorga the moment he quitted
-the Asturias. And the Partidas of the north, who
-had been completely depressed by Mina’s defeat,
-recovering courage, now moved towards the coast,
-where Popham’s expedition, which had sailed on
-the 18th of June from Coruña, soon appeared, a
-formidable spectacle, for there were five sail of the
-line, with many frigates and brigs, in all twenty
-ships of war.</p>
-
-<p>The port of Lesquito was immediately attacked
-<ins class="corr" id="tn-139" title="Transcriber’s Note—Original text: 'on the sea-bord'">
-on the sea-board</ins> by this squadron, on the land side by
-the Pastor, and when captain Bouverie got a gun up
-to breach the convent the Spanish chief assaulted
-but was repulsed; however the garrison, two hundred
-and fifty strong, surrendered to the squadron the 22d,
-and on the two following days Bermeo and Plencia
-fell. The Partidas failed to appear at Guetaria, but
-Castro and Portagalete, in the Bilbao river, were
-attacked the 6th of July, in concert with Longa, and
-though the latter was rebuffed at Bilbao the squadron
-took Castro. The enemy recovered some of
-their posts on the 10th, and on the 19th the attempt
-on Guetaria being renewed, Mina and Pastor
-came down to co-operate, but a French column
-beat those chiefs, and drove the British seamen
-to their vessels, with the loss of thirty men and
-two guns.</p>
-
-<p>It was the opinion of general Carrol who accompanied
-this expedition, that the plan of operations
-was ill-arranged, but the local successes merit no
-attention, the great object of distracting the enemy
-was obtained. Caffarelli heard at one and the same
-time, that Palombini’s division had been called to
-Madrid; that Bonet had abandoned the Asturias;
-that a Gallician division had entered that province;<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_140"></a>[140]</span>
-that a powerful English fleet, containing troops,
-was on the coast, and acting in concert with all the
-Partidas of the north; that the seventh army was
-menacing Burgos, and that the whole country was
-in commotion. Trembling for his own districts he
-instantly arrested the march of the divisions destined
-for Marmont; and although the king, who saw
-very clearly the real object of the maritime expedition,
-reiterated the orders to march upon Segovia or
-Cuellar, with a view to reinforce either the army of
-the centre or the army of Portugal, Caffarelli delayed
-obedience until the 13th of July, and then
-sent but eighteen hundred cavalry, with twenty
-guns.</p>
-
-<p>Thus Bonet’s movement which only brought a
-reinforcement of six thousand infantry to Marmont,
-kept away Caffarelli’s reserves, which were twelve
-thousand of all arms, uncovered the whole of the
-great French line of communication, and caused the
-siege of Astorga to be commenced. And while Bonet
-was in march by Palencia and Valladolid to the
-position of Tordesillas, the king heard of Marmont’s
-retreat from the Tormes, and that an English column
-menaced Arevalo; wherefore not being ready to move
-with the army of the centre, and fearing for Avila,
-he withdrew the garrison from that place, and thus
-lost his direct line of correspondence with the army
-of Portugal, because Segovia was environed by the
-Partidas. In this state of affairs neither Wellington
-nor Marmont had reason to fight upon the
-Duero. The latter because his position was so
-strong he could safely wait for Bonet’s and Caffarelli’s
-troops, and meanwhile the king could operate against
-the allies’ communications. The former because he
-could not attack the French, except at great disadvantage;<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_141"></a>[141]</span>
-for the fords of the Duero were little
-known, and that of Pollos was very deep. To pass
-the river there, and form within gun-shot of the
-enemy’s left, without other combinations, promised
-nothing but defeat, and the staff officers, sent to
-examine the course of the river, reported that the
-advantage of ground was entirely on the enemy’s
-side, except at Castro Nuño, half-way between
-Pollos and Toro.</p>
-
-<p>While the enemy commanded the bridge at Tordesillas,
-no attempt to force the passage of the river
-could be safe, seeing that Marmont might fall on
-the allies’ front and rear if the operation was within
-his reach; and if beyond his reach, that is to say
-near Zamora, he could cut their communication
-with Ciudad Rodrigo and yet preserve his own with
-Caffarelli and with the king. Wellington therefore
-resolved to wait until the fords should become lower,
-or the combined operations of the Gallicians and
-Partidas, should oblige the enemy, either to detach
-men, or to dislodge altogether for want of provisions.
-In this view he urged Santocildes to press
-the siege of Astorga vigorously and to send every
-man he could spare down the Esla; and an intercepted
-letter gave hopes that Astorga would surrender
-on the 7th, yet this seems to have been a
-device to keep the Gallicians in that quarter for it
-was in no danger. Santocildes, expecting its fall,
-would not detach men, but the vicinity of D’Urban’s
-cavalry, which remained at Castromonte, so incommoded
-the French right, that Foy marched to drive
-them beyond the Esla. General Pakenham however
-crossed the ford of Pollos, with some of the
-third division, which quickly brought Foy back, and
-Marmont then endeavoured to augment the number<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_142"></a>[142]</span>
-and efficiency of his cavalry, by taking a thousand
-horses from the infantry officers and the sutlers.</p>
-
-<p>On the 8th Bonet arrived, and the French marshal
-immediately extending his right to Toro, commenced
-repairing the bridge there. Wellington, in
-like manner, stretched his left to the Guarena, yet
-kept his centre still on the Trabancos, and his right
-at Rueda, with posts near Tordesillas and the ford
-of Pollos. In this situation the armies remained for
-some days. Generals Graham and Picton went to
-England in bad health, and the principal powder
-magazine at Salamanca exploded with hurt to
-many, but no other events worth recording occurred.
-The weather was very fine, the country rich, and
-the troops received their rations regularly; wine
-was so plentiful, that it was hard to keep the soldiers
-sober; the caves of Rueda, either natural or
-cut in the rock below the surface of the earth, were
-so immense and so well stocked, that the drunkards
-of two armies failed to make any very sensible
-diminution in the quantity. Many men of both
-sides perished in that labyrinth, and on both sides
-also, the soldiers, passing the Duero in groups, held
-amicable intercourse, conversing of the battles that
-were yet to be fought; the camps on the banks of
-the Duero seemed at times to belong to one army,
-so difficult is it to make brave men hate each other.</p>
-
-<p>To the officers of the allies all looked prosperous,
-their only anxiety was to receive the signal of
-battle, their only discontent, that it was delayed;
-and many amongst them murmured that the French
-had been permitted to retreat from Christoval. Had
-Wellington been finally forced back to Portugal his
-reputation would have been grievously assailed by
-his own people, for the majority, peering through<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_143"></a>[143]</span>
-their misty politics, saw Paris in dim perspective,
-and overlooked the enormous French armies that
-were close at hand. Meanwhile their general’s
-mind was filled with care and mortification, and all
-cross and evil circumstances seemed to combine
-against him.</p>
-
-<p>The mediation for the Spanish colonies had just
-failed at Cadiz, under such circumstances, as left
-no doubt that the English influence was powerless
-and the French influence visibly increasing in the
-Cortez. Soult had twenty-seven gun-boats in the
-Trocadero canal, shells were cast day and night into
-the city, and the people were alarmed; two thousand
-French had marched from Santa Mary to
-Seville, apparently to reinforce Drouet in Estremadura;
-Echevaria had effected nothing in the kingdom
-of Cordoba, and a French division was assembling
-at Bornos, to attack Ballesteros, whose
-rashness, inviting destruction, might alone put an
-end to the campaign in Leon and bring Wellington
-back to the Tagus. In the north of Spain also
-affairs appeared equally gloomy, Mina’s defeats,
-and their influence upon the other Partidas, were
-positively known, but the effect of Popham’s operations
-was unknown, or at least doubtful. Bonet’s
-division had certainly arrived, and the Gallicians
-who had done nothing at Astorga were already in
-want of ammunition. In Castile the activity of the
-Partidas instead of increasing, had diminished after
-Wellington crossed the Tormes, and the chiefs
-seemed inclined to leave the burthen of the war entirely
-to their allies. Nor was this feeling confined
-to them. It had been arranged, that new corps,
-especially of cavalry, should be raised, as the enemy
-receded in this campaign, and the necessary clothing<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_144"></a>[144]</span>
-and equipments, supplied by England, were placed
-at the disposal of lord Wellington, who to avoid the
-burthen of carriage had directed them to Coruña;
-yet now, when Leon and the Asturias were in a
-manner recovered, no man would serve voluntarily.
-There was great enthusiasm, in words, there had
-always been so, but the fighting men were not increased,
-and even the <i lang="es" xml:lang="es">juramentados</i>, many of whom
-deserted at this time from the king, well clothed
-and soldier-like men, refused to enter the English
-ranks.</p>
-
-<p>Now also came the news that lord William Bentinck’s
-plans were altered, and the intercepted despatches
-shewed that the king had again ordered
-Drouet to pass the Tagus, but Soult’s resistance to
-this order was not known. Wellington therefore at
-the same moment, saw Marmont’s army increase,
-heard that the king’s army, reinforced by Drouet,
-was on the point of taking the field; that the troops
-from Sicily, upon whose operations he depended to
-keep all the army of Aragon in the eastern part of
-Spain, and even to turn the king’s attention that
-way, were to be sent to Italy; and that two millions
-of dollars, which he hoped to have obtained at
-Gibraltar, had been swept off by lord William Bentinck
-for this Italian expedition, which thus at once
-deprived him of men and money! The latter was
-the most serious blow, the promised remittances
-from England had not arrived, and as the insufficiency
-of land-carriage rendered it nearly impossible
-to feed the army even on the Duero, to venture
-further into Spain without money would be akin to
-madness. From Gallicia, where no credit was
-given, came the supply of meat, a stoppage there
-would have made the war itself stop, and no greater<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_145"></a>[145]</span>
-error had been committed by the enemy, than delaying
-to conquer Gallicia, which could many times
-have been done.</p>
-
-<p>To meet the increasing exigences for money, the
-English general had, for one resource, obtained a
-credit of half a million from the Treasury to answer
-certain certificates, or notes of hand, which his
-Spanish correspondents promised to get cashed; but
-of this resource he was now suddenly deprived by
-the English ministers, who objected to the irregular
-form of the certificates, because he, with his usual
-sagacity, had adapted them to the habits of the
-people he was to deal with. Meanwhile his troops
-were four, his staff six, his muleteers nearly twelve
-months in arrears of pay, and he was in debt every
-where, and for every thing. The Portuguese
-government had become very clamorous for the
-subsidy, Mr. Stuart acknowledged that their distress
-was very great, and the desertion from the Portuguese
-army, which augmented in an alarming manner,
-and seemed rather to be increased than repressed
-by severity, sufficiently proved their misery.
-The personal resources of Wellington alone enabled
-the army to maintain its forward position, for he
-had, to a certain extent, carried his commercial speculations
-into Gallicia, as well as Portugal; and he
-had persuaded the Spanish authorities in Castile to
-give up a part of their revenue in kind to the army,
-receiving bills on the British embassy at Cadiz in
-return. But the situation of affairs may be best
-learned from the mouths of the generals.</p>
-
-<p>“The arrears of the army are certainly getting
-to an alarming pitch, and if it is suffered to increase,
-we cannot go on: we have only here two brigades
-of infantry, fed by our own commissariat, and we<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_146"></a>[146]</span>
-are now reduced to one of them having barely bread
-for this day, and the commissary has not a farthing
-of money. I know not how we shall get on!”</p>
-
-<p>Such were Beresford’s words on the 8th of July,
-and on the 15th Wellington wrote even more forcibly.</p>
-
-<p>“I have never,” said he, “been in such distress
-as at present, and some serious misfortune must
-happen, if the government do not attend seriously
-to the subject, and supply us regularly with money.
-The arrears and distresses of the Portuguse government,
-are a joke to ours, and if our credit was not
-better than theirs, we should certainly starve. As
-it is, if we don’t find means to pay our bills for
-butcher’s meat there will be an end to the war at
-once.”</p>
-
-<p>Thus stript as it were to the skin, the English
-general thought once more to hide his nakedness in
-the mountains of Portugal, when Marmont, proud
-of his own unripened skill, and perhaps, from the
-experience of San Cristoval, undervaluing his adversary’s
-tactics, desirous also, it was said, to gain
-a victory without the presence of a king, Marmont,
-pushed on by fate, madly broke the chain which
-restrained his enemy’s strength.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_147"></a>[147]</span><br /></p>
-
-<h3 id="CHAPTER_BXVIII_III">CHAPTER III.</h3>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="sidenote7">1812. July.</span>
-When Wellington found by the intercepted letters,
-that the king’s orders for Drouet to cross the Tagus,
-were reiterated, and imperative, he directed Hill to
-detach troops, in the same proportion. And as this
-reinforcement, coming by the way of Alcantara,
-could reach the Duero as soon as Drouet could
-reach Madrid, he hoped still to maintain the Tormes,
-if not the Duero, notwithstanding the king’s power;
-for some money, long expected from England, had
-at last arrived in Oporto, and he thought the Gallicians,
-maugre their inertness, must soon be felt by
-the enemy. Moreover the harvest on the ground,
-however abundant, could not long feed the French
-multitudes, if Drouet and the king should together
-join Marmont. Nevertheless, fearing the action of
-Joseph’s cavalry, he ordered D’Urban’s horsemen to
-join the army on the Duero. But to understand the
-remarkable movements which were now about to commence,
-the reader must bear in mind, that the French
-army, from its peculiar organization, could, while the
-ground harvest lasted, operate without any regard
-to lines of communication; it had supports on all
-sides and procured its food every where, for the
-troops were taught to reap the standing corn, and
-grind it themselves if their cavalry could not seize
-flour in the villages. This organization approaching
-the ancient Roman military perfection, gave them<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_148"></a>[148]</span>
-great advantages; in the field it baffled the irregular,
-and threw the regular force of the allies,
-entirely upon the defensive; because when the
-flanks were turned, a retreat only could save the
-communications, and the French offered no point,
-for retaliation in kind. Wherefore, with a force
-composed of four different nations, Wellington was
-to execute the most difficult evolutions, in an open
-country, his chances of success being to arise only
-from the casual errors of his adversary, who was an
-able general, who knew the country perfectly, and
-was at the head of an army, brave, excellently disciplined,
-and of one nation. The game would have
-been quite unequal if the English general had not
-been so strong in cavalry.</p>
-
-
-<h4>FRENCH PASSAGE OF THE DUERO.</h4>
-
-<p>In the course of the 15th and 16th Marmont,
-who had previously made several deceptive movements,
-concentrated his beautiful and gallant army
-between Toro and the Hornija river; and intercepted
-letters, the reports of deserters, and the talk
-of the peasants had for several days assigned the
-former place as his point of passage. On the morning
-of the 16th the English exploring officers, passing
-the Duero near Tordesillas, found only the
-garrison there, and in the evening the reports
-stated, that two French divisions had already
-passed the repaired bridge of Toro. Wellington
-united his centre and left at Canizal on the Guarena
-during the night, intending to attack those
-who had passed at Toro; but as he had still some
-doubts of the enemy’s real object, he caused sir
-Stapleton Cotton to halt on the Trabancos with the
-right wing, composed of the fourth and light divisions<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_149"></a>[149]</span>
-and Anson’s cavalry. Meanwhile Marmont,
-recalling his troops from the left bank of the Duero,
-returned to Tordesillas and Pollos, passed that river
-at those points and occupied Nava del Rey, where
-his whole army was concentrated in the evening of
-the 17th, some of his divisions having marched
-above forty miles, and some above fifty miles, without
-a halt. The English cavalry posts being thus
-driven over the Trabancos, advice of the enemy’s
-movement was sent to lord Wellington, but he was
-then near Toro, it was midnight ere it reached
-him, and the troops, under Cotton, remained near
-Castrejon behind the Trabancos during the night<span class="sidenote">See <a href="#i_b_581fp_3">plan No. 3.</a></span>
-of the 17th without orders, exposed, in a bad
-position, to the attack of the whole French army.
-Wellington hastened to their aid in person, and he
-ordered Bock’s, Le Marchant’s, and Alten’s brigades
-of cavalry, to follow him to Alaejos, and the fifth
-division to take post at Torrecilla de la Orden six
-miles in rear of Castrejon.</p>
-
-<p>At day-break Cotton’s outposts were again driven
-in by the enemy, and the bulk of his cavalry with a
-troop of horse artillery immediately formed in front
-of the two infantry divisions, which were drawn up,
-the fourth division on the left, the light division on
-the right, but at a considerable distance from each
-other and separated by a wide ravine. The country
-was open and hilly, like the downs of England, with
-here and there water-gulleys, dry hollows, and bold
-naked heads of land, and behind the most prominent
-of these last, on the other side of the Trabancos, lay
-the whole French army. Cotton however, seeing
-only horsemen, pushed his cavalry again towards the
-river, advancing cautiously by his right along some
-high table-land, and his troops were soon lost to the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_150"></a>[150]</span>
-view of the infantry, for the morning fog was thick
-on the stream, and at first nothing could be descried
-beyond. But very soon the deep tones of artillery
-shook the ground, the sharp ring of musketry was
-heard in the mist, and the forty-third regiment was
-hastily brought through Castrejon to support the
-advancing cavalry; for besides the ravine which
-separated the fourth from the light division, there
-was another ravine with a marshy bottom, between
-the cavalry and infantry, and the village of
-Castrejon was the only good point of passage.</p>
-
-<p>The cannonade now became heavy, and the spectacle
-surprisingly beautiful, for the lighter smoke
-and mist, curling up in fantastic pillars, formed a
-huge and glittering dome tinged of many colours
-by the rising sun; and through the grosser vapour
-below, the restless horsemen were seen or lost as
-the fume thickened from the rapid play of the
-artillery, while the bluff head of land, beyond the
-Trabancos, covered with French troops, appeared,
-by an optical deception close at hand, dilated to
-the size of a mountain, and crowned with gigantic
-soldiers, who were continually breaking off and
-sliding down into the fight. Suddenly a dismounted
-cavalry officer stalked from the midst of
-the smoke towards the line of infantry; his gait
-was peculiarly rigid, and he appeared to hold a
-bloody handkerchief to his heart, but that which
-seemed a cloth, was a broad and dreadful wound;
-a bullet had entirely effaced the flesh from his left
-shoulder and from his breast, and had carried away
-part of his ribs, his heart was bared, and its movement
-plainly discerned. It was a piteous and yet
-a noble sight, for his countenance though ghastly
-was firm, his step scarcely indicated weakness, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_151"></a>[151]</span>
-his voice never faltered. This unyielding man’s
-name was Williams; he died a short distance from
-the field of battle, and it was said, in the arms
-of his son, a youth of fourteen, who had followed
-his father to the Peninsula in hopes of obtaining a
-commission, for they were not in affluent circumstances.</p>
-
-<p>General Cotton maintained this exposed position
-with skill and resolution, from day-light until seven
-o’clock, at which time Wellington arrived, in company
-with Beresford, and proceeded to examine the
-enemy’s movements. The time was critical, and
-the two English generals were like to have been
-slain together by a body of French cavalry, not very
-numerous, which breaking away from the multitude
-on the head of land beyond the Trabancos, came
-galloping at full speed across the valley. It was
-for a moment thought they were deserting, but
-with headlong course they mounted the table-land
-on which Cotton’s left wing was posted, and drove
-a whole line of British cavalry skirmishers back in
-confusion. The reserves indeed soon came up from
-Alaejos, and these furious swordsmen being scattered
-in all directions were in turn driven away or cut
-down, but meanwhile thirty or forty, led by a noble
-officer, had brought up their right shoulders, and
-came over the edge of the table-land above the hollow
-which separated the British wings at the instant
-when Wellington and Beresford arrived on the same
-slope. There were some infantry picquets in the
-bottom, and higher up, near the French, were two
-guns covered by a squadron of light cavalry which
-was disposed in perfect order. When the French
-officer saw this squadron, he reined in his horse
-with difficulty, and his troopers gathered in a confused<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_152"></a>[152]</span>
-body round him as if to retreat. They
-seemed lost men, for the British instantly charged,
-but with a shout the gallant fellows soused down
-upon the squadron, and the latter turning, galloped
-through the guns; then the whole mass,
-friends and enemies, went like a whirlwind to the
-bottom, carrying away lord Wellington, and the other
-generals, who with drawn swords and some difficulty,
-got clear of the tumult. The French horsemen were
-now quite exhausted, and a reserve squadron of
-heavy dragoons coming in cut most of them to
-pieces; yet their invincible leader, assaulted by three
-enemies at once, struck one dead from his horse, and
-with surprising exertions saved himself from the
-others, though they rode hewing at him on each
-side for a quarter of a mile.</p>
-
-<p>While this charge was being executed, Marmont,
-who had ascertained that a part only of Wellington’s
-army was before him, crossed the Trabancos
-in two columns, and passing by Alaejos,
-turned the left of the allies, marching straight upon
-the Guarena. The British retired by Torecilla de
-la Orden, the fifth division being in one column on
-the left, the fourth division on the right as they
-retreated, and the light division on an intermediate
-line and nearer to the enemy. The cavalry were
-on the flanks and rear, the air was extremely
-sultry, the dust rose in clouds, and the close order
-of the troops rendered it very oppressive, but
-the military spectacle was exceedingly strange and
-grand. For then were seen the hostile columns of
-infantry, only half musket-shot from each other,
-marching impetuously towards a common goal,
-the officers on each side pointing forwards with
-their swords, or touching their caps, and waving<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_153"></a>[153]</span>
-their hands in courtesy, while the German cavalry,
-huge men, on huge horses, rode between in a close
-compact body as if to prevent a collision. At times
-the loud tones of command, to hasten the march,
-were heard passing from the front to the rear, and
-now and then the rushing sound of bullets came
-sweeping over the columns whose violent pace was
-continually accelerated.</p>
-
-<p>Thus moving for ten miles, yet keeping the most
-perfect order, both parties approached the Guarena,
-and the enemy seeing that the light division, although
-more in their power than the others, were
-yet outstripping them in the march, increased the
-fire of their guns and menaced an attack with infantry.
-But the German cavalry instantly drew close
-round, the column plunged suddenly into a hollow
-dip of ground on the left which offered the means of
-baffling the enemy’s aim, and ten minutes after the
-head of the division was in the stream of the Guarena
-between Osmo and Castrillo. The fifth division
-entered the river at the same time but higher
-up on the left, and the fourth division passed it on
-the right. The soldiers of the light division, tormented
-with thirst, yet long used to their enemy’s
-mode of warfare, drunk as they marched, and the
-soldiers of the fifth division stopped in the river for
-only a few moments, but on the instant forty French
-guns gathered on the heights above sent a tempest
-of bullets amongst them. So nicely timed was the
-operation.</p>
-
-<p>The Guarena, flowing from four distinct sources
-which are united below Castrillo, offered a very
-strong line of defence, and Marmont, hoping to
-carry it in the first confusion of the passage, and so<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_154"></a>[154]</span>
-seize the table-land of Vallesa, had brought up all
-his artillery to the front; and to distract the allies’
-attention he had directed Clausel to push the head
-of the right column over the river at Castrillo, at
-the same time. But Wellington expecting him at
-Vallesa from the first, had ordered the other divisions
-of his army, originally assembled at Canizal,
-to cross one of the upper branches of the river;
-and they reached the table-land of Vallesa, before
-Marmont’s infantry, oppressed by the extreme heat
-and rapidity of the march, could muster in strength to
-attempt the passage of the other branch. Clausel,
-however, sent Carier’s brigade of cavalry across
-the Guarena at Castrillo and supported it with a
-column of infantry; and the fourth division had just
-gained the heights above Canizal, after passing
-the stream, when Carier’s horsemen entered the
-valley on their left, and the infantry in one column
-menaced their front. The sedgy banks of the river
-would have been difficult to force in face of an
-enemy, but Victor Alten though a very bold man in
-action, was slow to seize an advantage, and suffered
-the French cavalry to cross and form in considerable
-numbers without opposition; he assailed them
-too late and by successive squadrons instead of by
-regiments, and the result was unfavourable at first.
-The fourteenth and the German hussars were hard-pressed,
-the third dragoons came up in support, but
-they were immediately driven back again by the
-fire of some French infantry, the fight waxed hot
-with the others, and many fell, but finally general
-Carier was wounded and taken, and the French retired.
-During this cavalry action the twenty-seventh
-and fortieth regiments coming down the hill, broke<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_155"></a>[155]</span>
-the enemy’s infantry with an impetuous bayonet
-charge, and Alten’s horsemen being then disengaged
-sabred some of the fugitives.</p>
-
-<p>This combat cost the French who had advanced
-too far without support, a general and five hundred
-soldiers; but Marmont, though baffled at Vallesa,
-and beaten at Castrillo, concentrated his army at the
-latter place in such a manner as to hold both banks
-of the Guarena. Whereupon Wellington recalled his
-troops from Vallesa; and as the whole loss of the
-allies during the previous operations was not more
-than six hundred, nor that of the French more than
-eight hundred, and that both sides were highly
-excited, the day still young, and the positions
-although strong, open, and within cannon-shot, a
-battle was expected. Marmont’s troops had however
-been marching for two days and nights incessantly,
-and Wellington’s plan did not admit of fighting
-unless forced to it in defence, or under such circumstances,
-as would enable him to crush his
-opponent, and yet keep the field afterwards against
-the king.</p>
-
-<p>By this series of signal operations, the French
-general had passed a great river, taken the initiatory
-movement, surprised the right wing of the
-allies, and pushed it back above ten miles. Yet
-these advantages are to be traced to the peculiarities
-of the English general’s situation which have
-been already noticed, and Wellington’s tactical
-skill was manifested by the extricating of his
-troops from their dangerous position at Castrejon
-without loss, and without being forced to fight a battle.
-He however appears to have erred in extending
-his troops to the right when he first reached the
-Duero, for seeing that Marmont could at pleasure<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_156"></a>[156]</span>
-pass that river and turn his flanks, he should have
-remained concentrated on the Guarena, and only
-pushed cavalry posts to the line of the Duero above
-Toro. Neither should he have risked his right
-wing so far from his main body from the evening
-of the 16th to the morning of the 18th. He could
-scarcely have brought it off without severe loss, if
-Marmont had been stronger in cavalry, and instead
-of pushing forwards at once to the Guarena had
-attacked him on the march. On the other hand the
-security of the French general’s movements, from
-the Trabancos to the Guarena, depended entirely on
-their rapidity; for as his columns crossed the open
-country on a line parallel to the march of the allies,
-a simple wheel by companies to the right
-would have formed the latter in order of battle on
-his flank while the four divisions already on the
-Guarena could have met them in front.</p>
-
-<p>But it was on the 16th that the French general
-failed in the most glaring manner. His intent was,
-by menacing the communication with Salamanca
-and Ciudad Rodrigo, to force the allies back, and
-strike some decisive blow during their retreat.
-Now on the evening of the 16th he had passed the
-Duero at Toro, gained a day’s march, and was
-then actually nearer to Salamanca than the allies
-were; and had he persisted in his movement Wellington
-must have fought him to disadvantage or have
-given up Salamanca, and passed the Tormes at
-Huerta to regain the communication with Ciudad
-Rodrigo. This advantage Marmont relinquished,
-to make a forced march of eighty miles in forty-eight
-hours, and to risk the execution of a variety of
-nice and difficult evolutions, in which he lost
-above a thousand men by the sword or by fatigue,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_157"></a>[157]</span>
-and finally found his adversary on the 18th still
-facing him in the very position which he had
-turned on the evening of the 16th!</p>
-
-<p>On the 19th the armies maintained their respective
-ground in quiet until the evening, when
-Marmont concentrated his troops in one mass on
-his left near the village of Tarazona, and Wellington,
-fearing for his right, again passed the second
-branch of the Guarena, at Vallesa, and El Olmo,
-and took post on the table-land above those villages.
-The light division, being in front, advanced to the
-edge of the table-land, overlooking the enemy’s
-main body which was at rest round the bivouac
-fires; yet the picquets would have been quietly
-posted, if sir Stapleton Cotton coming up at the
-moment, had not ordered captain Ross to turn his
-battery of six-pounders upon a group of French
-officers. At the first shot the enemy seemed surprised,
-at the second their gunners run to their
-pieces, and in a few moments a reply from twelve
-eight-pounders shewed the folly of provoking a
-useless combat. An artillery officer was wounded
-in the head, several of the British soldiers fell in
-different parts of the line, one shot swept away a
-whole section of Portuguese, and finally the division
-was obliged to withdraw several hundred yards in a
-mortifying manner to avoid a great and unnecessary
-effusion of blood.</p>
-
-<p>The allies being now formed in two lines on the
-table-land of Vallesa offered a fair though not an
-easy field to the enemy; Wellington expected a
-battle the next day, because the range of heights
-which he occupied, trended backwards to the
-Tormes on the shortest line; and as he had thrown
-a Spanish garrison into the castle of Alba de<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_158"></a>[158]</span>
-Tormes, he thought Marmont could not turn his
-right, or if he attempted it, that he would be
-shouldered off the Tormes at the ford of Huerta. He
-was mistaken. The French general was more perfectly
-acquainted with the ground and proved that
-he could move an army with wonderful facility.</p>
-
-<p>On the 20th at day-break instead of crossing
-the Guarena to dispute the high land of Vallesa,
-Marmont marched rapidly in several columns, covered
-by a powerful rear-guard, up the river to
-Canta la Piedra, and crossed the stream there, though
-the banks were difficult, before any disposition
-could be made to oppose him. He thus turned the
-right flank of the allies and gained a new range of
-hills trending towards the Tormes, and parallel to
-those leading from Vallesa. Wellington immediately
-made a corresponding movement. Then commenced
-an evolution similar to that of the 18th, but
-on a greater scale both as to numbers and length of
-way. The allies moving in two lines of battle
-within musket-shot of the French endeavoured to
-gain upon and cross their march at Cantalpino;
-the guns on both sides again exchanged their
-rough salutations as the accidents of ground favoured
-their play; and again the officers, like gallant
-gentlemen who bore no malice and knew no
-fear, made their military recognitions, while the
-horsemen on each side watched with eager eyes, for
-an opening to charge; but the French general
-moving his army as one man along the crest of the
-heights, preserved the lead he had taken, and made
-no mistake.</p>
-
-<p>At Cantalpino it became evident that the allies
-were outflanked, and all this time Marmont had so
-skilfully managed his troops that he furnished no<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_159"></a>[159]</span>
-opportunity even for a partial attack. Wellington
-therefore fell off a little and made towards the
-heights of Cabeça Vellosa and Aldea Rubia,
-intending to halt there while the sixth division and
-Alten’s cavalry, forcing their march, seized Aldea
-Lengua and secured the position of Christoval.
-But he made no effort to seize the ford of Huerta,
-for his own march had been long and the French
-had passed over nearly twice as much ground,
-wherefore he thought they would not attempt to
-reach the Tormes that day. However when night
-approached, although his second line had got possession
-of the heights of Vellosa, his first line was
-heaped up without much order in the low ground
-between that place and Hornillos; the French
-army crowned all the summit of the opposite hills,
-and their fires, stretching in a half circle from Villaruela
-to Babila Fuente, shewed that they commanded
-the ford of Huerta. They could even have
-attacked the allies with great advantage had there
-been light for the battle. The English general immediately
-ordered the bivouac fires to be made, but
-filed the troops off in succession with the greatest
-celerity towards Vellosa and Aldea Rubia, and during
-the movement the Portuguese cavalry, coming in
-from the front, were mistaken for French and lost
-some men by cannon-shot ere they were recognised.</p>
-
-<p>Wellington was deeply disquieted at the unexpected
-result of this day’s operations which had
-been entirely to the advantage of the French general.
-Marmont had shewn himself perfectly acquainted
-with the country, had outflanked and outmarched
-the allies, had gained the command of the
-Tormes, and as his junction with the king’s army
-was thus secured he might fight or wait for reinforcements<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_160"></a>[160]</span>
-or continue his operations as it seemed
-good to himself. But the scope of Wellington’s
-campaign was hourly being more restricted. His
-reasons for avoiding a battle except at advantage,
-were stronger than before, because Caffarelli’s cavalry
-was known to be in march, and the army of the
-centre was on the point of taking the field; hence
-though he should fight and gain a victory, unless it
-was decisive, his object would not be advanced.
-That object was to deliver the Peninsula, which
-could only be done by a long course of solid operations
-incompatible with sudden and rash strokes
-unauthorized by any thing but hope; wherefore
-yielding to the force of circumstances, he prepared
-to return to Portugal and abide his time; yet with
-a bitter spirit, which was not soothed by the recollection,
-that he had refused the opportunity of
-fighting to advantage, exactly one month before
-and upon the very hills he now occupied. Nevertheless
-that stedfast temper, which then prevented
-him from seizing an adventitious chance, would
-not now let him yield to fortune more than she
-could ravish from him: he still hoped to give the
-lion’s stroke, and resolved to cover Salamanca and
-the communication with Ciudad Rodrigo to the
-last moment. A letter stating his inability to hold
-his ground was however sent to Castaños, but it
-was intercepted by Marmont, who exultingly
-pushed forwards without regard to the king’s movements;
-and it is curious that Joseph afterwards<span class="sidenote">King’s correspondence, MSS.</span>
-imagined this to have been a subtlety of Wellington’s
-to draw the French general into a premature
-battle.</p>
-
-<p>On the 21st while the allies occupied the old
-position of Christoval, the French threw a garrison<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_161"></a>[161]</span>
-into Alba de Tormes, from whence the Spaniards
-had been withdrawn by Carlos D’España, without
-the knowledge of the English general. Marmont
-then passed the Tormes, by the fords between Alba
-and Huerta, and moving up the valley of Machechuco
-encamped behind Calvariza Ariba, at the
-edge of a forest which extended from the river to
-that place. Wellington also passed the Tormes in
-the course of the evening by the bridges, and by the
-fords of Santa Marta and Aldea Lengua; but the
-third division and D’Urban’s cavalry remained on the
-right bank, and entrenched themselves at Cabrerizos,
-lest the French, who had left a division on the
-heights of Babila Fuente, should recross the Tormes
-in the night and overwhelm them.</p>
-
-<p>It was late when the light division descended the
-rough side of the Aldea Lengua mountain to cross
-the river, and the night came suddenly down,
-with more than common darkness, for a storm, that
-common precursor of a battle in the Peninsula, was
-at hand. Torrents of rain deepened the ford, the
-water foamed and dashed with encreasing violence,
-the thunder was frequent and deafening, and the
-lightning passed in sheets of fire close over the
-column, or played upon the points of the bayonets.
-One flash falling amongst the fifth dragoon guards,
-near Santa Marta, killed many men and horses,
-while hundreds of frightened animals breaking
-loose from their piquet ropes, and galloping wildly
-about, were supposed to be the enemy’s cavalry
-charging in the darkness, and indeed some of their
-patroles were at hand; but to a military eye there
-was nothing more imposing than the close and
-beautiful order in which the soldiers of that noble
-light division, were seen by the fiery gleams to step<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_162"></a>[162]</span>
-from the river to the bank and pursue their march
-amidst this astounding turmoil, defying alike the
-storm and the enemy.</p>
-
-<p>The position now taken by the allies was nearly
-the same as that occupied by general Graham a
-month before, when the forts of Salamanca were
-invested. The left wing rested in the low ground
-on the Tormes, near Santa Marta, having a cavalry
-post in front towards Calvariza de Abaxo. The
-right wing extended along a range of heights which
-ended also in low ground, near the village of Arapiles,
-and this line being perpendicular to the
-course of the Tormes from Huerta to Salamanca,
-and parallel to its course from Alba to Huerta,
-covered Salamanca. But the enemy extending his
-left along the edge of the forest, still menaced the<span class="sidenote9">See <a href="#i_b_581fp_3">Plan 3.</a></span>
-line of communication with Ciudad Rodrigo; and
-in the night advice came that general Chauvel,
-with near two thousand of Caffarelli’s horsemen,
-and twenty guns, had actually reached Pollos on the
-20th, and would join Marmont the 22nd or 23rd.
-Hence Wellington, feeling that he must now perforce
-retreat to Ciudad Rodrigo, and fearing that
-the French cavalry thus reinforced would hamper
-his movements, determined, unless the enemy attacked
-him, or committed some flagrant fault, to
-retire before Chauvel’s horsemen could arrive.</p>
-
-<p>At day-break on the 22nd, Marmont who had
-called the troops at Babila Fuente over the Tormes,
-by the ford of Encina, brought Bonet’s and Maucune’s
-divisions up from the forest and took possession
-of the ridge of Calvariza de Ariba; he also
-occupied in advance of it a wooded height on which
-was an old chapel called Nuestra Señora de la Pena.
-But at a little distance from his left, and from the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_163"></a>[163]</span>
-English right, stood a pair of solitary hills, called
-the <em>Two Arapiles</em>, about half cannon-shot from each
-other; steep and savagely rugged they were, and
-the possession of them would have enabled the
-French general to form his army across Wellington’s
-right, and thus bring on a battle with every disadvantage
-to the allies, confined, as the latter would
-have been, between the French army and the
-Tormes. These hills were neglected by the English
-general until a staff officer, who had observed the
-enemy’s detachments stealing towards them, first informed
-Beresford, and afterwards Wellington of the
-fact. The former thought it was of no consequence,
-but the latter immediately sent the seventh Caçadores
-to seize the most distant of the rocks, and then a combat
-occurred similar to that which happened between
-Cæsar and Afranius at Lerida; for the French seeing
-the allies’ detachment approaching, broke their
-own ranks, and running without order to the encounter
-gained the first Arapiles and kept it, but
-were repulsed in an endeavour to seize the second.
-This skirmish was followed by one at Nuestra
-Señora de la Pena, which was also assailed by a
-detachment of the seventh division, and so far successfully,
-that half that height was gained; yet the
-enemy kept the other half, and Victor Alten, flanking
-the attack with a squadron of German hussars,
-lost some men and was himself wounded by a
-musket-shot.</p>
-
-<p>The result of the dispute for the Arapiles
-rendered a retreat difficult to the allies during day-light;
-for though the rock gained by the English
-was a fortress in the way of the French army,
-Marmont, by extending his left, and by gathering a
-force behind his own Arapiles, could still frame a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_164"></a>[164]</span>
-dangerous battle and pounce upon the allies during
-their movement. Wherefore Wellington immediately
-extended his right into the low ground, placing
-the light companies of the guards in the village of
-Arapiles, and the fourth division, with exception of
-the twenty-seventh regiment, which remained at the
-rock, on a gentle ridge behind them. The fifth and
-sixth divisions he gathered in one mass upon the internal
-slope of the English Arapiles, where from the
-hollow nature of the ground they were quite hidden
-from the enemy; and during these movements a
-sharp cannonade was exchanged from the tops of
-those frowning hills, on whose crowning rocks the
-two generals sat like ravenous vultures watching
-for their quarry.</p>
-
-<p>Marmont’s project was not yet developed; his
-troops coming from Babila Fuente were still in the
-forest, and some miles off; he had only two divisions
-close up, and the occupation of Calvariza Ariba,
-and Nuestra Señora de la Pena, was a daring
-defensive measure to cover the formation of his
-army. The occupation of the Arapiles was however
-a start forward, for an advantage to be afterwards
-turned to profit, and seemed to fix the operations
-on the left of the Tormes. Wellington, therefore,
-brought up the first and the light divisions to confront
-the enemy’s troops on the height of Calvariza Ariba;
-and then calling the third division and D’Urban’s
-cavalry over the river, by the fords of Santa Marta,
-he posted them in a wood near Aldea Tejada,
-entirely refused to the enemy and unseen by him,
-yet in a situation to secure the main road to Ciudad
-Rodrigo. Thus the position of the allies was suddenly
-reversed; the left rested on the English
-Arapiles, the right on Aldea Tejada; that which<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_165"></a>[165]</span>
-was the rear became the front, and the interval between
-the third and the fourth division was occupied
-by Bradford’s Portuguese infantry, by the
-Spaniards, and by the British cavalry.</p>
-
-<p>This ground had several breaks and hollows, so
-that few of these troops could be viewed by the
-enemy, and those which were, seemed, both from
-their movement and from their position, to be
-pointing to the <ins class="corr" id="tn-165" title="Transcriber’s Note—Original text: 'Ciudad Rodigo road'">
-Ciudad Rodrigo road</ins> as in retreat.
-The commissariat and baggage had also been
-ordered to the rear, the dust of their march was
-plainly to be seen many miles off, and hence
-there was nothing in the relative position of the
-armies, save their proximity, to indicate an approaching
-battle. Such a state of affairs could not
-last long. About twelve o’clock Marmont, fearing
-that the important bearing of the French Arapiles on
-Wellington’s retreat would induce the latter to drive
-him thence, hastily brought up Foy’s and Ferey’s
-divisions in support, placing, the first, with some
-guns, on a wooded height between the Arapiles
-and Nuestra Señora de la Pena, the second, and
-Boyer’s dragoons, behind Foy on the ridge of Calvariza
-de Ariba. Nor was this fear ill-founded, for
-the English general, thinking that he could not
-safely retreat in day-light without possessing both
-Arapiles, had actually issued orders for the seventh
-division to attack the French, but perceiving the
-approach of more troops, gave counter-orders lest
-he should bring on the battle disadvantageously.
-He judged it better to wait for new events, being
-certain that at night he could make his retreat good,
-and wishing rather that Marmont should attack him
-in his now strong position.</p>
-
-<p>The French troops coming from Babila Fuente<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_166"></a>[166]</span>
-had not yet reached the edge of the forest, when
-Marmont, seeing that the allies would not attack,
-and fearing that they would retreat before his own
-dispositions were completed, ordered Thomieres’
-division, covered by fifty guns and supported by the
-light cavalry, to menace the Ciudad Rodrigo road.
-He also hastened the march of his other divisions,
-designing, when Wellington should move in opposition
-to Thomieres, to fall upon him, by the village
-of Arapiles, with six divisions of infantry and
-Boyer’s dragoons, which last, he now put in march
-to take fresh ground on the left of the Arapiles
-rocks, leaving only one regiment of cavalry, to guard
-Foy’s right flank at Calvariza.</p>
-
-<p>In these new circumstances, the positions of the
-two armies embraced an oval basin formed by
-different ranges of hills, that rose like an amphitheatre
-of which the Arapiles rocks might be considered
-the door-posts. This basin was about
-a mile broad from north to south, and more than
-two miles long from east to west. The northern
-and western half-formed the allies’ position, which
-extended from the English Arapiles on the left
-to Aldea Tejada on the right. The eastern heights
-were held by the French right, and their left, consisting
-of Thomieres’ division with the artillery and
-light cavalry, was now moving along the southern
-side of the basin; but the march was wide and
-loose, there was a long space between Thomieres’
-and the divisions, which, coming from the edge of
-the forest were destined to form the centre, and
-there was a longer space between him and the divisions
-about the Arapiles. Nevertheless, the mass
-of artillery placed on his right flank was very imposing,
-and opened its fire grandly, taking ground<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_167"></a>[167]</span>
-to the left by guns, in succession, as the infantry
-moved on; and these last marched eagerly,
-continually contracting their distance from the
-allies, and bringing up their left shoulders as if to
-envelope Wellington’s position and embrace it with
-fire. At this time also, Bonet’s troops, one regiment
-of which held the French Arapiles, carried the village
-of that name, and although soon driven from the
-greatest part of it again, maintained a fierce struggle.</p>
-
-<p>Marmont’s first arrangements had occupied several
-hours, yet as they gave no positive indication
-of his designs, Wellington ceasing to watch
-him, had retired from the Arapiles. But at three
-o’clock, a report reached him that the French left
-was in motion and pointing towards the Ciudad
-Rodrigo road; then starting up he repaired to the
-high ground, and observed their movements for some
-time, with a stern contentment, for their left wing
-was entirely separated from the centre. The fault
-was flagrant, and he fixed it with the stroke of a
-thunderbolt. A few orders issued from his lips
-like the incantations of a wizard, and suddenly the
-dark mass of troops which covered the English
-Arapiles, was seemingly possessed by some mighty
-spirit, and rushing violently down the interior slope
-of the mountain, entered the great basin amidst a
-storm of bullets which seemed to shear away the
-whole surface of the earth over which the soldiers
-moved. The fifth division instantly formed on the
-right of the fourth, connecting the latter with
-Bradford’s Portuguese, who hastened forward at the
-same time from the right of the army, and the heavy
-cavalry galloping up on the right of Bradford, closed
-this front of battle. The sixth and seventh divisions
-flanked on the right by Anson’s light cavalry, which<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_168"></a>[168]</span>
-had now moved from the Arapiles, were ranged at half
-cannon-shot in a second line, which was prolonged by
-the Spaniards in the direction of the third division;
-and this last, reinforced by two squadrons of the
-fourteenth dragoons, and by D’Urban’s Portuguese
-horsemen, formed the extreme right of the army.
-Behind all, on the highest ground, the first and
-light divisions and Pack’s Portuguese were disposed
-in heavy masses as a reserve.</p>
-
-<p>When this grand disposition was completed, the
-third division and its attendant horsemen, the whole
-formed in four columns and flanked on the left by
-twelve guns, received orders to cross the enemy’s
-line of march. The remainder of the first line,
-including the main body of the cavalry was directed
-to advance whenever the attack of the third division
-should be developed; and as the fourth division must
-in this forward movement necessarily lend its flank
-to the enemy’s troops stationed on the French
-Arapiles, Pack’s brigade was commanded to assail
-that rock the moment the left of the British line
-should pass it. Thus, after long coiling and winding,
-the armies came together, and drawing up their
-huge trains like angry serpents mingled in deadly
-strife.</p>
-
-
-<h4>BATTLE OF SALAMANCA.</h4>
-
-<p>Marmont, from the top of the French Arapiles,
-saw the country beneath him suddenly covered with
-enemies at a moment when he was in the act of
-making a complicated evolution, and when, by the
-rash advance of his left, his troops were separated
-into three parts, each at too great a distance to
-assist the other, and those nearest the enemy neither
-strong enough to hold their ground, nor aware of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_169"></a>[169]</span>
-what they had to encounter. The third division
-was, however, still hidden from him by the western
-heights, and he hoped that the tempest of bullets
-under which the British line was moving in the
-basin beneath, would check it until he could bring
-up his reserve divisions, and by the village of
-Arapiles fall on what was now the left of the
-allies’ position. But even this, his only resource
-for saving the battle, was weak, for on that point
-there were still the first and light divisions and
-Pack’s brigade, forming a mass of twelve thousand
-troops with thirty pieces of artillery; the village
-itself was well disputed, and the English Arapiles
-rock stood out as a strong bastion of defence.
-However, the French general, nothing daunted, despatched
-officer after officer, some to hasten up the
-troops from the forest, others to stop the progress of
-his left wing, and with a sanguine expectation still
-looked for the victory until he saw Pakenham with
-the third division shoot like a meteor across Thomieres’
-path; then pride and hope alike died within
-him, and desperately he was hurrying in person to
-that fatal point, when an exploding shell stretched
-him on the earth with a broken arm and two deep
-wounds in his side. Confusion ensued and the
-troops distracted by ill-judged orders and counter-orders
-knew not where to move, who to fight or
-who to avoid.</p>
-
-<p>It was about five o’clock when Pakenham fell
-upon Thomieres, and it was at the instant when that
-general, the head of whose column had gained an
-open isolated hill at the extremity of the southern
-range of heights, expected to see the allies, in full
-retreat towards the Ciudad Rodrigo road, closely
-followed by Marmont from the Arapiles. The<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_170"></a>[170]</span>
-counter-stroke was terrible! Two batteries of artillery
-placed on the summit of the western heights
-suddenly took his troops in flank, and Pakenham’s
-massive columns supported by cavalry, were coming
-on full in his front, while two-thirds of his own
-division, lengthened out and unconnected, were still
-behind in a wood where they could hear, but could
-not see the storm which was now bursting. From
-the chief to the lowest soldier all felt that they were
-lost, and in an instant Pakenham the most frank and
-gallant of men commenced the battle.</p>
-
-<p>The British columns formed lines as they
-marched, and the French gunners standing up manfully
-for the honour of their country, sent showers of
-grape into the advancing masses, while a crowd of
-light troops poured in a fire of musketry, under
-cover of which the main body endeavoured to display
-a front. But bearing onwards through the
-skirmishers with the might of a giant, Pakenham
-broke the half-formed lines into fragments, and sent
-the whole in confusion upon the advancing supports;
-one only officer, with unyielding spirit, remained by
-the artillery; standing alone he fired the last gun at
-the distance of a few yards, but whether he lived
-or there died could not be seen for the smoke.
-Some squadrons of light cavalry fell on the right
-of the third division, but the fifth regiment repulsed
-them, and then D’Urban’s Portuguese horsemen, reinforced
-by two squadrons of the fourteenth dragoons
-under Felton Harvey, gained the enemy’s flank. The
-Oporto regiment, led by the English Major Watson,<span class="sidenote"><a href="#NO_I">Appendix I.</a></span>
-instantly charged the French infantry, yet vainly,
-Watson fell deeply wounded and his men retired.</p>
-
-<p>Pakenham continued his tempestuous course
-against the remainder of Thomieres’ troops, which<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_171"></a>[171]</span>
-were now arrayed on the wooded heights behind
-the first hill, yet imperfectly, and offering two
-fronts the one opposed to the third division and its
-attendant horsemen, the other to the fifth division, to
-Bradford’s brigade and the main body of cavalry
-and artillery, all of which were now moving in one
-great line across the basin. Meanwhile Bonet’s
-troops having failed at the village of Arapiles were
-sharply engaged with the fourth division, Maucune
-kept his menacing position behind the French
-Arapiles, and as Clauzel’s division had come up
-from the forest, the connection of the centre and left
-was in some measure restored; two divisions were
-however still in the rear, and Boyer’s dragoons were
-in march from Calvariza Ariba. Thomieres had been
-killed, and Bonet, who succeeded Marmont, had
-been disabled, hence more confusion; but the command
-of the army devolved on Clauzel, and he was
-of a capacity to sustain this terrible crisis.</p>
-
-<p>The fourth and fifth divisions, and Bradford’s brigade,
-were now hotly engaged and steadily gaining
-ground; the heavy cavalry, Anson’s light dragoons
-and Bull’s troop of artillery were advancing at a
-trot on Pakenham’s left; and on that general’s right
-D’Urban’s horsemen overlapped the enemy. Thus
-in less than half an hour, and before an order of
-battle had even been formed by the French, their
-commander-in-chief and two other generals had
-fallen, and the left of their army was turned, thrown
-into confusion and enveloped. Clauzel’s division
-had indeed joined Thomieres’, and a front had been
-spread on the southern heights, but it was loose and
-unfit to resist; for the troops were, some in double
-lines, some in columns, some in squares; a powerful
-sun shone full in their eyes, the light soil, stirred up<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_172"></a>[172]</span>
-by the trampling of men and horses, and driven forward
-by a breeze, which arose in the west at the
-moment of attack, came full upon them mingled
-with smoke in such stifling clouds, that scarcely
-able to breathe and quite unable to see, their fire
-was given at random.</p>
-
-<p>In this situation, while Pakenham, bearing onward
-with a conquering violence, was closing on their
-flank and the fifth division advancing with a storm
-of fire on their front, the interval between the two
-attacks was suddenly filled with a whirling cloud of
-dust, which moving swiftly forward carried within
-its womb the trampling sound of a charging multitude.
-As it passed the left of the third division
-Le Marchant’s heavy horsemen flanked by Anson’s
-light cavalry, broke forth from it at full speed, and
-the next instant twelve hundred French infantry
-though formed in several lines were trampled down
-with a terrible clamour and disturbance. Bewildered
-and blinded, they cast away their arms
-and run through the openings of the British squadrons
-stooping and demanding quarter, while the dragoons,
-big men and on big horses, rode onwards
-smiting with their long glittering swords in uncontroulable
-power, and the third division followed at
-speed, shouting as the French masses fell in succession
-before this dreadful charge.</p>
-
-<p>Nor were these valiant swordsmen yet exhausted.
-Their own general, Le Marchant, and many officers
-had fallen, but Cotton and all his staff was at their
-head, and with ranks confused, and blended together
-in one mass, still galloping forward they
-sustained from a fresh column an irregular stream
-of fire which emptied a hundred saddles; yet
-with fine courage, and downright force, the survivors<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_173"></a>[173]</span>
-broke through this the third and strongest
-body of men that had encountered them, and lord
-Edward Somerset, continuing his course at the
-head of one squadron, with a happy perseverance
-captured five guns. The French left was entirely
-broken, more than two thousand prisoners were
-taken, the French light horsemen abandoned that
-part of the field, and Thomieres’ division no longer
-existed as a military body. Anson’s cavalry which
-had passed quite over the hill and had suffered
-little in the charge, was now joined by D’Urban’s
-troopers, and took the place of Le Marchant’s exhausted
-men; the heavy German dragoons followed
-in reserve, and with the third and fifth divisions and
-the guns, formed one formidable line, two miles in
-advance of where Pakenham had first attacked; and
-that impetuous officer with unmitigated strength
-still pressed forward spreading terror and disorder
-on the enemy’s left.</p>
-
-<p>While these signal events, which occupied about
-forty minutes, were passing on the allies’ right, a
-terrible battle raged in the centre. For when the
-first shock of the third division had been observed
-from the Arapiles, the fourth division, moving in a
-line with the fifth, had passed the village of that
-name under a prodigious cannonade, and vigourously
-driving Bonet’s troops backwards, step by
-step, to the southern and eastern heights, obliged
-them to mingle with Clauzel’s and with Thomieres’
-broken remains. When the combatants had passed
-the French Arapiles, which was about the time of
-Le Marchant’s charge, Pack’s Portuguese assailed
-that rock, and the front of battle was thus completely
-defined, because Foy’s division was now exchanging
-a distant cannonade with the first and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_174"></a>[174]</span>
-light divisions. However Bonet’s troops, notwithstanding
-Marmont’s fall, and the loss of their own
-general, fought strongly, and Clauzel made a surprising
-effort, beyond all men’s expectations, to
-restore the battle. Already a great change was
-visible. Ferey’s division drawn off from the height
-of Calvaraza Ariba arrived in the centre behind
-Bonet’s men; the light cavalry, Boyer’s dragoons,
-and two divisions of infantry, from the forest, were
-also united there, and on this mass of fresh men,
-Clauzel rallied the remnants of his own and Thomieres’
-division. Thus by an able movement,
-Sarrut’s, Brennier’s, and Ferey’s unbroken troops,
-supported by the whole of the cavalry, were so
-disposed as to cover the line of retreat to Alba de
-Tormes, while Maucune’s division was still in mass
-behind the French Arapiles, and Foy’s remained
-untouched on the right.</p>
-
-<p>But Clauzel, not content with having brought
-the separated part of his army together and in a
-condition to effect a retreat, attempted to stem the
-tide of victory in the very fulness of its strength
-and roughness. His hopes were founded on a misfortune
-which had befallen general Pack; for that
-officer ascending the French Arapiles in one heavy
-column, had driven back the enemy’s skirmishers
-and was within thirty yards of the summit, believing
-himself victorious, when suddenly the French
-reserves leaped forward from the rocks upon his
-front, and upon his left flank. The hostile masses
-closed, there was a thick cloud of smoke, a shout,
-a stream of fire, and the side of the hill was covered
-to the very bottom with the dead the wounded
-and the flying Portuguese, who were scoffed at for
-this failure without any justice; no troops could<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_175"></a>[175]</span>
-have withstood that crash upon such steep ground,
-and the propriety of attacking the hill at all seems
-very questionable. The result went nigh to shake
-the whole battle. For the fourth division had just
-then reached the southern ridge of the basin, and
-one of the best regiments in the service was actually
-on the summit when twelve hundred fresh adversaries,
-arrayed on the reverse slope, charged up
-hill; and as the British fire was straggling and
-ineffectual, because the soldiers were breathless
-and disordered by the previous fighting, the
-French who came up resolutely and without firing
-won the crest. They were even pursuing
-down the other side when two regiments placed
-in line below, checked them with a destructive
-volley.</p>
-
-<p>This vigorous counter-blow took place at the
-moment when Pack’s defeat permitted Maucune,
-who was no longer in pain for the Arapiles hill, to
-menace the left flank and rear of the fourth division,
-but the left wing of the fortieth regiment immediately
-wheeled about and with a rough charge
-cleared the rear. Maucune would not engage himself
-more deeply at that time, but general Ferey’s
-troops pressed vigorously against the front of the
-fourth division, and Brennier did the same by the first
-line of the fifth division, Boyer’s dragoons also came
-on rapidly, and the allies being outflanked and over-matched
-lost ground. Fiercely and fast the French
-followed and the fight once more raged in the
-basin below. General Cole had before this fallen
-deeply wounded, and Leith had the same fortune,
-but Beresford promptly drew Spry’s Portuguese
-brigade from the second line of the fifth division
-and thus flanked the advancing columns of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_176"></a>[176]</span>
-enemy; yet he also fell desperately wounded, and
-Boyer’s dragoons then came freely into action because
-Anson’s cavalry had been checked after Le
-Marchant’s charge by a heavy fire of artillery.</p>
-
-<p>The crisis of the battle had now arrived and the
-victory was for the general who had the strongest
-reserves in hand. Wellington, who was seen that
-day at every point of the field exactly when his
-presence was most required, immediately brought
-up from the second line, the sixth division, and its
-charge was rough, strong, and successful. Nevertheless
-the struggle was no slight one. The men
-of general Hulse’s brigade, which was on the left,
-went down by hundreds, and the sixty-first and
-eleventh regiments won their way desperately and
-through such a fire, as British soldiers only, can
-sustain. Some of Boyer’s dragoons also breaking in
-between the fifth and sixth divisions slew many
-men, and caused some disorder in the fifty-third;
-but that brave regiment lost no ground, nor did
-Clauzel’s impetuous counter-attack avail at any
-point, after the first burst, against the steady courage
-of the allies. The southern ridge was regained,
-the French general Menne was severely, and general
-Ferey, mortally wounded, Clauzel himself was
-hurt, and the reserve of Boyer’s dragoons coming
-on at a canter were met and broken by the fire of
-Hulse’s noble brigade. Then the changing current
-of the fight once more set for the British. The
-third division continued to outflank the enemy’s left,
-Maucune abandoned the French Arapiles, Foy retired
-from the ridge of Calvariza, and the allied
-host righting itself as a gallant ship after a sudden
-gust, again bore onwards in blood and gloom, for
-though the air, purified by the storm of the night<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_177"></a>[177]</span>
-before, was peculiarly clear, one vast cloud of
-smoke and dust rolled along the basin, and within
-it was the battle with all its sights and sounds
-of terror.</p>
-
-<p>When the English general had thus restored the
-fight in the centre, he directed the commander of
-the first division to push between Foy and the rest
-of the French army, which would have rendered it
-impossible for the latter to rally or escape; but this
-order was not executed, and Foy’s and Maucune’s
-divisions were skilfully used by Clauzel to protect
-the retreat. The first, posted on undulating ground
-and flanked by some squadrons of dragoons, covered
-the roads to the fords of Huerta and Encina; the
-second, reinforced with fifteen guns, was placed
-on a steep ridge in front of the forest, covering the
-road to Alba de Tormes; and behind this ridge,
-the rest of the army, then falling back in disorder
-before the third, fifth, and sixth divisions, took
-refuge. Wellington immediately sent the light division,
-formed in two lines and flanked by some
-squadrons of dragoons, against Foy; and he supported
-them by the first division in columns, flanked
-on the right by two brigades of the fourth division
-which he had drawn off from the centre when the
-sixth division restored the fight. The seventh division
-and the Spaniards followed in reserve, the country
-was covered with troops, and a new army seemed
-to have risen out of the earth.</p>
-
-<p>Foy throwing out a cloud of skirmishers retired
-slowly by wings, turning and firing heavily from every
-rise of ground upon the light division, which marched
-steadily forward without returning a shot, save by its
-skirmishers; for three miles the march was under this
-musketry, which was occasionally thickened by a cannonade,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_178"></a>[178]</span>
-and yet very few men were lost, because
-the French aim was baffled, partly by the twilight,
-partly by the even order and rapid gliding of the
-lines. But the French general Desgraviers was
-killed, and the flanking brigades from the fourth division
-having now penetrated between Maucune and
-Foy, it seemed difficult for the latter to extricate his
-troops from the action; nevertheless he did it and
-with great dexterity. For having increased his skirmishers
-on the last defensible ridge, along the foot
-of which run a marshy stream, he redoubled his fire
-of musketry, and made a menacing demonstration
-with his horsemen just as the darkness fell; the
-British guns immediately opened their fire, a squadron
-of dragoons galloped forwards from the left,
-the infantry, crossing the marshy stream, with an
-impetuous pace hastened to the summit of the hill,
-and a rough shock seemed at hand, but there
-was no longer an enemy; the main body of the
-French had gone into the thick forest on their own
-left during the firing, and the skirmishers fled
-swiftly after, covered by the smoke and by the
-darkness.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile Maucune maintained a noble battle.
-He was outflanked and outnumbered, but the safety
-of the French army depended on his courage; he
-knew it, and Pakenham, marking his bold demeanour,
-advised Clinton, who was immediately in his
-front, not to assail him until the third division
-should have turned his left. Nevertheless the sixth
-division was soon plunged afresh into action under
-great disadvanatge, for after being kept by its
-commander a long time without reason, close
-under Maucune’s batteries which ploughed heavily
-through the ranks, it was suddenly directed by a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_179"></a>[179]</span>
-staff officer to attack the hill. Assisted by a brigade
-of the fourth division, the troops then rushed up, and
-in the darkness of the night the fire shewed from afar
-how the battle went. On the side of the British a
-sheet of flame was seen, sometimes advancing with
-an even front, sometimes pricking forth in spear
-heads, now falling back in waving lines, and anon
-darting upwards in one vast pyramid, the apex of
-which often approached yet never gained the actual
-summit of the mountain; but the French musketry,
-rapid as lightning, sparkled along the brow of the
-height with unvarying fulness, and with what destructive
-effects the dark gaps and changing shapes of
-the adverse fire showed too plainly. Yet when Pakenham
-had again turned the enemy’s left, and Foy’s
-division had glided into the forest, Maucune’s task
-was completed, the effulgent crest of the ridge became
-black and silent, and the whole French army
-vanished as it were in the darkness.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile Wellington, who was with the leading
-regiment of the light division, continued to advance
-towards the ford of Huerta leaving the forest to his
-right, for he thought the Spanish garrison was still
-in the castle of Alba de Tormes, and that the enemy
-must of necessity be found in a confused mass at
-the fords. It was for this final stroke that he had
-so skilfully strengthened his left wing, nor was he
-diverted from his aim by marching through standing
-corn where no enemy could have preceded him;
-nor by Foy’s retreat into the forest, because it pointed
-towards the fords of Encina and Gonzalo, which
-that general might be endeavouring to gain,
-and the right wing of the allies would find
-him there. A squadron of French dragoons also
-burst hastily from the forest in front of the advancing<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_180"></a>[180]</span>
-troops, soon after dark, and firing their pistols
-passed at full gallop towards the ford of Huerta,
-thus indicating great confusion in the defeated
-army, and confirming the notion that its retreat was
-in that direction. Had the castle of Alba been
-held, the French could not have carried off a third
-of their army, nor would they have been in much
-better plight if Carlos D’España, who soon discovered
-his error in withdrawing the garrison, had
-informed Wellington of the fact; but he suppressed
-it and suffered the colonel who had only obeyed
-his orders to be censured; the left wing therefore
-continued their march to the ford without meeting
-any enemy, and, the night being far spent, were
-there halted; the right wing, exhausted by long
-fighting, had ceased to pursue after the action with
-Maucune, and thus the French gained Alba unmolested;
-but the action did not terminate without
-two remarkable accidents. While riding close behind
-the forty-third regiment, Wellington was struck
-in the thigh by a spent musket-ball, which passed
-through his holster; and the night picquets had
-just been set at Huerta, when sir Stapleton Cotton,
-who had gone to the ford and returned a different
-road, was shot through the arm by a Portuguese
-sentinel whose challenge he had disregarded.
-These were the last events of this famous battle, in
-which the skill of the general was worthily seconded
-by troops whose ardour may be appreciated by the
-following anecdotes.</p>
-
-<p>Captain Brotherton of the fourteenth dragoons,
-fighting on the 18th at the Guarena, amongst
-the foremost, as he was always wont to do, had a
-sword thrust quite through his side, yet on the 22d he
-was again on horseback, and being denied leave to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_181"></a>[181]</span>
-remain in that condition with his own regiment,
-secretly joined Pack’s Portuguese in an undress,
-and was again hurt in the unfortunate charge at the
-Arapiles. Such were the officers. A man of the
-forty-third, one by no means distinguished above
-his comrades, was shot through the middle of the
-thigh, and lost his shoes in passing the marshy
-stream; but refusing to quit the fight, he limped
-under fire in rear of his regiment, and with naked
-feet, and streaming of blood from his wound, he
-marched for several miles over a country covered
-with sharp stones. Such were the soldiers, and
-the devotion of a woman was not wanting to the
-illustration of this great day.</p>
-
-<p>The wife of colonel Dalbiac, an English lady of a
-gentle disposition and possessing a very delicate
-frame, had braved the dangers, and endured the
-privations of two campaigns, with the patient fortitude
-which belongs only to her sex; and in this
-battle, forgetful of every thing but that strong
-affection which had so long supported her, she
-rode deep amidst the enemy’s fire, trembling yet
-irresistibly impelled forwards by feelings more imperious
-than horror, more piercing than the fear of
-death.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_182"></a>[182]</span><br /></p>
-
-<h3 id="CHAPTER_BXVIII_IV">CHAPTER IV.</h3>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="sidenote7">1812. July.</span>
-During the few hours of darkness, which succeeded
-the cessation of the battle, Clauzel had with
-a wonderful diligence, passed the Tormes by the
-narrow bridge of Alba and the fords below it, and
-at day-light was in full retreat upon Peneranda,
-covered by an organized rear-guard. Wellington
-also, having brought up the German dragoons and
-Anson’s cavalry to the front, crossed the river with
-his left wing at day-light, and moving up the
-stream, came about ten o’clock upon the French
-rear which was winding without much order along
-the Almar, a small stream at the foot of a height
-near the village of La Serna. He launched his
-cavalry against them, and the French squadrons,
-flying from Anson’s troopers towards their own left,
-abandoned three battalions of infantry, who in separate
-columns were making up a hollow slope on
-their right, hoping to gain the crest of the heights
-before the cavalry could fall on. The two foremost
-did reach the higher ground and there formed
-squares, general Foy being in the one, and general
-Chemineau in the other; but the last regiment
-when half-way up, seeing Bock’s dragoons galloping
-hard on, faced about and being still in column
-commenced a disorderly fire. The two squares already
-formed above, also plied their muskets with
-far greater effect; and as the Germans, after crossing<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_183"></a>[183]</span>
-the Almar stream, had to pass a turn of narrow
-road, and then to clear some rough ground before
-they could range their squadrons on a charging
-front, the troopers dropt fast under the fire.
-By two’s, by three’s, by ten’s, by twenties they
-fell, but the rest keeping together, surmounted
-the difficulties of the ground, and hurtling on the
-column went clean through it; then the squares
-above retreated and several hundred prisoners were
-made by these able and daring horsemen.</p>
-
-<p>This charge had been successful even to wonder,
-the joyous victors standing in the midst of
-their captives and of thousands of admiring friends
-seemed invincible; yet those who witnessed the
-scene, nay the actors themselves remained with the
-conviction of this military truth, that cavalry are
-not able to cope with veteran infantry save by surprize.
-The hill of La Serna offered a frightful
-spectacle of the power of the musket, that queen of
-weapons, and the track of the Germans was marked
-by their huge bodies. A few minutes only had the
-combat lasted and above a hundred had fallen;
-fifty-one were killed outright; and in several places
-man and horse had died simultaneously, and so suddenly,
-that falling together on their sides they
-appeared still alive, the horse’s legs stretched out as
-in movement, the rider’s feet in the stirrup, his
-bridle in hand, the sword raised to strike, and the
-large hat fastened under the chin, giving to the
-grim, but undistorted countenance, a supernatural
-and terrible expression.</p>
-
-<p>When the French main body found their rear-guard
-attacked, they turned to its succour, but
-seeing the light division coming up recommenced
-the retreat and were followed to Nava de Sotroval.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_184"></a>[184]</span>
-Near that place Chauvel’s horsemen joined them
-from the Duero, and covered the rear with such a
-resolute countenance that the allied cavalry, reduced
-in numbers and fatigued with continual
-fighting, did not choose to meddle again. Thus
-Clauzel carried his army clear off without further
-loss, and with such celerity, that his head-quarters
-were that night at Flores de Avila forty miles from
-the field of battle. After remaining a few hours
-there he crossed the Zapardiel, and would have
-halted the 24th, but the allied cavalry entered
-Cisla, and the march was then continued to Arevalo.
-This was a wonderful retreat, and the line was
-chosen with judgment, for Wellington naturally
-expected the French army would have made for
-Tordesillas instead of the Adaja. The pursuit was
-however somewhat slack, for on the very night
-of the action, the British left wing, being quite
-fresh, could have ascended the Tormes and reached
-the Almar before day-light, or, passing at Huerta,
-have marched by Ventosa to Peneranda; but the vigorous
-following of a beaten enemy was never a
-prominent characteristic of Lord Wellington’s campaigns
-in the Peninsula.</p>
-
-<p>The 25th the allied army halted on the Zapardiel,
-and Adaja rivers, to let the commissariat, which
-had been sent to the rear the morning of the battle,
-come up. Meanwhile the king having quitted
-Madrid with fourteen thousand men on the 21st
-reached the Adaja and pushed his cavalry towards<span class="sidenote9">See <a href="#i_b_581fp_3">Plan 3.</a></span>
-Fontiveros; he was at Blasco Sancho the 24th,
-within a few hours’ march of Arevalo, and consequently
-able to effect a junction with Clauzel, yet
-he did not hurry his march, for he knew only of
-the advance upon Salamanca not of the defeat, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_185"></a>[185]</span>
-having sent many messengers to inform Marmont of
-his approach, concluded that general would await
-his arrival. The next day he received letters from<span class="sidenote">King’s correspondence, MSS.</span>
-the duke of Ragusa and Clauzel, dated Arevalo,
-describing the battle, and telling him that the defeated
-army must pass the Duero immediately to
-save the dépôt of Valladolid, and to establish new
-communications with the army of the north. Those
-generals promised however to halt behind that river,
-if possible, until the king could receive reinforcements
-from Suchet and Soult.</p>
-
-<p>Joseph by a rapid movement upon Arevalo could
-still have effected a junction, but he immediately
-made a forced march to Espinar, leaving in Blasco
-Sancho two officers and twenty-seven troopers, who
-were surprised and made prisoners on the evening
-of the 25th by a corporal’s patrole; Clauzel at the
-same time marched upon Valladolid, by Olmedo,
-thus abandoning Zamora, Toro, and Tordesillas,
-with their garrisons, to the allies. Wellington immediately
-brought Santo Cildes, who was now upon
-the Esla with eight thousand Gallicians, to the right
-bank of the Duero, across which river he communicated
-by Castro Nuño with the left of the allies
-which was then upon the Zapardiel.</p>
-
-<p>The 27th the British whose march had become
-more circumspect from the vicinity of the king’s
-army entered Olmedo. At this place, general
-Ferrey had died of his wounds, and the Spaniards
-tearing his body from the grave were going to mutilate
-it, when the soldiers of the light division who
-had so often fought against this brave man rescued
-his corpse, re-made his grave and heaped rocks upon
-it for more security, though with little need; for the
-Spaniards, with whom the sentiment of honor is<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_186"></a>[186]</span>
-always strong when not stifled by the violence of
-their passions, applauded the action.</p>
-
-<p>On the 26th Clauzel, finding the pursuit had
-slackened, sent Colonel Fabvier to advise the king
-of it, and then sending his own right wing across
-the Duero, by the ford near Boecillo, to cover the
-evacuation of Valladolid, marched with the other
-wing towards the bridge of Tudela; he remained
-however still on the left bank, in the hope that Fabvier’s
-mission would bring the king back. Joseph
-who had already passed the Puerta de Guadarama
-immediately repassed it without delay and made
-a flank movement to Segovia, which he reached the
-27th, and pushed his cavalry to Santa Maria de
-Nieva. Here he remained until the 31st expecting
-Clauzel would join him, for he resolved not to quit
-his hold of the passes over the Guadarama, nor to
-abandon his communication with Valencia and Andalusia.
-But Wellington brought Santo Cildes
-over the Duero to the Zapardiel, and crossing the
-Eresma and Ciga rivers himself, with the first and
-light divisions and the cavalry, had obliged Clauzel
-to retire over the Duero in the night of the 29th;
-and the next day the French general whose army was
-very much discouraged, fearing that Wellington
-would gain Aranda and Lerma while the Gallicians
-seized Dueñas and Torquemada, retreated in three
-columns by the valleys of the Arlanza, the Duero
-and the Esquiva towards Burgos.</p>
-
-<p>The English general entered Valladolid amidst
-the rejoicings of the people and there captured
-seventeen pieces of artillery, considerable stores,
-and eight hundred sick and wounded men; three
-hundred other prisoners were taken by the Partida
-chief Marquinez, and a large French convoy intended<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_187"></a>[187]</span>
-for Andalusia returned to Burgos. While the left
-wing of the allies pursued the enemy up the Arlanza,
-Wellington, marching with the right wing
-against the king, reached Cuellar the 1st of August;
-on the same day the garrison of Tordesillas surrendered
-to the Gallicians, and Joseph having first
-dismantled the castle of Segovia and raised a
-contribution of money and church plate retreated<span class="sidenote">Wellington’s despatch.</span>
-through the Puerta de Guadarama, leaving a
-rear-guard of cavalry which escaped by the Ildefonso
-pass on the approach of the allied horsemen.
-Thus the army of the centre was irrevocably separated
-from the army of Portugal, the operations
-against the latter were terminated, and new combinations
-were made conformable to the altered state
-of affairs; but to understand these it is necessary
-to look at the transactions in other parts of the
-Peninsula.</p>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote">See <a href="#CHAPTER_BXVIII_IV">Chap. IV. Book XVIII.</a></span>
-In Estremadura, after Drouet’s retreat to Azagua,
-Hill placed a strong division at Merida ready to
-cross the Tagus, but no military event occurred
-until the 24th of July, when general Lallemand,
-with three regiments of cavalry pushed back
-some Portuguese horsemen from Ribera to Villa
-Franca. He was attacked in front by general Long,
-while general Slade menaced his left, but he succeeded
-in repassing the defile of Ribera; Long then
-turned him by both flanks, and aided by Lefebre’s
-horse artillery, drove him with the loss of fifty
-men and many horses upon Llera, a distance of
-twenty miles. Drouet, desirous to retaliate, immediately
-executed a flank march towards Merida,
-and Hill fearing for his detachments there made a
-corresponding movement, whereupon the French general<span class="sidenote">Intercepted correspondence.</span>
-returned to the Serena; but though he received<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_188"></a>[188]</span>
-positive orders from Soult to give battle no action
-followed and the affairs of that part of the Peninsula
-remained balanced.</p>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote7">August.</span>
-In Andalusia, Ballesteros surprised colonel Beauvais,
-at Ossuna, took three hundred prisoners and
-destroyed the French dépôt there. After this he
-moved against Malaga, and was opposed by general
-Laval in front, while general Villatte, detached
-from the blockade of Cadiz, cut off his retreat to
-San Roque. The road to Murcia was still open to
-him, but his rashness, though of less consequence
-since the battle of Salamanca, gave Wellington
-great disquietude, and the more so that Joseph
-O’Donel had just sustained a serious defeat near Alicant.
-This disaster, which shall be described in a
-more fitting place, was however in some measure
-counterbalanced by the information, that the revived
-expedition from Sicily had reached Majorca,
-where it had been reinforced by Whittingham’s division,
-and by the stores and guns sent from Portugal
-to Gibraltar. It was known also, that in the
-northern provinces Popham’s armament had drawn
-all Caffarelli’s troops to the coast, and although the
-littoral warfare was not followed up the French
-were in confusion and the diversion complete.</p>
-
-<p>In Castile the siege of Astorga still lingered,
-but the division of Santo Cildes, seven thousand
-strong, was in communication with Wellington,
-Silveira’s militia were on the Duero, Clauzel had
-retreated to Burgos, and the king joined by two
-thousand men from Suchet’s army, could concentrate
-twenty thousand to dispute the passes of the
-Guadarama. Hence Wellington, having nothing
-immediate to fear from Soult, nor from the army
-of Portugal, nor from the army of the north, nor<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_189"></a>[189]</span>
-from Suchet, menaced as that marshal was by the
-Sicilian expedition, resolved to attack the king in
-preference to following Clauzel. The latter general
-could not be pursued without exposing Salamanca
-and the Gallicians to Joseph, who was strong in
-cavalry; but the monarch could be assailed without
-risking much in other quarters, seeing that Clauzel
-could not be very soon ready to renew the campaign,
-and it was expected Castaños would reduce Astorga
-in a few days which would give eight thousand additional
-men to the field army. Moreover a strong
-British division could be spared to co-operate with
-Santo Cildes, Silveira, and the Partidas, in the watching
-of the beaten army of Portugal while Wellington
-gave the king a blow in the field, or forced him to
-abandon Madrid; and it appeared probable that the
-moral effect of regaining the capital would excite
-the Spaniards’ energy every where, and would prevent
-Soult from attacking Hill. If he did attack
-him, the allies by choosing this line of operations,
-would be at hand to give succour.</p>
-
-<p>These reasons being weighed, Wellington posted
-general Clinton at Cuellar with the sixth division,
-which he increased to eight thousand men by the
-addition of some sickly regiments and by Anson’s
-cavalry; Santo Cildes also was put in communication
-with him, and the Partidas of Marquinez, Saornil,
-and El Principe agreed to act with Anson on a
-prescribed plan. Thus exclusive of Silveira’s militia,
-and of the Gallicians about Astorga, eighteen
-thousand men were left on the Duero, and the English
-general was still able to march against Joseph
-with twenty-eight thousand old troops, exclusive of
-Carlos D’España’s Spaniards. He had also assurance
-from lord Castlereagh, that a considerable<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_190"></a>[190]</span>
-sum in hard money, to be followed by other remittances,
-had been sent from England, a circumstance
-of the utmost importance because grain
-could be purchased in Spain at one-third the cost
-of bringing it up from Portugal.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the king, who had regained Madrid,
-expecting to hear that ten thousand of the army
-of the south were at Toledo, received letters from
-Soult positively refusing to send that detachment;
-and from Clausel, saying that the army of Portugal
-was in full retreat to Burgos. This retreat he<span class="sidenote">King’s correspondence, MSS.</span>
-regarded as a breach of faith, because Clausel had
-promised to hold the line of the Duero if Wellington
-marched upon Madrid; but Joseph was unable
-to appreciate Wellington’s military combinations;
-he did not perceive, that, taking advantage of his
-central position, the English general, before he
-marched against Madrid, had forced Clausel to
-abandon the Duero to seek some safe and distant
-point to re-organize his army. Nor was the king’s
-perception of his own situation much clearer. He
-had the choice of several lines of operations; that
-is, he might defend the passes of the Guadarama
-while his court and enormous convoys evacuated
-Madrid and marched either upon Zaragoza, Valencia
-or Andalusia; or he might retire, army and
-convoy together, in one of those directions.</p>
-
-<p>Rejecting the defence of the passes, lest the
-allies should then march by their right to the Tagus,
-and so intercept his communication with the south,
-he resolved to direct his march towards the Morena,
-and he had from Segovia sent Soult orders to
-evacuate Andalusia and meet him on the frontier
-of La Mancha; but to avoid the disgrace of flying
-before a detachment, he occupied the Escurial<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_191"></a>[191]</span>
-mountain, and placed his army across the roads
-leading from the passes of the Guadarama to Madrid.
-While in this position Wellington’s advanced
-guard, composed of D’Urban’s Portuguese a troop
-of horse artillery and a battalion of infantry, passed
-the Guadarama, and the 10th the whole army was
-over the mountains. Then the king, retaining
-only eight thousand men in position, sent the rest of
-his troops to protect the march of his court, which
-quitted Madrid the same day, with two or three
-thousand carriages of different kinds and nearly
-twenty thousand persons of all ages and sexes.</p>
-
-<p>The 11th D’Urban drove back Trielhard’s cavalry
-posts, and entered Majadahonda, whilst some German
-infantry, Bock’s heavy cavalry, and a troop of
-horse artillery, occupied Las Rozas about a mile
-in his rear. In the evening, Trielhard, reinforced
-by Schiazzetti’s Italian dragoons and the lancers of
-Berg, returned, whereupon D’Urban called up the
-horse artillery and would have charged the enemy’s
-leading squadrons, but the Portuguese cavalry fled.
-The artillery officer thus abandoned, made a vigorous
-effort to save his guns, yet three of them being
-overturned on the rough ground were taken, and the
-victorious cavalry passed through Majadahonda in
-pursuit. The German dragoons, although surprised
-in their quarters, mounted and stopped the leading
-French squadrons until Schiazzetti’s Italians came
-up, when the fight was like to end badly; but Ponsonby’s
-cavalry and the seventh division arrived, and
-Trielhard immediately abandoned Majadahonda,
-leaving the captured guns behind him, yet carrying
-away prisoners, the Portuguese general Visconde de
-Barbacena, the colonel of the German cavalry, and
-others of less rank. The whole loss of the allies<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_192"></a>[192]</span>
-was above two hundred, and when the infantry
-passed through Rozas, a few hours after the combat,
-the German dead were lying thickly in the streets,
-many of them in their shirts and trousers, and thus
-stretched across the sills of the doors, they furnished
-proof at once of the suddenness of the action and of
-their own bravery. Had the king been prepared to
-follow up this blow with his whole force the allies
-must have suffered severely, for Wellington, trusting
-to the advanced guard, had not kept his divisions
-very close together.</p>
-
-<p>After this combat the king retired to Valdemoro
-where he met his convoy from Madrid, and when
-the troops of the three different nations forming his
-army thus came together, a horrible confusion
-arose; the convoy was plundered, and the miserable
-people who followed the court, were made a prey
-by the licentious soldiers. Marshal Jourdan, a man
-at all times distinguished for the noblest sentiments,
-immediately threw himself into the midst of the
-disorderly troops, and aided by the other generals,
-with great personal risk arrested the mischief, and
-succeeded in making the multitude file over the
-bridge of Aranjues. The procession was however
-lugubrious and shocking, for the military line of
-march was broken by crowds of weeping women
-and children and by despairing men, and courtiers
-of the highest rank were to be seen in full dress,
-desperately struggling with savage soldiers for the
-possession of even the animals on which they were
-endeavouring to save their families. The cavalry
-of the allies could have driven the whole before
-them into the Tagus, yet Lord Wellington did not
-molest them. Either from ignorance of their situation,
-or what is more probable compassionating<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_193"></a>[193]</span>
-their misery, and knowing that the troops by abandoning
-the convoy could easily escape over the
-river, he would not strike where the blow could
-only fall on helpless people without affecting the
-military operations. Perhaps also he thought it
-wise to leave Joseph the burthen of his court.</p>
-
-<p>In the evening of the 13th the whole multitude
-was over the Tagus, the garrisons of Aranjues and
-Toledo joined the army, order was restored, and the
-king received letters from Soult and Suchet. The
-first named marshal opposed the evacuation of Andalusia;
-the second gave notice, that the Sicilian
-expedition had landed at Alicant, and that a considerable
-army was forming there. Then irritated
-by Soult and alarmed for the safety of Suchet, the
-king relinquished his march towards the Morena
-and commenced his retreat to Valencia. The 15th
-the advanced guard moved with the sick and
-wounded, who were heaped on country cars, and
-the main body of the convoy followed under charge
-of the infantry, while the cavalry, spreading to the
-right and left, endeavoured to collect provisions.
-But the people, remembering the wanton devastation
-committed a few months before by Montbrun’s
-troops, on their return from Alicant, fled with their
-property; and as it was the hottest time of the year,
-and the deserted country was sandy and without
-shade, this march, of one hundred and fifty miles to
-Almanza, was one of continual suffering. The Partida
-chief Chaleco hovered constantly on the flanks
-and rear, killing without mercy all persons, civil or
-military, who straggled or sunk from exhaustion;
-and while this disastrous journey was in progress,
-another misfortune befel the French on the side of
-Requeña. For the hussars and infantry belonging to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_194"></a>[194]</span>
-Suchet’s army, having left Madrid to succour Cuenca
-before the king returned from Segovia, carried off
-the garrison of that place in despite of the Empecinado,
-and made for Valencia; but Villa Campa
-crossing their march on the 25th of August, at the
-passage of a river, near Utiel, took all their baggage,
-their guns, and three hundred men. And
-after being driven away from Cuenca the Empecinado
-invested Guadalaxara where the enemy had
-left a garrison of seven hundred men.</p>
-
-<p>Wellington seeing that the king had crossed the
-Tagus in retreat entered Madrid, a very memorable
-event were it only from the affecting circumstances
-attending it. He, a foreigner and marching at the
-head of a foreign army, was met and welcomed to
-the capital of Spain by the whole remaining population.
-The multitude who before that hour had
-never seen him, came forth to hail his approach,
-not with feigned enthusiasm, not with acclamations
-extorted by the fear of a conqueror’s power, nor yet
-excited by the natural proneness of human nature
-to laud the successful, for there was no tumultuous
-exultation; famine was amongst them, and long-endured
-misery had subdued their spirits, but
-with tears, and every other sign of deep emotion,
-they crowded around his horse, hung upon his stirrups,
-touched his clothes, or throwing themselves
-upon the earth, blessed him aloud as the friend of
-Spain. His triumph was as pure, and glorious, as
-it was uncommon, and he felt it to be so.</p>
-
-<p>Madrid was however still disturbed by the presence
-of the enemy. The Retiro contained enormous
-stores, twenty thousand stand of arms, more
-than one hundred and eighty pieces of artillery, and
-the eagles of two French regiments, and it had a garrison<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_195"></a>[195]</span>
-of two thousand fighting men, besides invalids
-and followers, but its inherent weakness was soon
-made manifest. The works consisted of an interior
-fort called La China, with an exterior entrenchment;
-but the fort was too small, the entrenchment
-too large, and the latter could be easily deprived of
-water. In the lodgings of a French officer also was
-found an order, directing the commandant to confine
-his real defence to the fort, and accordingly, in
-the night of the 13th, being menaced, he abandoned
-the entrenchment, and the next day accepted honourable
-terms, because La China was so contracted
-and filled with combustible buildings, that his fine
-troops would with only a little firing have been
-smothered in the ruins; yet they were so dissatisfied
-that many broke their arms and their commander
-was like to have fallen a victim to their wrath.
-They were immediately sent to Portugal, and French
-writers with too much truth assert, that the escort
-basely robbed and murdered many of the prisoners.
-This disgraceful action was perpetrated, either at
-Avila or on the frontier of Portugal, wherefore the
-British troops, who furnished no escorts after the
-first day’s march from Madrid, are guiltless.</p>
-
-<p>Coincident with the fall of the Retiro was
-that of Guadalaxara, which surrendered to the
-Empecinado. This mode of wasting an army, and
-its resources, was designated by Napoleon as the
-most glaring and extraordinary of all the errors
-committed by the king and by Marmont. And
-surely it was so. For including the garrisons of
-Toro, Tordesillas, Zamora and Astorga, which were
-now blockaded, six thousand men had been delivered,
-as it were bound, to the allies, and with
-them, stores and equipments sufficient for a new<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_196"></a>[196]</span>
-army. These forts had been designed by the
-emperor to resist the partidas, but his lieutenants
-exposed them to the British army, and thus the
-positive loss of men from the battle of Salamanca
-was doubled.</p>
-
-<p>Napoleon had notice of Marmont’s defeat as early
-as the 2d of September, a week before the great
-battle of Borodino; the news was carried by colonel
-Fabvier, who made the journey <ins class="corr" id="tn-196" title="Transcriber’s Note—Original text: 'from Valladodid in'">
-from Valladolid in</ins> one course, and having fought on the 22d of July
-at the Arapiles, was wounded on the heights of
-Moskowa the 7th of September! However, the
-duke of Ragusa, suffering alike in body and in
-mind, had excused himself with so little strength,
-or clearness, that the emperor contemptuously remarking,
-that the despatch contained more complicate
-stuffing than a clock, desired his war minister
-to demand, why Marmont had delivered battle
-without the orders of the king? why he had not
-made his operations subservient to the general
-plan of the campaign? why he broke from defensive
-into offensive operations before the army of the
-centre joined him? why he would not even wait two
-days for Chauvel’s cavalry, which he knew were
-close at hand? “From personal vanity,” said the
-emperor, with seeming sternness, “the duke of
-Ragusa has sacrificed the interests of his country,
-and the good of my service, he is guilty of the
-crime of insubordination, and is the author of all
-this misfortune.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote9">September</span>
-But Napoleon’s wrath so just, and apparently so
-dangerous, could not, even in its first violence,
-overpower his early friendship. With a kindness,
-the recollection of which must now pierce Marmont’s
-inmost soul, twice, in the same letter, he desired<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_197"></a>[197]</span>
-that these questions might not even be put to his
-unhappy lieutenant until his wounds were cured
-and his health re-established. Nor was this generous
-feeling shaken by the arrival of the king’s
-agent, colonel Desprez, who reached Moscow the
-18th of October, just after Murat had lost a battle
-at the outposts and when all hopes of peace with
-Russia were at an end. Joseph’s dispatches bitter<span class="sidenote"><a href="#NO_IV">Appendix, 4,</a> <a href="#NO_V">5,</a> <a href="#NO_VI_A">6.</a></span>
-against all the generals, were especially so against
-Marmont and Soult; the former for having lost the
-battle, the latter because of his resistance to the
-royal plan. The recal of the duke of Dalmatia
-was demanded imperatively, because he had written
-a letter to the emperor, extremely offensive to the
-king; and it was also hinted, that Soult designed to
-make himself king of Andalusia. Idle stories of that
-marshal’s ambition seem always to have been resorted
-to, when his skilful plans were beyond the military
-judgement of ordinary generals; but Marmont was
-deeply sunk in culpable misfortune, and the king’s
-complaints against him were not unjust. Napoleon
-had however then seen Wellington’s dispatch,
-which was more favourable to the duke of Ragusa,
-than Joseph’s report; for the latter was founded on
-a belief, that the unfortunate general, knowing the
-army of the centre was close at hand, would not
-wait for it; whereas the partidas had intercepted
-so many of Joseph’s letters, it is doubtful if any
-reached Marmont previous to the battle. It was in
-vain therefore, that Desprez pressed the king’s
-discontent on the emperor; that great man, with
-unerring sagacity, had already disentangled the
-truth, and Desprez was thus roughly interrogated as
-to the conduct of his master.</p>
-
-<p>Why was not the army of the centre in the field<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_198"></a>[198]</span>
-a month sooner to succour Marmont? Why was
-the emperor’s example, when, in a like case, he
-marched from Madrid against sir John Moore,
-forgotten? Why, after the battle, was not the
-Duero passed, and the beaten troops rallied on the
-army of the centre? Why were the passes of the
-Guadarama so early abandoned? Why was the
-Tagus crossed so soon? Finally, why were the
-stores and gun-carriages in the Retiro not burnt,
-the eagles and the garrison carried off?</p>
-
-<p>To these questions the king’s agent could only
-reply by excuses which must have made the energetic
-emperor smile; but when, following his instructions,
-Desprez harped upon Soult’s demeanour, his designs
-in Andalusia, and still more upon the letter so personally
-offensive to the king, and which shall be
-noticed hereafter, Napoleon replied sharply, that he
-could not enter into such pitiful disputes while he
-was at the head of five hundred thousand men
-and occupied with such immense operations. With
-respect to Soult’s letter, he said he knew his brother’s
-real feelings, but those who judged Joseph by
-his language could only think with Soult, whose
-suspicions were natural and partaken by the other
-generals; wherefore he would not, by recalling
-him, deprive the armies in Spain of the only military
-head they possessed. And then in ridicule of
-Soult’s supposed treachery, he observed, that the
-king’s fears on that head must have subsided, as the
-English newspapers said the duke of Dalmatia was
-evacuating Andalusia, and he would of course unite
-with Suchet and with the army of the centre to
-retake the offensive.</p>
-
-<p>The emperor, however, admitted all the evils
-arising from these disputes between the generals and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_199"></a>[199]</span>
-the king, but said that at such a distance he could not
-give precise orders for their conduct. He had foreseen
-the mischief he observed, and regretted more
-than ever that Joseph had disregarded his counsel
-not to return to Spain in 1811, and thus saying he
-closed the conversation, but this expression about
-Joseph not returning to Spain is very remarkable.
-Napoleon spoke of it as of a well known
-fact, yet Joseph’s letters shew that he not only
-desired but repeatedly offered to resign the crown
-of Spain and live a private man in France! Did
-the emperor mean that he wished his brother to
-remain a crowned guest at Paris? or had some
-subtle intriguers misrepresented the brothers to each
-other? The noblest buildings are often defiled in
-secret by vile and creeping things.</p>
-
-
-<h4>OBSERVATIONS.</h4>
-
-<p>1º. <em>Menace your enemy’s flanks, protect your
-own, and be ready to concentrate on the important
-points</em>:</p>
-
-<p>These maxims contain the whole spirit of Napoleon’s
-instructions to his generals, after Badajos
-was succoured in 1811. At that time he ordered the
-army of Portugal to occupy the valley of the Tagus
-and the passes of the Gredos mountains, in which
-position it covered Madrid, and from thence it
-could readily march to aid either the army of the
-south, or the army of the north. Dorsenne, who
-commanded the latter, could bring twenty-six thousand
-men to Ciudad Rodrigo, and Soult could
-bring a like number to Badajos, but Wellington<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_200"></a>[200]</span>
-could not move against one or the other without
-having Marmont upon his flank; he could not
-move against Marmont, without having the others
-on both flanks, and he could not turn his opponent’s
-flanks save from the ocean. If notwithstanding
-this combination he took Ciudad Rodrigo and
-Badajos, it was by surprise, and because the
-French did not concentrate on the important
-points, which proved indeed his superiority to the
-executive general opposed to him but in no manner
-affected the principle of Napoleon’s plan.</p>
-
-<p>Again, when the preparations for the Russian
-war had weakened the army of the north, the
-emperor, giving Marmont two additional divisions,
-ordered him to occupy Castile, not as a defensive
-position, but as a central offensive one from whence
-he could keep the Gallicians in check, and by
-prompt menacing movements, prevent Wellington
-from commencing serious operations elsewhere.
-This plan also had reference to the maxim respecting
-flanks. For Marmont was forbidden to
-invade Portugal while Wellington was on the
-frontier of Beira, that is when he could not assail
-him in flank; and he was directed to guard the
-Asturias carefully as a protection to the great line
-of communication with France; in May also he
-was rebuked for having withdrawn Bonet from
-Oviedo, and for delaying to reoccupy the Asturias
-when the incursion against Beira terminated. But
-neither then nor afterwards did the duke of Ragusa
-comprehend the spirit of the Emperor’s views, and
-that extraordinary man, whose piercing sagacity
-seized every chance of war, was so disquieted by
-his lieutenant’s want of perception, that all the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_201"></a>[201]</span>
-pomp, and all the vast political and military combinations
-of Dresden, could not put it from his
-thoughts.</p>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote"><a href="#NO_II">Appendix No. 2.</a></span>
-“Twice,” said he, “has the duke of Ragusa
-placed an interval of thirty leagues between his
-army and the enemy, contrary to all the rules of
-war; the English general goes where he will, the
-French general loses the initial movements and is
-of no weight in the affairs of Spain. Biscay and
-the north are exposed by the evacuation of the
-Asturias; Santona and St. Sebastian are endangered,
-and the guerillas communicate freely with
-the coast. If the duke of Ragusa has not kept
-some bridges on the Agueda, he cannot know what
-Wellington is about, and he will retire before light
-cavalry instead of operating so as to make the
-English general concentrate his whole army. The
-false direction already given to affairs by marshal
-Marmont, makes it necessary that Caffarelli should
-keep a strong corps always in hand; that the commander
-of the reserve, at Bayonne, should look to
-the safety of St. Sebastian, holding three thousand
-men always ready to march; finally that the provisional
-battalions, and troops from the dépôts of
-the interior, should immediately reinforce the reserve
-at Bayonne, be encamped on the Pyrennees,
-and exercised and formed for service. <em>If Marmont’s
-oversights continue, these troops will prevent
-the disasters from becoming extreme.</em>”</p>
-
-<p>Napoleon was supernaturally gifted in warlike
-matters. It has been recorded of Cæsar’s generalship,
-that he foretold the cohorts mixed with his
-cavalry would be the cause of victory at Pharsalia.
-But this letter was written by the French emperor
-on the 28th of May before the allies were even<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_202"></a>[202]</span>
-collected on the Agueda, and when a hundred
-thousand French troops were between the English
-general and Bayonne, and yet its prescience was
-vindicated at Burgos in October!</p>
-
-<p>2º. To fulfil the conditions of the emperor’s
-design, Marmont should have adopted Soult’s recommendation,
-that is, leaving one or two divisions
-on the Tormes he should have encamped near
-Baños, and pushed troops towards the upper
-Agueda to watch the movements of the allies.
-Caffarelli’s divisions could then have joined those
-on the Tormes, and thus Napoleon’s plan for 1811
-would have been exactly renewed; Madrid would
-have been covered, a junction with the king would
-have been secured, Wellington could scarcely have
-moved beyond the Agueda, and the disaster of
-Salamanca would have been avoided.</p>
-
-<p>The duke of Ragusa, apparently because he
-would not have the king in his camp, run counter
-both to the emperor and to Soult. 1º. He kept no
-troops on the Agueda, which might be excused
-on the ground that the feeding of them there was
-beyond his means; but then he did not concentrate
-behind the Tormes to sustain his forts, neither did
-he abandon his forts, when he abandoned Salamanca,
-and thus eight hundred men were sacrificed
-merely to secure the power of concentrating behind
-the Duero. 2º. He adopted a line of operations
-perpendicular to the allies’ front, instead of
-lying on their flank; he abandoned sixty miles of
-country between the Tormes and the Agueda, and
-he suffered Wellington to take the initial movements
-of the campaign. 3º. He withdrew Bonet’s
-division from the Asturias, whereby he lost Caffarelli’s
-support and realized the emperor’s fears<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_203"></a>[203]</span>
-for the northern provinces. It is true that he regained
-the initial power, by passing the Duero on
-the 18th, and had he deferred the passage until the
-king was over the Guadarama, Wellington must
-have gone back upon Portugal with some shew of
-dishonour if not great loss. But if Castaños, instead
-of remaining with fifteen thousand Gallicians,
-before Astorga, a weak place with a garrison of
-only twelve hundred men, had blockaded it with
-three or four thousand, and detached Santocildes
-with eleven or twelve thousand down the Esla to
-co-operate with Silveira and D’Urban, sixteen thousand
-men would have been acting upon Marmont’s
-right flank in June; and as Bonet did not join until
-the 8th of July the line of the Duero would
-scarcely have availed the French general.</p>
-
-<p>3º. The secret of Wellington’s success is to be
-found in the extent of country occupied by the
-French armies, and the impediments to their military
-communication. Portugal was an impregnable
-central position, from whence the English
-general could rush out unexpectedly against any
-point. This strong post was however of his own
-making, he had chosen it, had fortified it, had
-defended it, he knew its full value and possessed
-quickness and judgement to avail himself of all
-its advantages; the battle of Salamanca was accidental
-in itself, but the tree was planted to bear
-such fruit, and Wellington’s profound combinations
-must be estimated from the general result. He
-had only sixty thousand disposable troops, and
-above a hundred thousand French were especially
-appointed to watch and controul him, yet he passed
-the frontier, defeated forty-five thousand in a
-pitched battle, and drove twenty thousand others<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_204"></a>[204]</span>
-from Madrid in the greatest confusion, without
-risking a single strategic point, of importance to
-his own operations. His campaign up to the conquest
-of Madrid was therefore strictly in accord
-with the rules of art, although his means and resources
-have been shewn to be precarious, shifting,
-and uncertain. Indeed the want of money alone
-would have prevented him from following up his
-victory if he had not persuaded the Spanish authorities,
-in the Salamanca country, to yield him the
-revenues of the government in kind under a promise
-of repayment at Cadiz. No general was ever
-more entitled to the honours of victory.</p>
-
-<p>4º. The success of Wellington’s daring advance
-would seem to indicate a fault in the French plan
-of invasion. The army of the south, numerous, of
-approved valour and perfectly well commanded, was
-yet of so little weight in this campaign as to prove
-that Andalusia was a point pushed beyond the true
-line of operations. The conquest of that province
-in 1811 was an enterprize of the king’s, on which
-he prided himself, yet it seems never to have been
-much liked by Napoleon, although he did not absolutely
-condemn it. The question was indeed a
-very grave one. While the English general held
-Portugal, and while Cadiz was unsubdued, Andalusia
-was a burthen, rather than a gain. It would
-have answered better, either to have established
-communications with France by the southern line
-of invasion, which would have brought the enterprize
-within the rules of a methodical war, or to
-have held the province partially by detachments,
-keeping the bulk of the army of the south in Estremadura,
-and thus have strengthened the northern
-line of invasion. For in Estremadura, Soult would<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_205"></a>[205]</span>
-have covered the capital, and have been more strictly
-connected with the army of the centre; and his
-powerful co-operation with Massena in 1810 would
-probably have obliged the English general to quit
-Portugal. The same result could doubtless have
-been obtained by reinforcing the army of the south,
-with thirty or forty thousand men, but it is questionable
-if Soult could have fed such a number;
-and in favour of the invasion of Andalusia it may
-be observed, that Seville was the great arsenal of
-Spain, that a formidable power might have been
-established there by the English without abandoning
-Portugal, that Cadiz would have compensated
-for the loss of Lisbon, and finally that the English
-ministers were not at that time determined to defend
-Portugal.</p>
-
-<p>5º. When the emperor declared that Soult possessed
-the only military head in the Peninsula he referred
-to a proposition made by that marshal which
-shall be noticed in the next chapter; but having
-regard merely to <ins class="corr" id="tn-205" title="Transcriber’s Note—Original text: 'the disputes betwen'">
-the disputes between</ins> the duke of
-Dalmatia, Marmont, and the king, Suchet’s talents
-not being in question, the justice of the remark
-may be demonstrated. Napoleon always enforced
-with precept and example, the vital military principle
-of concentration on the important points; but
-the king and the marshals, though harping continually
-upon this maxim, desired to follow it out, each
-in his own sphere. Now to concentrate on a wrong
-point, is to hurt yourself with your own sword,
-and as each French general desired to be strong,
-the army at large was scattered instead of being
-concentrated.</p>
-
-<p>The failure of the campaign was, by the king,
-attributed to Soult’s disobedience, inasmuch as the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_206"></a>[206]</span>
-passage of the Tagus by Drouet would have enabled
-the army of the centre to act, before Palombini’s
-division arrived. But it has been shewn that
-Hill could have brought Wellington an equal, or
-superior reinforcement, in less time, whereby the
-latter could either have made head until the French
-dispersed for want of provisions, or, by a rapid
-counter-movement, he could have fallen upon Andalusia.
-And if the king had menaced Ciudad Rodrigo
-in return it would have been no diversion, for
-he had no battering train, still less could he have
-revenged himself by marching on Lisbon, because
-Wellington would have overpowered Soult and
-established a new base at Cadiz, before such an
-operation could become dangerous to the capital of
-Portugal. Oporto might indeed have been taken,
-yet Joseph would have hesitated to exchange Madrid
-for that city. But the ten thousand men
-required of Soult by the king, on the 19th of June,
-could have been at Madrid before August, and thus
-the passes of the Guadarama could have been defended
-until the army of Portugal was reorganized!
-Aye! but Hill could then have entered the valley of
-the Tagus, or, being reinforced, could have invaded
-Andalusia while Wellington kept the king’s army in
-check. It would appear therefore that Joseph’s
-plan of operations, if all its combinations had been
-exactly executed, might have prevented Wellington’s
-progress on some points, but to effect this the
-French must have been concentrated in large
-masses from distant places without striking any
-decisive blow, which was the very pith and marrow
-of the English general’s policy. Hence it follows
-that Soult made the true and Joseph the false application
-of the principle of concentration.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_207"></a>[207]</span></p>
-
-<p>6º. If the king had judged his position truly he
-would have early merged the monarch in the general,
-exchanged the palace for the tent; he would
-have held only the Retiro and a few fortified posts
-in the vicinity of Madrid, he would have organized
-a good pontoon train and established his magazines
-in Segovia, Avila, Toledo, and Talavera; finally he
-would have kept his army constantly united in the
-field, and exercised his soldiers, either by opening
-good roads through the mountains, or in chasing
-the partidas, while Wellington remained quiet.
-Thus acting, he would have been always ready to
-march north or south, to succour any menaced
-point. By enforcing good order and discipline in
-his own army, he would also have given a useful
-example, and he could by vigilance and activity
-have ensured the preponderance of force in the
-field on whichever side he marched. He would
-thus have acquired the esteem of the French generals,
-and obtained their willing obedience, and
-the Spaniards would more readily have submitted
-to a warlike monarch. A weak man may safely
-wear an inherited crown, it is of gold and the people
-support it; but it requires the strength of a warrior
-to bear the weight of an usurped diadem, it is of
-iron.</p>
-
-<p>7º. If Marmont and the king were at fault in the
-general plan of operations, they were not less so in
-the particular tactics of the campaign.</p>
-
-<p>On the 18th of July the army of Portugal passed
-the Douro in advance. On the 30th it repassed that
-river in retreat, having, in twelve days, marched
-two hundred miles, fought three combats, and a general
-battle. One field-marshal, seven generals,<span class="sidenote"><a href="#NO_XIX">Appendix, Nos. 19</a>, <a href="#NO_XX">20.</a></span>
-twelve thousand five hundred men and officers had<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_208"></a>[208]</span>
-been killed, wounded, or taken; and two eagles,
-besides those taken in the Retiro, several standards,
-twelve guns, and eight carriages, exclusive of the
-artillery and stores captured at Valladolid, fell into
-the victors’ hands. In the same period, the allies
-marched one hundred and sixty miles, and had one
-field-marshal, four generals, and somewhat less than
-six thousand officers and soldiers killed or wounded.</p>
-
-<p>This comparison furnishes the proof of Wellington’s
-sagacity, when he determined not to fight
-except at great advantage. The French army,
-although surprised in the midst of an evolution and
-instantly swept from the field, killed and wounded
-six thousand of the allies; the eleventh and sixty-first
-regiments of the sixth division had not together
-more than one hundred and sixty men and officers
-left standing at the end of the battle; twice six
-thousand then would have fallen in a more equal
-contest, the blow would have been less decisive,
-and as Chauvel’s cavalry and the king’s army were
-both at hand, a retreat into Portugal would probably
-have followed a less perfect victory. Wherefore
-this battle ought not, and would not have been
-fought, but for Marmont’s false movement on the
-22d. Yet it is certain that if Wellington had
-retired without fighting, the murmurs of his army,
-already louder than was seemly, would have been
-heard in England, and if an accidental shot had terminated
-his career all would have terminated. The
-cortez, ripe for a change, would have accepted the
-intrusive king, and the American war, just declared
-against England, would have rendered the complicated
-affairs of Portugal so extremely embarrassed
-that no new man could have continued the contest.
-Then the cries of disappointed politicians would<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_209"></a>[209]</span>
-have been raised. Wellington, it would have been
-said, Wellington, desponding, and distrusting his
-brave troops, dared not venture a battle on even
-terms, hence these misfortunes! His name would
-have been made, as sir John Moore’s was, a butt for
-the malice and falsehood of faction, and his military
-genius would have been measured by the ignorance
-of his detractors.</p>
-
-<p>8º. In the battle Marmont had about forty-two
-thousand sabres and bayonets; Wellington who had
-received some detachments on the 19th had above
-forty-six thousand, but the excess was principally<span class="sidenote"><a href="#NO_XIX">Appendix, Nos. 19</a>, <a href="#NO_XX">20.</a></span>
-Spanish. The French had seventy-four guns, the
-allies, including a Spanish battery, had only sixty
-pieces. Thus, Marmont, over-matched in cavalry
-and infantry, was superior in artillery, and the fight
-would have been most bloody, if the generals had
-been equal, for courage and strength were in even
-balance until Wellington’s genius struck the beam.
-Scarcely can a fault be detected in his conduct. It
-might indeed be asked why the cavalry reserves
-were not, after Le Marchant’s charge, brought up
-closer to sustain the fourth, fifth, and sixth divisions
-and to keep off Boyer’s dragoons, but it would seem
-ill to cavil at an action which was described at the
-time by a French officer, as the “<em>beating of forty
-thousand men in forty minutes</em>.”</p>
-
-<p>9º. The battle of Salamanca remarkable in many
-points of view, was not least so in this that it was
-the first decided victory gained by the allies in the
-Peninsula. In former actions the French had been
-repulsed, here they were driven headlong as it were
-before a mighty wind, without help or stay, and the
-results were proportionate. Joseph’s secret negociations
-with the Cortez were crushed, his partizans<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_210"></a>[210]</span>
-in every part of the Peninsula were abashed, and
-the sinking spirit of the Catalans was revived; the
-clamours of the opposition in England were checked,
-the provisional government of France was dismayed,
-the secret plots against the French in Germany were
-resuscitated, and the shock, reaching even to Moscow,
-heaved and shook the colossal structure of Napoleon’s
-power to its very base.</p>
-
-<p>Nevertheless Salamanca was as most great battles
-are, an accident; an accident seized upon with
-astonishing vigour and quickness, but still an accident.
-Even its results were accidental, for the
-French could never have repassed the Tormes as an
-army, if Carlos D’España had not withdrawn the
-garrison from Alba, and hidden the fact from Wellington;
-and this circumstance alone would probably
-have led to the ruin of the whole campaign, but
-for another of those chances, which, recurring so
-frequently in war, render bad generals timid, and
-make great generals trust their fortune under the
-most adverse circumstances. This is easily shewn.
-Joseph was at Blasco Sancho on the 24th, and notwithstanding
-his numerous cavalry, the army of
-Portugal passed in retreat across his front at the
-distance of only a few miles, without his knowledge;
-he thus missed one opportunity of effecting his junction
-with Clauzel. On the 25th this junction could
-still have been made at Arevalo, and Wellington, as
-if to mock the king’s generalship, halted that day
-behind the Zapardiel; yet Joseph retreated towards
-the Guadarama, wrathful that Clauzel made no
-effort to join him, and forgetful that as a beaten
-and pursued army must march, it was for him to
-join Clauzel. But the true cause of these errors
-was the different inclinations of the generals. The<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_211"></a>[211]</span>
-king wished to draw Clauzel to Madrid, Clauzel
-desired to have the king behind the Duero, and if
-he had succeeded the probable result may be thus
-traced.</p>
-
-<p>Clauzel during the first confusion wrote that only
-twenty thousand men could be reorganised, but in
-this number he did not include the stragglers and
-marauders who always take advantage of a defeat
-to seek their own interest; a reference to the French
-loss proves that there were nearly thirty thousand
-fighting men left, and in fact Clauzel did in a fortnight
-reorganise twenty thousand infantry, two
-thousand cavalry and fifty guns, besides gaining a
-knowledge of five thousand stragglers and marauders.
-In fine no soldiers rally quicker after a defeat,
-than the French, and hence as Joseph brought to
-Blasco Sancho thirty guns and fourteen thousand
-men of which above two thousand were horsemen,
-forty thousand infantry, and more than six thousand
-cavalry with a powerful artillery, might then have
-been rallied behind the Duero, exclusive of Caffarelli’s
-divisions. Nor would Madrid have been
-meanwhile exposed to an insurrection, nor to the
-operation of a weak detachment from Wellington’s
-army; for the two thousand men, sent by Suchet,
-had arrived in that capital on the 30th, and there
-were in the several fortified points of the vicinity,
-six or seven thousand other troops who could have
-been united at the Retiro, to protect that dépôt and
-the families attached to the intrusive court.</p>
-
-<p>Thus Wellington without committing any fault,
-would have found a more powerful army than Marmont’s,
-again on the Duero, and capable of renewing
-the former operations with the advantage of former
-errors as warning beacons. But his own army<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_212"></a>[212]</span>
-would not have been so powerful as before, for the
-reinforcements sent from England did not even
-suffice to replace the current consumption of men;
-and neither the fresh soldiers nor the old Walcheren
-regiments were able to sustain the toil of the recent
-operations. Three thousand troops had joined since
-the battle, yet the general decrease, including the
-killed and wounded, was above eight thousand men,
-and the number of sick was rapidly augmenting from
-the extreme heat. It may therefore be said that if
-Marmont was stricken deeply by Wellington the
-king poisoned the wound. The English general
-had fore-calculated all these superior resources of
-the enemy, and it was only Marmont’s flagrant
-fault, on the 22d, that could have wrung the battle
-from him; yet he fought it as if his genius disdained
-such trial of its strength. I saw him late in the
-evening of that great day, when the advancing
-flashes of cannon and musketry, stretching as far
-as the eye could command, shewed in the darkness
-how well the field was won; he was alone, the
-flush of victory was on his brow, and his eyes
-were eager and watchful, but his voice was calm,
-and even gentle. More than the rival of Marlborough,
-since he had defeated greater warriors
-than Marlborough ever encountered, with a prescient
-pride he seemed only to accept this glory, as
-an earnest of greater things.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_213"></a>[213]</span><br /></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="BOOK_XIX">BOOK XIX.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<h3 id="CHAPTER_BXIX_I">CHAPTER I.</h3>
-
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="sidenote7">1812.</span>
-As Wellington’s operations had now deeply affected
-the French affairs in the distant provinces, it is
-necessary again to revert to the general progress of
-the war, lest the true bearings of his military policy
-should be overlooked. The battle of Salamanca,
-by clearing all the centre of Spain, had reduced
-the invasion to its original lines of operation. For
-Palombini’s division having joined the army of the
-centre, the army of the Ebro was broken up; Caffarelli
-had concentrated the scattered troops of the
-army of the north; and when Clauzel had led back
-the vanquished army of Portugal to Burgos, the
-whole French host was divided in two distinct parts,
-each having a separate line of communication with
-France, and a circuitous, uncertain, attenuated line
-of correspondence with each other by Zaragoza
-instead of a sure and short one by Madrid. But
-Wellington was also forced to divide his army in
-two parts, and though, by the advantage of his
-central position, he retained the initial power, both
-of movement and concentration, his lines of communication
-were become long, and weak because the
-enemy was powerful at either flank. Wherefore on
-his own simple strength in the centre of Spain he
-could not rely, and the diversions he had projected<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_214"></a>[214]</span>
-against the enemy’s rear and flanks became more important
-than ever. To these we must now turn.</p>
-
-
-<h4>EASTERN OPERATIONS.</h4>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote">See <a href="#CHAPTER_BXVII_II">Book XVII. Chap. II.</a></span>
-It will be recollected that the narrative of Catalonian
-affairs ceased at the moment when Decaen,
-after fortifying the coast line and opening new
-roads beyond the reach of shot from the English
-ships, was gathering the harvest of the interior.
-Lacy, inefficient in the field and universally hated,
-was thus confined to the mountain chain which
-separates the coast territory from the plains of
-Lerida, and from the Cerdaña. The insurrectionary<span class="sidenote">Captain Addington’s correspondence, MSS.</span>
-spirit of the Catalonians was indeed only upheld by
-Wellington’s successes, and by the hope of English
-succour from Sicily; for Lacy, devoted to the republican
-party in Spain, had now been made captain-general
-as well as commander-in-chief, and sought
-to keep down the people, who were generally of the
-priestly and royal faction. He publicly spoke of
-exciting a general insurrection, yet, in his intercourse
-with the English naval officers, avowed his wish to
-repress the patriotism of the Somatenes; he was
-not ashamed to boast of his assassination plots, and
-<span class="sidenote">History of the conspiracies against the French army in Catalonia, published at Barcelona, 1813.</span>
-received with honour, a man who had murdered <ins class="corr" id="tn-214" title="Transcriber’s Note—Original text: 'the aid-de-camp of'">
-the aide-de-camp of</ins> Maurice Mathieu; he sowed dissentions
-amongst his generals, intrigued against all
-of them in turn, and when Eroles and Manso, who
-were the people’s favourites, raised any soldiers, he
-transferred the latter as soon as they were organized
-to Sarzfield’s division, at the same time calumniating
-that general to depress his influence. He quarrelled
-incessantly with captain Codrington, and had no
-desire to see an English force in Catalonia lest a
-general insurrection should take place, for he feared<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_215"></a>[215]</span>
-that the multitude once gathered and armed would
-drive him from the province and declare for the opponents
-of the cortez. And in this view the constitution
-itself, although emanating from the cortez,
-was long withheld from the Catalans, lest the newly
-declared popular rights should interfere with the
-arbitrary power of the chief.</p>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote7">July.</span>
-Such was the state of the province when intelligence
-that the Anglo-Sicilian expedition had arrived
-at Mahon, excited the hopes of the Spaniards and
-the fears of the French. The coast then became the
-great object of interest to both, and the Catalans
-again opened a communication with the English
-fleet by Villa Nueva de Sitjes, and endeavoured
-to collect the grain of the Campo de Taragona.
-Decaen, coming to meet Suchet who had arrived at
-Reus with two thousand men, drove the Catalans to
-the hills again; yet the Lerida district was thus
-opened to the enterprises of Lacy, because it was at
-this period that Reille had detached general Paris<span class="sidenote">See <a href="#CHAPTER_BXVII_II">Book XVII. Chap. II.</a></span>
-from Zaragoza to the aid of Palombini; and that
-Severoli’s division was broken up to reinforce the
-garrisons of Lerida, Taragona, Barcelona, and
-Zaragoza. But the army of the Ebro being dissolved,
-Lacy resolved to march upon Lerida, where
-he had engaged certain Spaniards in the French
-service to explode the powder magazine when he
-should approach; and this odious scheme, which
-necessarily involved the destruction of hundreds of
-his own countrymen, was vainly opposed by Eroles
-and Sarzfield.</p>
-
-<p>On the 12th of July, Eroles’ division, that general
-being absent, was incorporated with Sarzfield’s and
-other troops at Guisona, and the whole journeying
-day and night reached Tremp on the 13th. Lacy<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_216"></a>[216]</span>
-having thus turned Lerida, would have resumed the
-march at mid-day, intending to attack the next
-morning at dawn, but the men were without food,
-and exhausted by fatigue, and fifteen hundred had
-fallen behind. A council of war being then held,
-Sarzfield, who thought the plot wild, would have
-returned, observing that all communication with the
-sea was abandoned, and the harvests of the Camps
-de Taragona and Valls being left to be gathered by<span class="sidenote"><ins class="corr" id="tn-216" title="Transcriber’s Note—Original text: 'Sarsfield'">
-Sarzfield</ins>’s Vindication, MSS.</span>
-the enemy, the loss of the corn would seriously
-affect the whole principality. Displeased at the
-remonstrance, Lacy immediately sent him back
-to the plain of Urgel with some infantry and the
-cavalry, to keep the garrison of Balaguer in check;
-but in the night of the 16th when Sarzfield had
-reached the bridge of Alentorna on the Segre, fresh
-orders caused him to return to Limiana on the
-Noguera. Meanwhile Lacy himself had advanced
-by Agen towards Lerida, the explosion of the
-magazine took place, many houses were thrown
-down, two hundred inhabitants and one hundred
-and fifty soldiers were destroyed; two bastions fell,
-and the place was laid open.</p>
-
-<p>Henriod the governor, although ignorant of the
-vicinity of the Spaniards, immediately manned the
-breaches, the garrison of Balaguer, hearing the
-explosion marched to his succour, and when the
-Catalan troops appeared, the citizens enraged by
-the destruction of their habitations aided the
-French; Lacy then fled back to Tremp, bearing
-the burthen of a crime which he had not feared
-to commit, but wanted courage to turn to his
-country’s advantage. To lessen the odium thus
-incurred, he insidiously attributed the failure to
-Sarzfield’s disobedience; and as that general, to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_217"></a>[217]</span>
-punish the people of Barbastro for siding with the
-French and killing twenty of his men, had raised<span class="sidenote">Captain Codrington’s Papers, MSS.</span>
-a heavy contribution of money and corn in the
-district, he became so hateful, that some time after,
-when he endeavoured to raise soldiers in those parts,
-the people threw boiling water at him from the
-windows as he passed.</p>
-
-<p>Before this event Suchet had returned to Valencia,
-and Dacaen and Maurice Mathieu marched against
-colonel Green, who was entrenched in the hermitage<span class="sidenote">Idem.</span>
-of St. Dimas, one of the highest of the
-peaked rocks overhanging the convent of Montserrat.
-Manso immediately raised the Somatenes<span class="sidenote">Laffaille’s Campaigns in Catalonia.</span>
-to aid Green, and as the latter had provisions the
-inaccessible strength of his post seemed to defy
-capture; yet he surrendered in twenty-four hours,
-and at a moment when the enemy, despairing of
-success, were going to relinquish the attack. He
-excused himself as being forced by his own people,
-but he signed the capitulation. Decaen then set
-fire to the convent of Montserrat and the flames
-seen for miles around was the signal that the
-warfare on that holy mountain was finished.
-After this the French general marched to Lerida
-to gather corn and Lacy again spread his troops
-in the mountains.</p>
-
-<p>During his absence Eroles had secretly been
-preparing a general insurrection to break out when
-the British army should arrive, and it was supposed
-that his object was to effect a change in the government
-of the province; for though Lacy himself
-again spoke of embodying the Somatenes if
-arms were given to him by sir Edward Pellew,<span class="sidenote">Codrington’s Papers, MSS.</span>
-there was really no scarcity of arms, the demand
-was a deceit to prevent the muskets from being
-given to the people, and there was no levy. Hence<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_218"></a>[218]</span>
-the discontent increased and a general desire for
-the arrival of the British troops became prevalent;
-the miserable people turned anxiously towards
-any quarter for aid, and this expression of
-conscious helplessness was given in evidence by
-the Spanish chiefs, and received as proof of enthusiasm
-by the English naval commanders, who
-were more sanguine of success than experience
-would warrant. All eyes were however directed
-towards the ocean, the French in fear, the Catalans
-in hope; and the British armament did appear off
-Palamos, but after three days, spread its sails
-again and steered for Alicant, leaving the principality
-stupified with grief and disappointment.</p>
-
-<p>This unexpected event was the natural result of
-previous errors on all sides, errors which invariably
-attend warlike proceedings when not directed by
-a superior genius, and even then not always to be
-avoided. It has been shewn how ministerial vacillation
-marred lord William Bentinck’s first intention
-of landing in person with ten or twelve thousand
-men on the Catalonian coast; and how after
-much delay general Maitland had sailed to Palma
-with a division of six thousand men, Calabrians,
-Sicilians and others, troops of no likelihood save
-that some three thousand British and Germans were
-amongst them. This force was afterwards joined
-by the transports from Portugal having engineers
-and artillery officers on board, and that honoured
-battering train which had shattered the gory walls of
-Badajos. Wellington had great hopes of this expedition;
-he had himself sketched the general plan
-of operations; and his own campaign had been conceived
-in the expectation, that lord William Bentinck,
-a general of high rank and reputation, with
-ten thousand good troops, aided with at least as<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_219"></a>[219]</span>
-many Spanish soldiers, disciplined under the two
-British officers Whittingham and Roche, would
-have early fallen on Catalonia to the destruction of
-Suchet’s plans. And when this his first hope was
-quashed, he still expected that a force would be
-disembarked of strength, sufficient, in conjunction
-with the Catalan army, to take Taragona.</p>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote7">August.</span>
-Roche’s corps was most advanced in discipline,
-but the Spanish government delayed to place it under
-general Maitland, and hence it first sailed from
-the islands to Murcia, then returned without orders,
-again repaired to Murcia, and at the moment of
-general Maitland’s arrival off Palamos, was, under
-the command of Joseph O’Donel, involved in a
-terrible catastrophe already alluded to and hereafter
-to be particularly narrated. Whittingham’s levy<span class="sidenote">Gen. Donkin’s papers, MSS.</span>
-remained, but when inspected by the quarter-master
-general Donkin it was found in a raw state,
-scarcely mustering four thousand effective men,
-amongst which were many French deserters from
-the island of Cabrera. The sumptuous clothing
-and equipments of Whittingham’s and Roche’s
-men, their pay regularly supplied from the British
-subsidy, and very much exceeding that of the
-other Spanish corps, excited envy and dislike;
-there was no public inspection, no check upon the
-expenditure, nor upon the delivery of the stores, and
-Roche’s proceedings on this last head, whether justly
-or unjustly I know not, were very generally and
-severely censured. Whittingham acknowledged
-that he could not trust his people near the enemy
-without the aid of British troops, and though the
-captain-general Coupigny desired their departure,
-his opinion was against a descent in Catalonia.
-Maitland hesitated, but sir Edward Pellew urged
-this descent so very strongly, that he finally assented<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_220"></a>[220]</span>
-and reached Palamos with nine thousand men of
-all nations on the 31st of July, yet in some confusion
-as to the transport service, which the staff
-officers attributed to the injudicious meddling of
-the naval chiefs.</p>
-
-<p>Maitland’s first care was to open a communication
-with the Spanish commanders. Eroles came
-on board at once and vehemently and unceasingly
-urged an immediate disembarkation, declaring that
-the fate of Catalonia and his own existence depended
-upon it; the other generals shewed less<span class="sidenote">Notes by general Maitland, MSS.</span>
-eagerness, and their accounts differed greatly with
-respect to the relative means of the Catalans and
-the French. Lacy estimated the enemy’s disposable<span class="sidenote">General Donkin’s papers, MSS.</span>
-troops at fifteen thousand, and his own at seven
-thousand infantry and three hundred cavalry; and
-even that number he said he could with difficulty
-feed or provide with ammunition. Sarzfield judged
-the French to be, exclusive of Suchet’s moveable
-column, eighteen thousand infantry and five hundred
-cavalry; he thought it rash to invest Taragona
-with a less force, and that a free and constant communication
-with the fleet was absolutely essential
-in any operation. Eroles rated the enemy at thirteen
-thousand infantry and five hundred cavalry,
-including Suchet’s column; but the reports of the
-deserters gave twenty-two thousand infantry, exclusive
-of Suchet’s column and of the garrisons and
-Miguelettes in the enemy’s service.</p>
-
-<p>No insurrection of the Somatenes had yet taken
-place, nor was there any appearance that such an
-event would happen, as the French were descried
-conducting convoys along the shore with small
-escorts, and concentrating their troops for battle
-without molestation. The engineers demanded from<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_221"></a>[221]</span>
-six to ten days to reduce Taragona after investment,
-and Decaen and Maurice Mathieu were then near
-Montserrat with seven or eight thousand good
-troops, which number could be doubled in a few
-days; the Catalans could not so soon unite and
-join Maitland’s force, and there was a general,
-although apparently, an unjust notion abroad, that
-Lacy was a Frenchman at heart. It was feared
-also, that the Toulon fleet might come out and burn
-the transports at their anchorage during the siege,
-and thus Wellington’s battering train and even the
-safety of the army would be involved in an enterprize
-promising little success. A full council of war
-was unanimous not to land, and the reluctance of
-the people to rise, attributed by captain Codrington
-to the machinations of traitors, was visible; Maitland
-also was farther swayed by the generous and just
-consideration, that as the Somatenes had not voluntarily
-taken arms, it would be cruel to excite them
-to such a step, when a few days might oblige him
-to abandon them to the vengeance of the enemy.
-Wherefore as Palamos appeared too strong for a
-sudden assault, the armament sailed towards Valencia
-with intent to attack that place, after a project, furnished
-by the quarter-master general Donkin and
-in unison with lord Wellington’s plan of operations;
-but Maitland, during the voyage, changed his mind
-and proceeded at once to Alicant.</p>
-
-<p>The Catalans were not more displeased than the
-British naval commanders at seeing the principality
-thus shaken off; yet the judgment of the latter
-seems to have been swayed partly from having
-given stronger hopes of assistance to the former
-than the circumstances would rigorously warrant;
-partly from that confidence, which inspired by continual<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_222"></a>[222]</span>
-success, is strength on their own element,
-but rashness on shore. Captain Codrington, from<span class="sidenote">Captain Codrington’s papers, MSS.</span>
-the great interest he took in the struggle, was
-peculiarly discontented; yet his own description of
-the state of Catalonia at the time, shows that his
-hopes rested more on some vague notions of the
-Somatenes’ enthusiasm, than upon any facts which
-a general ought to calculate upon. Lord Wellington
-indeed said, that he could see no reason why the
-plan he had recommended, should not have been
-successful; an observation made, however, when he
-was somewhat excited by the prospect of having
-Suchet on his own hands, and probably under some
-erroneous information. He had been deceived about
-the strength of the forts at Salamanca, although
-close to them; and as he had only just established
-a sure channel of intelligence in Catalonia, it was
-probable that he was also deceived with respect to
-Taragona, which if not strong in regular works was
-well provided and commanded by a very bold active
-governor, and offered great resources in the facility
-of making interior retrenchments.</p>
-
-<p>The force of the Catalans lord Wellington knew
-principally from sir Edward Pellew, who had derived
-his information chiefly from Eroles, who very much
-exaggerated it, and lessened the enemy’s power in
-proportion. And general Maitland could scarcely be
-called a commander-in-chief, for lord William Bentinck
-forbade him to risk the loss of his division lest
-Sicily itself should thereby be endangered; and to
-avoid mischief from the winter season, he was instructed
-to quit the Spanish coast in the second week
-of September. Lord William and lord Wellington
-were therefore not agreed in the object to be attained.
-The first considered the diversion on the Spanish<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_223"></a>[223]</span>
-coast as secondary to the wants of Sicily, whereas
-Wellington looked only to the great interests at
-stake in the Peninsula, and thought Sicily in no
-danger until the French should reinforce their army
-in Calabria. He desired vigorous combined efforts
-of the military and naval forces, to give a new aspect
-to the war in Catalonia, and his plan was that
-Taragona should be attacked; if it fell the warfare
-he said would be once more established on a good
-base in Catalonia; if it was succoured by the concentration
-of the French troops, Valencia would
-necessarily be weak, and the armament could then
-proceed to attack that place, and if unsuccessful
-return to assail Taragona again.</p>
-
-<p>This was an excellent plan no doubt, but Napoleon
-never lost sight of that great principle of war,
-so concisely expressed by Sertorius when he told
-Pompey that a good general should look behind
-him rather than before. The emperor acting on the
-proverb that fortune favours the brave, often urged
-his lieutenants to dare desperately with a few men
-in the front, but he invariably covered their communications
-with heavy masses, and there is no
-instance of his plan of invasion being shaken by a
-flank or rear attack, except where his instructions
-were neglected. His armies made what are called
-points, in war, such as Massena’s invasion of Portugal,
-Moncey’s attack on Valencia, Dupont’s on
-Andalusia; but the general plan of operation was
-invariably supported by heavy masses protecting
-the communications. Had his instructions, sent
-from Dresden, been strictly obeyed, the walls of
-Lerida and Taragona would have been destroyed,
-and only the citadels of each occupied with small
-garrisons easily provisioned for a long time. The<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_224"></a>[224]</span>
-field army would thus have been increased by at
-least three thousand men, the moveable columns
-spared many harassing marches, and Catalonia
-would have offered little temptation for a descent.</p>
-
-<p>But notwithstanding this error of Suchet, Maitland’s
-troops were too few, and too ill-composed to
-venture the investment of Taragona. The imperial
-muster-rolls give more than eighty thousand men,
-including Reille’s divisions at Zaragosa, for the
-armies of Aragon and Catalonia, and twenty-seven
-thousand of the first and thirty-seven thousand of
-the second, were actually under arms with the
-eagles; wherefore to say that Decaen could have
-brought at once ten thousand men to the succour of
-Taragona, and, by weakening his garrisons, as many
-more in a very short time, is not to over-rate his
-power; and this without counting Paris’ brigade,
-three thousand strong, which belonged to Reille’s
-division and was disposable. Suchet had just before
-come to Reus with two thousand select men of all
-arms, and as O’Donel’s army had since been defeated
-near Alicant, he could have returned with a still
-greater force to oppose Maitland.</p>
-
-<p>Now the English fleet was descried by the French
-off Palamos on the evening of the 31st of July,
-although it did not anchor before the 1st of August;
-Decaen and Maurice Mathieu with some eight
-thousand disposable men were then between Montserrat
-and Barcelona, that is to say, only two
-marches from Taragona; Lamarque with from four
-to five thousand, was between Palamos and Mataro,
-five marches from Taragona; Quesnel with a like
-number was in the Cerdaña, being about seven
-marches off; Suchet and Paris could have arrived
-in less than eight days, and from the garrisons, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_225"></a>[225]</span>
-minor posts, smaller succours might have been
-drawn; Tortoza alone could have furnished two
-thousand. But Lacy’s division was at Vich, Sarzfield’s
-at Villa Franca, Eroles’ divided between
-Montserrat and Urgel, Milan’s in the Grao D’Olot,
-and they required five days even to assemble; when
-united, they would not have exceeded seven thousand
-men, and with their disputing, captious generals,
-would have been unfit to act vigorously; nor could
-they have easily joined the allies without fighting
-a battle in which their defeat would have been
-certain.</p>
-
-<p>Sarzfield judged that ten days at least were
-necessary to reduce Taragona, and positively affirmed
-that the army must be entirely fed from the fleet,
-as the country could scarcely supply the Catalonian
-troops alone. Thus Maitland would have had to
-land his men, his battering train and stores, and
-to form his investment, in the face of Decaen’s
-power, or, following the rules of war, have defeated
-that general first. But Decaen’s troops numerically
-equal, without reckoning the garrison of Taragona
-two thousand strong, were in composition vastly
-superior to the allies, seeing that only three thousand
-British and German troops in Maitland’s army,
-were to be at all depended upon in battle; neither
-does it appear that the platforms, sand-bags, fascines
-and other materials, necessary for a siege, were at
-this period prepared and on board the vessels.</p>
-
-<p>It is true Maitland would, if he had been able to
-resist Decaen at first, which seems doubtful, have
-effected a great diversion, and Wellington’s object
-would have been gained if a re-embarkation had
-been secure; but the naval officers, having reference
-to the nature of the coast, declared that a safe re-embarkation<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_226"></a>[226]</span>
-could not be depended upon. The
-soundness of this opinion has indeed been disputed
-by many seamen, well acquainted with the coast,
-who maintain, that even in winter the Catalonian
-shore is remarkably safe and tranquil; and that
-Cape Salou, a place in other respects admirably
-adapted for a camp, affords a certain retreat, and
-facility of re-embarking on one or other of its
-sides in all weather. However, to Maitland the
-coast of Catalonia was represented as unsafe, and
-this view of the question is also supported by very
-able seamen likewise acquainted with that sea.</p>
-
-
-<h4>OPERATIONS IN MURCIA.</h4>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote7">July.</span>
-The Anglo-Sicilian armament arrived at Alicant
-at a critical moment; the Spanish cause was there
-going to ruin. Joseph O’Donel, brother to the
-regent, had with great difficulty organized a new
-Murcian army after Blake’s surrender at Valencia, and
-this army, based upon Alicant and Carthagena, was
-independent of a division under general Frere,
-which always hung about Baza, and Lorca, on the
-frontier of Grenada, and communicated through the
-Alpuxaras with the sea-coast. Both Suchet and
-Soult were paralyzed in some degree by the neighbourhood
-of these armies, which holding a central
-position were supported by fortresses, supplied by
-sea from Gibraltar to Cadiz, and had their existence
-guaranteed by Wellington’s march into Spain, by his
-victory of Salamanca, and by his general combinations.
-For the two French commanders were forced
-to watch his movements, and to support at the same
-time, the one a blockade of the Isla de Leon, the
-other the fortresses in Catalonia; hence they were
-in no condition to follow up the prolonged operations<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_227"></a>[227]</span>
-necessary to destroy these Murcian armies,
-which were moreover supported by the arrival of
-general Ross with British troops at Carthagena.</p>
-
-<p>O’Donel had been joined by Roche in July, and
-Suchet, after detaching Maupoint’s brigade towards
-Madrid, departed himself with two thousand men
-for Catalonia, leaving general Harispe with not more
-than four thousand men beyond the Xucar. General
-Ross immediately advised O’Donel to attack him,
-and to distract his attention a large fleet, with
-troops on board, which had originally sailed from
-Cadiz to succour Ballesteros at Malaga, now
-appeared off the Valencian coast. At the same
-time Bassecour and Villa Campa, being free to act
-in consequence of Palombini’s and Maupoint’s departure
-for Madrid, came down from their haunts
-in the mountains of Albaracyn upon the right flank<span class="sidenote9">See <a href="#i_b_581fp_6">Plan 6.</a></span>
-and rear of the French positions. Villa Campa
-penetrated to Liria, and Bassecour to Cofrentes on
-the Xucar; but ere this attack could take place,
-Suchet, with his usual celerity, returned from Reus.
-At first he detached men against Villa Campa, but
-when he saw the fleet, fearing it was the Sicilian
-armament, he recalled them again, and sent for
-Paris’ brigade from Zaragoza, to act by Teruel
-against Bassecour and Villa Campa. Then he concentrated
-his own forces at Valencia, but a storm
-drove the fleet off the coast, and meanwhile
-O’Donel’s operations brought on the</p>
-
-
-<h4>FIRST BATTLE OF CASTALLA.</h4>
-
-<p>Harispe’s posts were established at Biar, Castalla,
-and Onil on the right; at Ibi and Alcoy on the
-left. This line was not more than one march from
-Alicant. Colonel Mesclop, with a regiment of infantry<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_228"></a>[228]</span>
-and some cuirassiers held Ibi, and was supported
-by Harispe himself with a reserve at Alcoy.
-General Delort, with another regiment of infantry,
-was at Castalla, having some cuirassiers at Onil on
-his left, and a regiment of dragoons with three
-companies of foot at Biar on his right. In this exposed
-situation the French awaited O’Donel, who
-directed his principal force, consisting of six thousand
-infantry, seven hundred cavalry, and eight
-guns, against Delort; meanwhile Roche with three<span class="sidenote9">See <a href="#i_b_581fp_7">Plan 7.</a></span>
-thousand men was to move through the mountains
-of Xixona, so as to fall upon Ibi simultaneously with
-the attack at Castalla. O’Donel hoped thus to cut the
-French line, and during these operations, Bassecour,
-with two thousand men, was to come down from
-Cofrentes to Villena, on the right flank of Delort.</p>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote">Suchet’s official correspondence, MSS.</span>
-Roche, who marched in the night of the 19th,
-remained during the 20th in the mountains, but the
-next night he threaded a difficult pass, eight miles
-long, reached Ibi at day-break on the 21st, and sent<span class="sidenote">Suchet’s Memoirs.</span>
-notice of his arrival to O’Donel; and when that
-general appeared in front of Delort, the latter abandoned<span class="sidenote">Roche’s correspondence, MSS.</span>
-Castalla, which was situated in the same
-valley as Ibi, and about five miles distant from it.
-But he only retired skirmishing to a strong ridge
-<span class="sidenote">General Delort’s <ins class="corr" id="tn-228" title="Transcriber’s Note—Original text: 'official re-'"> official report</ins></span>
-behind that town, which also extended behind
-Ibi; this secured his communication with Mesclop,
-of whom he demanded succour, and at the same
-time he called in his own cavalry and infantry from
-Onil and Biar. Mesclop, leaving some infantry,
-two guns, and his cuirassiers, to defend Ibi and a
-small fort on the hill behind it, marched at once
-towards Delort, and thus Roche, finding only a few
-men before him, got possession of the town after a
-sharp skirmish, yet he could not take the fort.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_229"></a>[229]</span></p>
-
-<p>At first O’Donel who had advanced beyond
-Castalla, only skirmished with and cannonaded the
-French in his front, for he had detached the Spanish
-cavalry to operate by the plains of Villena, to turn
-the enemy’s right and communicate with Bassecour.
-While expecting the effects of this movement he
-was astonished to see the French dragoons come
-trotting through the pass of Biar, on his left flank;
-they were followed by some companies of infantry,
-and only separated from him by a stream over which
-was a narrow bridge without parapets, and at the
-same moment the cuirassiers appeared on the other
-side coming from Onil. The Spanish cavalry
-had made no effort to interrupt this march from
-Biar, nor to follow the French through the defile,<span class="sidenote">See <a href="#NO_XV">Appendix, No. 15.</a></span>
-nor any effort whatever. In this difficulty
-O’Donel turned two guns against the bridge and
-supported them with a battalion of infantry, but the
-French dragoons observing this battalion to be unsteady,
-braved the fire of the guns, and riding
-furiously over the bridge seized the battery, and
-then dashed against and broke the infantry. Delort’s
-line advanced at the same moment, the cuirassiers
-charged into the town of Castalla, and the whole
-Spanish army fled outright. Several hundred sought
-refuge in an old castle and there surrendered, and of
-the others three thousand were killed, wounded, or
-taken, and yet the victors had scarcely fifteen hundred
-men engaged, and did not lose two hundred.
-O’Donel attributed his defeat to the disobedience
-and inactivity of St. Estevan, who commanded his
-cavalry, but the great fault was the placing that
-cavalry beyond the defile of Biar instead of keeping
-it in hand for the battle.</p>
-
-<p>This part of the action being over, Mesclop, who<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_230"></a>[230]</span>
-had not taken any share in it, was reinforced and
-returned to succour Ibi, to which place also Harispe
-was now approaching from Alcoy; but Roche
-favoured by the strength of the passes escaped, and
-reached Alicant with little hurt, while the remains
-of O’Donel’s divisions, pursued by the cavalry on
-the road of Jumilla, fled to the city of Murcia.
-Bassecour who had advanced to Almanza was then
-driven back to his mountain-haunts, where Villa
-Campa rejoined him. It was at this moment that
-Maitland’s armament disembarked and the remnants
-of the Spanish force rallied. The king, then flying
-from Madrid, immediately changed the direction of
-his march from the Morena to Valencia, and one
-more proof was given that it was England and not
-Spain which resisted the French; for Alicant would
-have fallen, if not as an immediate consequence of
-this defeat, yet surely when the king’s army had
-joined Suchet.</p>
-
-<p>That general, who had heard of the battle of Salamanca,
-the evacuation of Madrid and the approach
-of Joseph, and now saw a fresh army springing up
-in his front, hastened to concentrate his disposable
-force in the positions of San Felippe de Xativa and
-Moxente which he entrenched, as well as the road
-to Almanza with a view to secure his junction with
-the king. At the same time he established a new
-bridge and bridge-head at Alberique in addition to
-that at Alcira on the Xucar; and having called up
-Paris from Teruel and Maupoint from Cuenca resolved
-to abide a battle, which the slowness and
-vacillation of his adversaries gave him full time to
-prepare for.</p>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote7">August.</span>
-Maitland arrived the 7th, and though his force was
-not all landed before the 11th, the French were<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_231"></a>[231]</span>
-still scattered on various points, and a vigorous
-commander would have found the means to drive
-them over the Xucar, and perhaps from Valencia
-itself. However the British general had scarcely set
-his foot on shore when the usual Spanish vexations
-overwhelmed him. Three principal roads led towards
-the enemy; one on the left, passed through
-Yecla and Fuente La Higuera, and by it the remnant
-of O’Donel’s army was coming up from Murcia;
-another passed through Elda, Sax, Villena, and
-Fuente de la Higuera, and the third through Xixona,
-Alcoy, and Albayda. Now O’Donel, whose existence
-as a general was redeemed by the appearance
-of Maitland, instantly demanded from the latter a
-pledge, that he would draw nothing either by purchase
-or requisition, save wine and straw, from
-any of these lines, nor from the country between
-them. The English general assented and instantly
-sunk under the difficulties thus created. For his
-intention was to have attacked Harispe at Alcoy
-and Ibi on the 13th or 14th, but he was only
-able to get one march from Alicant as late as the
-16th, he could not attack before the 18th, and it
-was on that day, that Suchet concentrated his army
-at Xativa. The delay had been a necessary consequence
-of the agreement with O’Donel.</p>
-
-<p>Maitland was without any habitude of command,
-his commissariat was utterly inefficient, and his
-field-artillery had been so shamefully ill-prepared
-in Sicily that it was nearly useless. He had hired
-mules at a great expense for the transport of his
-guns, and of provisions, from Alicant, but the owners
-of the mules soon declared they could not fulfil
-their contract unless they were fed by the British,
-and this O’Donel’s restrictions as to the roads prevented.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_232"></a>[232]</span>
-Many of the muleteers also, after receiving
-their money, deserted with both mules and provisions;
-and on the first day’s march a convoy, with
-six days’ supply, was attacked by an armed banditti
-called a guerilla, and the convoy was plundered or
-dispersed and lost.</p>
-
-<p>Maitland suffering severely from illness, was disgusted
-at these things, and fearing for the safety
-of his troops, would have retired at once, and
-perhaps have re-embarked, if Suchet had not gone
-back to Xativa; then however, he advanced to
-Elda, while Roche entered Alcoy; yet both apparently
-without an object, for there was no intention
-of fighting, and the next day Roche retired to
-Xixona and Maitland retreated to Alicant. To
-cover this retreat general Donkin pushed forward,
-with a detachment of Spanish and English cavalry,
-through Sax, Ibi, and Alcoy, and giving
-out that an advanced guard of five thousand British
-was close behind him, coasted all the French line,
-captured a convoy at Olleria, and then returned
-through Alcoy. Suchet kept close himself, in the
-camp of Xativa, but sent Harispe to meet the king
-who was now near Almanza, and on the 25th the
-junction of the two armies was effected; at the
-same time Maupoint, escaping Villa Campa’s assault,
-arrived from Cuenca with the remnant of
-his brigade.</p>
-
-<p>When the king’s troops arrived, Suchet pushed
-his outposts again to Villena and Alcoy, but apparently
-occupied in providing for Joseph’s army and
-court he neglected to press the allies, which he
-might have done to their serious detriment. Meanwhile
-O’Donel who had drawn off Frere’s division
-from Lorca came up to Yecla with five or six thousand<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_233"></a>[233]</span>
-men, and Maitland reinforced with some
-detachments from Sicily, commenced fortifying a
-camp outside Alicant; but his health was quite
-broken, and he earnestly desired to resign, being
-filled with anxiety at the near approach of Soult.
-That marshal had abandoned Andalusia, and his
-manner of doing so shall be set forth in the next
-chapter; for it was a great event, leading to great
-results, and worthy of deep consideration by those
-who desire to know upon what the fate of kingdoms
-may depend.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_234"></a>[234]</span><br /></p>
-
-<h3 id="CHAPTER_BXIX_II">CHAPTER II.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<h4>OPERATIONS IN ANDALUSIA.</h4>
-
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="sidenote7">1812. August.</span>
-Suchet found resources in Valencia to support the
-king’s court and army, without augmenting the
-pressure on the inhabitants, and a counter-stroke
-could have been made against the allies, if the
-French commanders had been of one mind and
-had looked well to the state of affairs; but Joseph
-exasperated by the previous opposition of the generals,
-and troubled by the distresses of the numerous
-families attached to his court, was only intent
-upon recovering Madrid as soon as he could collect
-troops enough to give Wellington battle. He had
-demanded from the French minister of war, money,
-stores, and a reinforcement of forty thousand men,
-and he had imperatively commanded Soult to
-abandon Andalusia; that clear-sighted commander,<span class="sidenote"><a href="#NO_III">Appendix, No. 3.</a></span>
-could not however understand why the king, who
-had given him no accurate details of Marmont’s
-misfortunes, or of his own operations, should yet
-order him to abandon at once, all the results, and
-all the interests, springing from three years’ possession
-of the south of Spain. He thought it a great
-question not to be treated lightly, and as his vast
-capacity enabled him to embrace the whole field of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_235"></a>[235]</span>
-operations, he concluded that rumour had exaggerated
-the catastrophe at Salamanca and that the
-abandoning of Andalusia would be the ruin of the
-French cause.</p>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote">French correspondence taken at Vittoria, MSS.</span>
-“To march on Madrid,” he said, “would probably
-produce another pitched battle, which should be
-carefully avoided, seeing that the whole frame-work
-of the French invasion was disjointed, and
-no resource would remain after a defeat. On the
-other hand, Andalusia, which had hitherto been
-such a burthen to the invasion, now offered means
-to remedy the present disasters, and to sacrifice that
-province with all its resources, for the sake of
-regaining the capital of Spain, appeared a folly.
-It was purchasing a town at the price of a kingdom.
-Madrid was nothing in the emperor’s policy,
-though it might be something for a king of Spain;
-yet Philip the Vth had thrice lost it and preserved his
-throne. Why then should Joseph set such a value
-upon that city? The battle of the Arapiles was
-merely a grand duel which might be fought again
-with a different result; but to abandon Andalusia
-with all its stores and establishments; to raise the
-blockade of Cadiz; to sacrifice the guns, the
-equipments, the hospitals and the magazines, and
-thus render null the labours of three years, would be
-to make the battle of the Arapiles a prodigious historical
-event, the effect of which would be felt all over
-Europe and even in the new world. And how was
-this flight from Andalusia to be safely effected? The
-army of the south had been able to hold in check
-sixty thousand enemies disposed on a circuit round
-it, but the moment it commenced its retreat towards
-Toledo those sixty thousand men would unite to
-follow, and Wellington himself would be found on<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_236"></a>[236]</span>
-the Tagus in its front. On that line then the army
-of the south could not march, and a retreat through
-Murcia would be long and difficult. But why retreat
-at all? Where,” exclaimed this able warrior,
-“where is the harm though the allies should possess
-the centre of Spain?”</p>
-
-<p>“Your majesty,” he continued, “should collect the
-army of the centre, the army of Aragon, and if possible,
-the army of Portugal, and you should march
-upon Andalusia, even though to do so should involve
-the abandonment of Valencia. If the army of Portugal
-comes with you, one hundred and twenty thousand
-men will be close to Portugal; if it cannot or
-will not come, let it remain, because while Burgos
-defends itself, that army can keep on the right of the
-Ebro and the emperor will take measures for its
-succour. Let Wellington then occupy Spain from
-Burgos to the Morena, it shall be my care to provide
-magazines, stores, and places of arms in Andalusia;
-and the moment eighty thousand French are assembled
-in that province the theatre of war is changed!
-The English general must fall back to save Lisbon,
-the army of Portugal may follow him to the Tagus,
-the line of communication with France will be
-established by the eastern coast, the final result of
-the campaign turns in our favour, and a decisive
-battle may be delivered without fear at the gates
-of Lisbon. March then with the army of the
-centre upon the Despenas Peros, unite all our forces
-in Andalusia, and all will be well! Abandon that
-province and you lose Spain! you will retire behind
-the Ebro and famine will drive you thence before
-the emperor can, from the distant Russia, provide
-a remedy; his affairs even in that country will suffer
-by the blow, and America dismayed by our misfortunes
-will perhaps make peace with England.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_237"></a>[237]</span></p>
-
-<p>Neither the king’s genius, nor his passions,
-would permit him to understand the grandeur and
-vigour of this conception. To change even simple
-lines of operation suddenly, is at all times a nice
-affair, but thus to change the whole theatre of operations
-and regain the initial movements after a
-defeat, belongs only to master spirits in war. Now
-the emperor had recommended a concentration of
-force, and Joseph would not understand this save as
-applied to the recovery of Madrid; he was uneasy
-for the frontiers of France; as if Wellington could
-possibly have invaded that country while a great
-army menaced Lisbon; in fine he could see nothing
-but his lost capital on one side, and a disobedient
-lieutenant on the other, and peremptorily repeated
-his orders. Then Soult, knowing that his plan
-could only be effected by union and rapidity,
-and dreading the responsibility of further delay,
-took immediate steps to abandon Andalusia; but
-mortified by this blighting of his fruitful genius,
-and stung with anger at such a termination to all
-his political and military labours, his feelings over-mastered
-his judgment. Instead of tracing the
-king’s rigid counteraction of his scheme to the narrowness
-of the monarch’s military genius, he judged
-it part of a design to secure his own fortune at the
-expense of his brother, an action quite foreign to
-Joseph’s honest and passionate nature. Wherefore
-making known this opinion to six generals, who
-were sworn to secrecy, unless interrogated by the
-Emperor, he wrote to the French minister of war<span class="sidenote"><a href="#NO_IV">Appendix No. 4.</a></span>
-expressing his doubts of the king’s loyalty towards
-the emperor, and founding them on the following
-facts.</p>
-
-<p>1º. That the extent of Marmont’s defeat had
-been made known to him only by the reports of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_238"></a>[238]</span>
-enemy, and the king, after remaining for twenty-three
-days, without sending any detailed information
-of the operations in the north of Spain,
-although the armies were actively engaged, had
-peremptorily ordered him to abandon Andalusia,
-saying it was the only resource remaining for the
-French. To this opinion Soult said he could not
-subscribe, yet being unable absolutely to disobey
-the monarch, he was going to make a movement
-which must finally lead to the loss of all the
-French conquests in Spain, seeing that it would
-then be impossible to remain permanently on the
-Tagus, or even in the Castiles.</p>
-
-<p>2º. This operation ruinous in itself was insisted
-upon at a time, when the newspapers of Cadiz
-affirmed, that Joseph’s ambassador at the court of
-Petersburgh, had joined the Prussian army in the
-field; that Joseph himself had made secret overtures
-to the government in the Isla de Leon; that
-Bernadotte, his brother-in-law, had made a treaty
-with England and had demanded of the Cortez a
-guard of Spaniards, a fact confirmed by information
-obtained through an officer sent with a flag of truce
-to the English admiral; finally that Moreau and
-Blucher were at Stockholm, and <ins class="corr" id="tn-238" title="Transcriber’s Note—Original text: 'the aid-du-camp of'">
-the aide-de-camp of</ins> the former was in London.</p>
-
-<p>Reflecting upon all these circumstances he feared
-that the object of the king’s false movements, might
-be to force the French army over the Ebro, in the
-view of making an arrangement for Spain, separate
-from France; fears, said the duke of Dalmatia,
-which may be chimerical, but it is better in such a
-crisis to be too fearful than too confident. This
-letter was sent by sea, and the vessel having touched
-at Valencia at the moment of Joseph’s arrival there,
-the despatch was opened, and it was then, in the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_239"></a>[239]</span>
-first burst of his anger, that the king despatched
-Desprez on that mission to Moscow, the result of
-which has been already related.</p>
-
-<p>Soult’s proceedings though most offensive to the
-king and founded in error, because Joseph’s letters,
-containing the information required, were intercepted,
-not withheld, were prompted by zeal for his
-master’s service and cannot be justly condemned, yet
-Joseph’s indignation was natural and becoming.
-But the admiration of reflecting men must ever
-be excited by the greatness of mind, and the calm
-sagacity, with which Napoleon treated this thorny
-affair. Neither the complaints of his brother, nor
-the hints of his minister of war (for the duke of
-Feltre, a man of mean capacity and of an intriguing
-disposition, countenanced Joseph’s expressed suspicions<span class="sidenote"><a href="#NO_V">Appendix, No. 5.</a></span>
-that the duke of Dalmatia designed to make
-himself king of Andalusia) could disturb the temper
-or judgment of the Emperor; and it was then,
-struck with the vigour of the plan for concentrating
-the army in Andalusia, he called Soult the only
-military head in Spain. Nor was Wellington inattentive
-of that general’s movements, he knew his
-talents, and could foresee and appreciate the importance
-of the project he had proposed. Anxiously
-he watched his reluctant motions, and while apparently
-enjoying his own triumph amidst the
-feasts and rejoicings of Madrid, his eye was fixed
-on Seville; the balls and bull-fights of the capital
-cloaked both the skill and the apprehensions of the
-consummate general.</p>
-
-<p>Before the allies had crossed the Guadarama,
-Hill had been directed to hold his army in hand,
-close to Drouet, and ready to move into the valley
-of the Tagus, if that general should hasten to the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_240"></a>[240]</span>
-succour of the king. But when Joseph’s retreat
-upon Valencia was known, Hill received orders to
-fight Drouet, and even to follow him into Andalusia;
-at the same time general Cooke was directed to
-prepare an attack, even though it should be an
-open assault on the French lines before Cadiz, while
-Ballesteros operated on the flank from Gibraltar.
-By these means Wellington hoped to keep Soult
-from sending any succour to the king, and even to
-force him out of Andalusia without the necessity of
-marching there himself; yet if these measures
-failed, he was resolved to take twenty thousand
-men from Madrid and uniting with Hill drive
-the French from that province.</p>
-
-<p>Previous to the sending of these instructions,
-Laval and Villatte had pursued Ballesteros to Malaga,
-which place, after a skirmish at Coin, he entered,
-and was in such danger of capture, that the maritime
-expedition already noticed was detached from Cadiz,
-by sea, to carry him off. However the news of the
-battle of Salamanca having arrested the French
-movements, the Spanish general regained San Roque,
-and the fleet went on to Valencia. Meanwhile Soult,
-hoping the king would transfer the seat of war to
-Andalusia had caused Drouet to shew a bold front
-against Hill, extending from the Serena to Monasterio,
-and to send scouting parties towards Merida;
-and large magazines were formed at Cordoba,
-a central point, equally suited for an advance by
-Estremadura, a march to La Mancha, or a retreat by
-Grenada. Wherefore Hill, who had not then received
-his orders to advance, remained on the defensive;
-nor would Wellington stir from Madrid, although
-his presence was urgently called for on the Duero,
-until he was satisfied that the duke of Dalmatia<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_241"></a>[241]</span>
-meant to abandon Andalusia. The king, as we
-have seen, finally forced this measure upon the
-marshal; but the execution required very extensive
-arrangements, for the quarters were distant, the
-convoys immense, the enemies numerous, the line
-of march wild, and the journey long. And it was
-most important to present the imposing appearance
-of a great and regular military movement and not
-the disgraceful scene of a confused flight.</p>
-
-<p>The distant minor posts, in the Condado de Niebla
-and other places, were first called in, and then the
-lines before the Isla were abandoned; for Soult,
-in obedience to the king’s first order, designed to
-move upon La Mancha, and it was only by accident,
-and indirectly, that he heard of Joseph’s retreat
-to Valencia. At the same time he discovered that
-Drouet, who had received direct orders from the
-king, was going to Toledo, and it was not without
-difficulty, and only through the medium of his brother,
-who commanded Drouet’s cavalry, that he could
-prevent that destructive isolated movement. Murcia
-then became the line of retreat but every thing was
-hurried, because the works before the Isla were
-already broken up in the view of retreating towards
-La Mancha, and the troops were in march for Seville
-although the safe assembling of the army at Grenada
-required another arrangement.</p>
-
-<p>On the 25th of August a thousand guns, stores in
-proportion, and all the immense works of Chiclana,
-St. Maria, and the Trocadero, were destroyed.
-Thus the long blockade of the Isla de Leon was
-broken up at the moment when the bombardment of
-Cadiz had become very serious, when the opposition
-to English influence was taking a dangerous direction,
-when the French intrigues were nearly ripe,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_242"></a>[242]</span>
-the cortez becoming alienated from the cause of
-Ferdinand and the church; finally when the executive
-government was weaker than ever, because the
-count of Abispal, the only active person in the
-regency, had resigned, disgusted that his brother
-had been superseded by Elio and censured in the
-cortez for the defeat at Castalla. This siege or
-rather defence of Cadiz, for it was never, strictly
-speaking, besieged, was a curious episode in the
-war. Whether the Spaniards would or would not
-have effectually defended it without the aid of
-British troops is a matter of speculation; but it
-is certain that notwithstanding Graham’s glorious
-action at Barrosa, Cadiz was always a heavy burthen
-upon Lord Wellington; the forces, there employed,
-would have done better service under his immediate
-command, and many severe financial difficulties to
-say nothing of political crosses would have been
-spared.</p>
-
-<p>In the night of the 26th Soult quitting Seville,
-commenced his march by Ossuna and Antequera,
-towards Grenada; but now Wellington’s orders had
-set all the allied troops of Andalusia and Estremadura
-in motion. Hill advanced against Drouet;
-Ballesteros moved by the Ronda mountains to hang
-on the retiring enemy’s flanks; the expedition sent
-by sea to succour him, returned from Valencia;
-colonel Skerrit and Cruz Murgeon disembarked
-with four thousand English and Spanish troops, at
-Huelva, and marching upon St. Lucar Mayor, drove
-the enemy from thence, on the 24th. The 27th
-they fell upon the French rear-guard at Seville,
-and the suburb of Triana, the bridge, and the streets
-beyond, were soon carried, by the English guards
-and Downie’s legion. Two hundred prisoners,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_243"></a>[243]</span>
-several guns and many stores were taken, but
-Downie himself was wounded and made prisoner,
-and treated very harshly, because the populace rising
-in aid of the allies had mutilated the French soldiers
-who fell into their hands. Scarcely was Seville taken,
-when seven thousand French infantry came up from
-Chiclana, but thinking all Hill’s troops were before
-them, instead of attacking Skerrit hastily followed
-their own army, leaving the allies masters of the city.
-But this attack though successful, was isolated and
-contrary to lord Wellington’s desire. A direct and
-vigorous assault upon the lines of Chiclana by the
-whole of the Anglo-Spanish garrison was his plan,
-and such an assault, when the French were abandoning
-their works there, would have been a far
-heavier blow to Soult.</p>
-
-<p>That commander was now too strong to be meddled
-with. He issued eight days’ bread to his army,
-marched very leisurely, picked up on his route the
-garrisons and troops who came into him at Antequera,
-from the Ronda and from the coast; and at Grenada
-he halted eleven days to give Drouet time to join him,
-for the latter quitting Estremadura the 25th by the
-Cordova passes, was marching by Jaen to Huescar.
-Ballesteros had harassed the march, but the French
-general had, with an insignificant loss, united seventy-two
-guns and forty-five thousand soldiers
-under arms, of which six thousand were cavalry.
-He was however still in the midst of enemies.
-On his left flank was Hill; on his right flank
-was Ballesteros; Wellington himself might come
-down by the Despenas Perros; the Murcians were
-in his front, Skerrit and Cruz Murgeon behind him,
-and he was clogged with enormous convoys; his<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_244"></a>[244]</span>
-sick and maimed men alone amounted to nearly
-nine thousand; his Spanish soldiers were deserting
-daily, and it was necessary to provide for several
-hundreds of Spanish families who were attached
-to the French interests. To march upon the city
-of Murcia was the direct, and the best route for
-Valencia; but the yellow fever raged there and at
-Carthagena; moreover, Don S. Bracco, the English
-consul at Murcia, a resolute man, declared
-his resolution to inundate the country if the
-French advanced. Wherefore again issuing eight<span class="sidenote9">September</span>
-days’ bread Soult marched by the mountain ways
-leading from Huescar to Cehejin, and Calasparra,
-and then moving by Hellin, gained Almanza on
-the great road to Madrid, his flank being covered
-by a detachment from Suchet’s army which skirmished
-with Maitland’s advanced posts at San
-Vicente close to Alicant. At Hellin he met the
-advanced guard of the army of Aragon, and on
-the 3rd of October the military junction of all the
-French forces was effected.</p>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote7">October.</span>
-The task was thus completed, and in a manner
-worthy of so great a commander. For it must be
-recollected that besides the drawing together of the
-different divisions, the march itself was three hundred
-miles, great part through mountain roads, and
-the population was every where hostile. General
-Hill had menaced him with twenty-five thousand
-men, including Morillo and Penne Villemur’s forces;
-Ballesteros, reinforced from Cadiz, and by the deserters,
-had nearly twenty thousand; there were
-fourteen thousand soldiers still in the Isla; Skerrit
-and Cruz Murgeon had four thousand, and the
-Partidas were in all parts numerous: yet from the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_245"></a>[245]</span>
-midst of these multitudes the duke of Dalmatia
-carried off his army his convoys and his sick
-without any disaster. In this manner Andalusia,
-which had once been saved by the indirect influence
-of a single march, made by Moore from
-Salamanca, was, such is the complexity of war,
-after three years’ subjection, recovered by the indirect
-effect of a single battle delivered by Wellington
-close to the same city.</p>
-
-<p>During these transactions Maitland’s proceedings
-had been anxiously watched by Wellington; for
-though the recovery of Andalusia was, both politically
-and militarily, a great gain, the result, he saw, must
-necessarily be hurtful to the ultimate success of his
-campaign by bringing together such powerful forces.
-He still thought that regular operations would not
-so effectually occupy Suchet, as a littoral warfare,
-yet he was contented that Maitland should try his
-own plan, and he advised that general to march
-by the coast, and have constant communication
-with the fleet, referring to his own campaign
-against Junot in 1808 as an example to be followed.
-But, the coast roads were difficult, the
-access for the fleet uncertain; and though the same
-obstacles, and the latter perhaps in a greater degree,
-had occurred in Portugal, the different constitution
-of the armies, and still more of the generals,
-was an insuperable bar to a like proceeding in
-Valencia.</p>
-
-<p>General Maitland only desired to quit his command,
-and the more so that the time appointed by
-lord William Bentinck for the return of the troops
-to Sicily was approaching. The moment was critical,
-but Wellington without hesitation forbade<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_246"></a>[246]</span>
-their departure, and even asked the ministers to
-place them under his own command. Meanwhile
-with the utmost gentleness and delicacy, he showed
-to Maitland, who was a man of high honour, courage,
-and feeling, although inexperienced in command,
-and now heavily oppressed with illness,
-that his situation was by no means dangerous;—that
-the entrenched camp of Alicant might be
-safely defended,—that he was comparatively better
-off than Wellington himself had been when in the
-lines of Torres Vedras, and that it was even desirable
-that the enemy should attack him on such
-strong ground, because the Spaniards when joined
-with English soldiers in a secure position would
-certainly fight. He also desired that Carthagena
-should be well looked to by general Ross lest Soult
-should turn aside to surprise it. Then taking advantage
-of Elio’s fear of Soult he drew him with
-the army that had been O’Donel’s towards Madrid
-and so got some controul over his operations.</p>
-
-<p>If the English general had been well furnished
-with money at this time, and if the yellow fever
-had not raged in Murcia, it is probable he would
-have followed Joseph rapidly, and rallying all the
-scattered Spanish forces, and the Sicilian armament
-on his own army, have endeavoured to crush
-the king and Suchet before Soult could arrive; or
-he might have formed a junction with Hill at Despenas
-Perros and so have fallen on Soult himself,
-during his march, although such an operation would
-have endangered his line of communication on the
-Duero. But these obstacles induced him to avoid
-operations in the south, which would have involved
-him in new and immense combinations, until he had<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_247"></a>[247]</span>
-secured his northern line of operations by the capture
-of Burgos, meaning then with his whole army
-united to attack the enemy in the south.</p>
-
-<p>However he could not stir from Madrid until he
-was certain that Soult would relinquish Andalusia,
-and this was not made clear before Cordoba was
-abandoned. Then Hill was ordered to advance on
-Zalamea de la Serena, where he commanded equally,
-the passes leading to Cordoba in front, those leading
-to La Mancha on the left, and those leading by
-Truxillo to the Tagus in the rear; so that he could
-at pleasure either join Wellington, follow Drouet
-towards Grenada, or interpose between Soult and
-Madrid, if he should turn towards the Despenas
-Perros: meanwhile Skerrit’s troops were marching
-to join him, and the rest of the Anglo-Portuguese
-garrison of Cadiz sailed to Lisbon, with intent to
-join Wellington by the regular line of operations.</p>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote7">August.</span>
-During these transactions the affairs in Old
-Castile had become greatly deranged, for where
-Wellington was not, the French warfare generally
-assumed a severe and menacing aspect. Castaños
-had, in person, conducted the siege of Astorga, after
-the battle of Salamanca, yet with so little vigour,
-that it appeared rather a blockade than a siege.
-The forts at Toro and Zamora had also been
-invested, the first by the Partidas, the second by Silveira’s
-militia, who with great spirit had passed their
-own frontier, although well aware that they could
-not be legally compelled to do so. Thus all the
-French garrisons abandoned by Clauzel’s retreat
-were endangered, and though the slow progress of
-the Spaniards before Astorga was infinitely disgraceful
-to their military prowess, final success
-seemed certain.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_248"></a>[248]</span></p>
-
-<p>General H. Clinton was at Cuellar, Santo Cildes
-occupied Valladolid, Anson’s cavalry was in the
-valley of the Esqueva, and the front looked fair
-enough. But in the rear the line of communication,
-as far as the frontier of Portugal, was in great disorder;
-the discipline of the army was deteriorating
-rapidly, and excesses were committed on all the
-routes. A detachment of Portuguese, not more
-than a thousand strong, either instigated by want
-or by their hatred of the Spaniards, had perpetrated
-such enormities on their march from Pinhel to
-Salamanca, that as an example, five were executed
-and many others severely punished by stripes, yet
-even this did not check the growing evil, the origin
-of which may be partly traced to the license at the
-storming of Ciudad Rodrigo and Badajos, but
-principally to the sufferings of the soldiers.</p>
-
-<p>All the hospitals in the rear were crowded, and Salamanca
-itself, in which there were six thousand sick
-and wounded, besides French prisoners, was the very
-abode of misery. The soldiers endured much during
-the first two or three days after the battle, and the inferior
-officers’ sufferings were still more heavy and
-protracted. They had no money, and many sold their
-horses and other property to sustain life; some actually
-died of want, and though Wellington, hearing of this,
-gave orders that they should be supplied from the
-purveyor’s stores in the same manner as the soldiers,
-the relief came late. It is a common, yet erroneous
-notion, that the English system of hospitals in
-the Peninsula was admirable, and that the French
-hospitals were neglected. Strenuous and unceasing
-exertions were made by lord Wellington and the
-chiefs of the medical staff to form good hospital
-establishments, but the want of money, and still<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_249"></a>[249]</span>
-more the want of previous institutions, foiled their
-utmost efforts. Now there was no point of warfare
-which more engaged Napoleon’s attention than the
-care of his sick and wounded; and he being monarch
-as well as general, furnished his hospitals with all
-things requisite, even with luxuries. Under his
-fostering care also, baron Larrey justly celebrated,
-were it for this alone, organized the establishment
-called the hospital “<em>Ambulance</em>;” that is to say,
-waggons of a peculiar construction, well horsed,
-served by men trained and incorporated as soldiers,
-and subject to a strict discipline. Rewarded for their
-courage and devotion like other soldiers they were
-always at hand, and whether in action or on a march,
-ready to pick up, to salve, and to carry off wounded
-men; and the astonishing rapidity with which the
-fallen French soldiers disappeared from a field of
-battle attested the excellence of the institution.</p>
-
-<p>But in the British army, the carrying off the
-wounded, depended, partly upon the casual assistance
-of a weak waggon train, very badly disciplined,
-furnishing only three waggons to a division, and not
-originally appropriated to that service; partly upon
-the spare commissariat animals, but principally upon
-the resources of the country, whether of bullock-carts,
-mules, or donkeys, and hence the most doleful
-scenes after a battle, or when an hospital was to be
-evacuated. The increasing numbers of the sick
-and wounded as the war enlarged, also pressed on
-the limited number of regular medical officers,
-and Wellington complained, that when he demanded
-more, the military medical board in London
-neglected his demands, and thwarted his arrangements.
-Shoals of hospital mates and students
-were indeed sent out, and they arrived for the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_250"></a>[250]</span>
-most part ignorant alike of war, and their own profession;
-while a heterogeneous mass of purveyors
-and their subordinates, acting without any military
-organization or effectual superintendence, continually
-bade defiance to the exertions of those medical
-officers, and they were many, whose experience,
-zeal, and talents would, with a good institution to
-work upon, have rendered this branch of the service
-most distinguished. Nay, many even of the well-educated
-surgeons sent out were for some time of
-little use, for superior professional skill is of little
-value in comparison of experience in military
-arrangement; where one soldier dies from the want
-of a delicate operation, hundreds perish from the
-absence of military arrangement. War tries the
-strength of the military frame-work; it is in peace
-that the frame-work itself must be formed, otherwise
-barbarians would be the leading soldiers of
-the world; a perfect army can only be made by
-civil institutions, and those, rightly considered,
-would tend to confine the horrors of war to the field
-of battle, which would be the next best thing to the
-perfection of civilization that would prevent war
-altogether.</p>
-
-<p>Such was the state of affairs on the allies’ line of
-communication, when, on the 14th of August, Clauzel
-suddenly came down the Pisuerga. Anson’s
-cavalry immediately recrossed the Duero at Tudela,
-Santo Cildes, following Wellington’s instructions,
-fell back to Torrelobaton, and on the 18th the
-French assembled at Valladolid to the number of<span class="sidenote">Clauzel’s Correspondence, MSS.</span>
-twenty thousand infantry, two thousand cavalry,
-and fifty guns well provided with ammunition. Five
-thousand stragglers, who in the confusion of defeat
-had fled to Burgos and Vittoria, were also collected<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_251"></a>[251]</span>
-and in march to join. Clauzel’s design was to be
-at hand when Joseph, reinforced from the south,
-should drive Wellington from Madrid, for he
-thought the latter must then retire by Avila, and
-the Valle de Ambles, and he purposed to gain
-the mountains of Avila himself, and harass the
-English general’s flank. Meanwhile Foy proposed
-with two divisions of infantry and sixteen hundred<span class="sidenote">Foy’s correspondence, MSS.</span>
-cavalry, to succour the garrisons of Toro, Zamora, and
-Astorga, and Clauzel consented, though he appears
-to have been somewhat fearful of this dangerous experiment,
-and did not believe Astorga was so near
-its fall.</p>
-
-<p>Foy wished to march on the 15th by Placentia,
-yet he was not dispatched until the evening of the
-17th, and then by the line of Toro, the garrison of
-which place he carried off in passing. The 19th
-he sabred some of the Spanish rear-guard at Castro
-Gonzalo, on the Esla; the 20th, at three o’clock
-in the evening, he reached La Baneza, but was
-mortified to learn, that Castaños, by an artful
-negociation had, the day before, persuaded the
-garrison of Astorga, twelve hundred good troops,
-to surrender, although there was no breach, and the
-siege was actually being raised at the time. The
-Gallicians being safe in their mountains, the French
-general turned to the left, and marched upon Carvajales,
-hoping to enclose Silveira’s militia, between
-the Duero and the Esla, and sweep them off in his<span class="sidenote">Foy’s correspondence, MSS.</span>
-course; then relieving Zamora, he purposed to penetrate
-to Salamanca, and seize the trophies of the Arapiles.
-And this would infallibly have happened, but<span class="sidenote">Sir H. Douglas’s papers, MSS.</span>
-for the judicious activity of sir Howard Douglas, who,
-divining Foy’s object, sent Silveira with timeful notice
-into Portugal; yet so critical was the movement that<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_252"></a>[252]</span>
-Foy’s cavalry skirmished with the Portuguese rear-guard
-near Constantin at day-break on the 24th.
-The 25th the French entered Zamora, but Wellington
-was now in movement upon Arevalo, and
-Clauzel recalled Foy at the moment when his infantry
-were actually in march upon Salamanca to
-seize the trophies, and his cavalry was moving by
-Ledesma, to break up the line of communication
-with Ciudad Rodrigo.</p>
-
-<p>That Foy was thus able to disturb the line of
-communication was certainly Clinton’s error. Wellington
-left eighteen thousand men, exclusive of
-the troops besieging Astorga, to protect his flank and
-rear, and he had a right to think it enough, because
-he momentarily expected Astorga to fall, and the
-French army, a beaten one, was then in full retreat.
-It is true none of the French garrisons yielded before
-Clauzel returned, but Clinton alone had eight
-thousand good troops, and might with the aid of
-Santo Cildes and the partidas, have baffled the
-French; he might even have menaced Valladolid,
-after Foy’s departure, which would have certainly
-brought that general back. And if he dared not
-venture so much, he should, following his instructions,
-have regulated his movements along the left
-of the Duero, so as to be always in a condition to
-protect Salamanca; that is, he should have gone to
-Olmedo when Clauzel first occupied Valladolid,
-but he retired to Arevalo, which enabled Foy to
-advance.</p>
-
-<p>The mere escape of the garrisons, from Toro and
-Zamora, was by the English general thought no
-misfortune. It would have cost him a long march
-and two sieges in the hottest season to have reduced
-them, which, in the actual state of affairs, was more<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_253"></a>[253]</span>
-than they were worth; yet, to use his own words,
-“<em>it was not very encouraging to find, that the best
-Spanish army was unable to stand before the remains
-of Marmont’s beaten troops; that in more than two
-months, it had been unable even to breach Astorga,
-and that all important operations must still be performed
-by the British troops</em>.” The Spaniards,
-now in the fifth year of the war, were still in the
-state described by sir John Moore, “<em>without an
-army, without a government, without a general!</em>”</p>
-
-<p>While these events were passing in Castile
-Popham’s armament remained on the Biscay coast,
-and the partidas thus encouraged became so active,
-that with exception of Santona and Gueteria, all the
-littoral posts were abandoned by Caffarelli; Porlier,
-Renovalles, and Mendizabel, the nominal commanders
-of all the bands, immediately took possession
-of Castro, Santander, and even of Bilbao, and though
-general Rouget came from Vittoria to recover the
-last, he was after some sharp fighting obliged to
-retire again to Durango. Meanwhile Reille, deluded
-by a rumour that Wellington was marching
-through the centre of Spain upon Zaragoza, abandoned
-several important outposts, Aragon, hitherto
-so tranquil, became unquiet, and all the northern
-provinces were ripe for insurrection.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_254"></a>[254]</span><br /></p>
-
-<h3 id="CHAPTER_BXIX_III">CHAPTER III.</h3>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="sidenote7">1812. August.</span>
-While the various military combinations, described
-in the foregoing chapter, were thickening, Wellington,
-as we have seen, remained in Madrid, apparently
-inactive, but really watching the fitting
-moment to push his operations, and consolidate
-his success in the north, preparatory to the execution
-of his designs in the south. The result was
-involved in a mixed question, of time, and of combinations
-dependant upon his central position, and
-upon the activity of the partidas in cutting off all correspondence
-between the French armies. His mode
-of paralyzing Suchet’s and Caffarelli’s armies, by
-the Sicilian armament in the east and Popham’s
-armament in the north, has been already described,
-but his internal combinations, to oppose the united
-forces of Soult and the king, were still more important
-and extensive.</p>
-
-<p>When it was certain that Soult had actually abandoned
-Andalusia, Hill was directed upon Toledo, by
-the bridge of Almaraz, and colonel Sturgeon’s genius
-had rendered that stupendous ruin, although more
-lofty than Alcantara, passable for artillery. Elio
-also was induced to bring the army of Murcia to the
-same quarter, and Ballesteros was desired to take
-post on the mountain of Alcaraz, and look to the
-fortress of Chinchilla, which, situated at the confines<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_255"></a>[255]</span>
-of Murcia and La Mancha, and perched on a rugged
-isolated hill in a vast plain, was peculiarly strong
-both from construction and site, and it was the knot
-of all the great lines of communication. The partizan
-corps of Bassecour, Villa Campa, and the Empecinado,
-were desired to enter La Mancha, and thus,
-as Hill could bring up above twenty thousand men,
-and as the third, fourth, and light divisions, two
-brigades of cavalry, and Carlos D’España’s troops,
-were to remain near Madrid, whilst the rest of the
-army marched into Old Castile, above sixty thousand
-men, thirty thousand being excellent troops
-and well commanded, would have been assembled,
-with the fortified post of Chinchilla in front, before
-Soult could unite with the king.</p>
-
-<p>The British troops at Carthagena were directed,
-when Soult should have passed that city, to leave
-only small garrisons in the forts there, and join the
-army at Alicant, which with the reinforcements
-from Sicily, would then be sixteen thousand strong,
-seven thousand being British troops. While this
-force was at Alicant Wellington judged that the
-French could not bring more than fifty thousand
-against Madrid without risking the loss of Valencia
-itself. Not that he expected the heterogeneous
-mass he had collected could resist on a fair field
-the veteran and powerfully constituted army which
-would finally be opposed to them; but he calculated
-that ere the French generals could act seriously, the
-rivers would be full, and Hill could then hold his
-ground, sufficiently long to enable the army to
-come back from Burgos. Indeed he had little
-doubt of reducing that place, and being again on
-the Tagus in time to take the initial movements
-himself.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_256"></a>[256]</span></p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the allies had several lines of operation.</p>
-
-<p>Ballasteros from the mountains of Alcaraz, could
-harass the flanks of the advancing French, and
-when they passed, could unite with Maitland to
-overpower Suchet.</p>
-
-<p>Hill could retire if pressed, by Madrid, or by
-Toledo, and could either gain the passes of the
-Guadarama or the valley of the Tagus.</p>
-
-<p>Elio, Villa Campa, Bassecour, and the Empecinado
-could act by Cuenca and Requeña against
-Suchet, or against Madrid if the French followed
-Hill obstinately; or they could join Ballesteros.
-And besides all these forces, there were ten or twelve
-thousand new Spanish levies in the Isla waiting for
-clothing and arms which under the recent treaty
-were to come from England.</p>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote7">May.</span>
-To lord Wellington, the English ministers had
-nominally confided the distribution of these succours,
-but following their usual vicious manner of
-doing business, they also gave Mr. Stuart a controul
-over it, without Wellington’s knowledge, and
-hence the stores, expected by the latter at Lisbon
-or Cadiz, were by Stuart unwittingly directed to
-Coruña, with which place the English general had
-no secure communication; moreover there were
-very few Spanish levies there, and no confidential
-person to superintend the delivery of them. Other
-political crosses, which shall be noticed in due
-time, he also met with, but it will suffice here to
-say that the want of money was an evil now become
-intolerable. The army was many months in
-arrears; those officers who went to the rear sick
-suffered the most cruel privations, and those who
-remained in Madrid, tempted by the pleasures of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_257"></a>[257]</span>
-the capital, obtained some dollars at an exorbitant
-premium from a money-broker, and it was
-grievously suspected that his means resulted from
-the nefarious proceedings of an under commissary;
-but the soldiers, equally tempted, having no such
-resource, plundered the stores of the Retiro. In
-fine, discipline became relaxed throughout the
-army, and the troops kept in the field were gloomy,
-envying those who remained at Madrid.</p>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote9">September</span>
-That city exhibited a sad mixture of luxury and
-desolation. When it was first entered a violent,
-cruel, and unjust persecution of those who were
-called “<i lang="es" xml:lang="es">Afrancesados</i>,” was commenced, and continued,
-until the English general interfered, and as
-an example made no distinction in his invitations
-to the palace feasts. Truly it was not necessary to
-increase the sufferings of the miserable people,
-for though the markets were full of provisions,
-there was no money wherewith to buy; and though
-the houses were full of rich furniture, there were
-neither purchasers nor lenders; even noble families
-secretly sought charity that they might live. At
-night the groans, and stifled cries of famishing
-people were heard, and every morning emaciated
-dead bodies, cast into the streets, shewed why those
-cries had ceased. The calm resignation with which
-these terrible sufferings were borne was a distinctive
-mark of the national character; not many begged,
-none complained, there was no violence, no reproaches,
-very few thefts; the allies lost a few
-animals, nothing more, and these were generally
-thought to be taken by robbers from the country.
-But with this patient endurance of calamity the
-“<i lang="es" xml:lang="es">Madrileños</i>” discovered a deep and unaffected
-gratitude for kindness received at the hands of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_258"></a>[258]</span>
-British officers who contributed, not much for they
-had it not, but, enough of money to form soup charities
-by which hundreds were succoured. It was
-the third division, and I believe the forty-fifth regiment
-which set the example, and surely this is not
-the least of the many honourable distinctions those
-brave men have earned.</p>
-
-<p>Wellington desirous of obtaining shelter from the
-extreme heat for his troops, had early sent four
-divisions and the cavalry, to the Escurial and St.
-Ildefonso, from whence they could join Hill by the
-valley of the Tagus, or Clinton by Arevalo; but
-when he knew that the king’s retreat upon Valencia
-was decided, that Soult had abandoned Cordoba,
-and that Clinton was falling back before Clauzel,
-he ordered the first, fifth, and seventh divisions,
-Pack’s and Bradford’s Portuguese brigades, Ponsonby’s
-light horsemen, and the heavy German
-cavalry, to move rapidly upon Arevalo, and on the
-1st of September quitted Madrid himself to take
-the command. Yet his army had been so diminished
-by sickness that only twenty-one thousand
-men, including three thousand cavalry, were assembled
-in that town, and he had great difficulty
-to feed the Portuguese soldiers, who were also very
-ill equipped.</p>
-
-<p>The regency instead of transmitting money and
-stores to supply their troops, endeavoured to throw
-off the burthen entirely by an ingenious device;
-for having always had a running account with the
-Spanish government, they now made a treaty, by
-which the Spaniards were to feed the Portuguese
-troops, and check off the expense on the national
-account which was then in favour of the Portuguese;
-that is, the soldiers were to starve under the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_259"></a>[259]</span>
-sanction of this treaty, because the Spaniards could
-not feed their own men, and would not, if they
-could, have fed the Portuguese. Neither could
-the latter take provisions from the country, because
-Wellington demanded the resources of the valleys
-of the Duero and Pisuerga for the English soldiers,
-as a set-off against the money advanced by sir
-Henry Wellesley to the Spanish regency at Cadiz.
-Wherefore to force the Portuguese regency from
-this shameful expedient he stopped the payments
-of their subsidy from the chest of aids. Then the
-old discontents and disputes revived and acquired
-new force; the regency became more intractable
-than ever, and the whole military system of Portugal
-was like to fall to pieces.</p>
-
-<p>On the 4th the allies quitted Arevalo, the 6th
-they passed the Duero by the ford above Puente de
-Duero, the 7th they entered Valladolid, and meanwhile
-the Gallicians, who had returned to the Esla,
-when Foy retreated, were ordered to join the
-Anglo-Portuguese army. Clauzel abandoned Valladolid
-in the night of the 6th, and though closely
-followed by Ponsonby’s cavalry, crossed the Pisuerga
-and destroyed the bridge of Berecal on that river.
-The 8th the allies halted, for rest, and to await
-the arrival of Castaños; but seldom during this
-war did a Spanish general deviate into activity;
-and Wellington observed that in his whole intercourse
-with that people, from the beginning of the
-revolution to that moment, he had not met with an
-able Spaniard, while amongst the Portuguese he
-had found several. The Gallicians came not, and
-the French retreated slowly up the beautiful
-Pisuerga and Arlanzan valleys, which, in denial
-of the stories about French devastation, were carefully<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_260"></a>[260]</span>
-cultivated and filled to repletion with corn,
-wine, and oil.</p>
-
-<p>Nor were they deficient in military strength.
-Off the high road, on both sides, ditches and rivulets
-impeded the troops, while cross ridges continually
-furnished strong parallel positions flanked
-by the lofty hills on either side. In these valleys
-Clauzel baffled his great adversary in the most surprising
-manner. Each day he offered battle, but
-on ground which Wellington was unwilling to assail
-in front, partly because he momentarily expected
-the Gallicians up, but chiefly because of
-the declining state of his own army from sickness,
-which, combined with the hope of ulterior operations
-in the south, made him unwilling to lose men.
-By flank movements he dislodged the enemy, yet
-each day darkness fell ere they were completed, and
-the morning’s sun always saw Clauzel again in
-position. At Cigales and Dueñas, in the Pisuerga
-valley; at Magoz, Torquemada, Cordobilla, Revilla,
-Vallejera, and Pampliega in the valley of the Arlanzan,
-the French general thus offered battle, and
-finally covered Burgos on the 16th, by taking the
-strong position of Cellada del Camino.</p>
-
-<p>But eleven thousand Spanish infantry, three hundred
-cavalry, and eight guns, had now joined the
-allies, and Wellington would have attacked frankly
-on the 17th, had not Clauzel, alike wary and skilful,
-observed the increased numbers and retired in the
-night to Frandovinez; his rear-guard was however
-next day pushed sharply back to the heights of
-Burgos, and in the following night he passed through
-that town leaving behind him large stores of grain.
-Caffarelli who had come down to place the castle of
-Burgos in a state of defence, now joined him, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_261"></a>[261]</span>
-the two generals retreated upon Briviesca, where
-they were immediately reinforced by that reserve
-which, with such an extraordinary foresight, the
-emperor had directed to be assembled and exercised
-on the Pyrennees, in anticipation of Marmont’s
-disaster. The allies entered Burgos amidst great
-confusion, for the garrison of the castle had set fire
-to some houses impeding the defence of the fortress,
-the conflagration spread widely, and the Partidas
-who were already gathered like wolves round a carcass,
-entered the town for mischief. Mr. Sydenham,
-an eye-witness, and not unused to scenes of war, thus
-describes their proceedings, “What with the flames
-and the plundering of the Guerillas, who are as
-bad as Tartars and Cossacks of the Kischack or
-Zagatay hordes, I was afraid Burgos would be
-entirely destroyed, but order was at length restored
-by the manful exertions of Don Miguel Alava.”</p>
-
-<p>The series of beautiful movements executed by
-Clauzel, merit every praise, but it may be questioned
-if the English general’s marches were in the
-true direction, or made in good time; for though
-Clinton’s retreat upon Arevalo influenced, it did not
-absolutely dictate the line of operations. Wellington
-had expected Clauzel’s advance to Valladolid; it
-was therefore no surprise, and on the 26th of August,
-Foy was still at Zamora. At that period the English
-general might have had his army, Clinton’s troops
-excepted, at Segovia; and as the distance from
-thence to Valladolid, is rather less than from Valladolid
-to Zamora, a rapid march upon the former,
-Clinton advancing at the same time, might have
-separated Clauzel from Foy. Again, Wellington
-might have marched upon Burgos by Aranda de<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_262"></a>[262]</span>
-Duero and Lerma, that road being as short as by
-Valladolid; he might also have brought forward
-the third, or the light division, by the Somosierra,
-from Madrid, and directed Clinton and the Spaniards
-to close upon the French rear. He would
-thus have turned the valleys of the Pisuerga and
-the Arlanzan, and could from Aranda, or Lerma,
-have fallen upon Clauzel while in march. That
-general having Clinton and the Gallicians on his rear,
-and Wellington, reinforced by the divisions from
-Madrid, on his front or flank, would then have had
-to fight a decisive battle under every disadvantage.
-In fine the object was to crush Clauzel, and this
-should have been effected though Madrid had been
-entirely abandoned to secure success. It is however
-probable that want of money and means of
-transport decided the line of operations, for the
-route by the Somosierra was savage and barren,
-and the feeding of the troops even by Valladolid
-was from hand to mouth, or painfully supported by
-convoys from Portugal.</p>
-
-
-<h4>SIEGE OF THE CASTLE OF BURGOS.</h4>
-
-<p>Caffarelli had placed eighteen hundred infantry,
-besides artillery-men, in this place, and general
-Dubreton the governor, was of such courage and skill
-that he surpassed even the hopes of his sanguine
-and warlike countryman. The castle and its works
-enclosed a rugged hill, between which and the
-river, the city of Burgos was situated. An old
-wall with a new parapet and flanks constructed<span class="sidenote">Colonel Jones’s Sieges, 2nd edit.</span>
-by the French offered the first line of defence;
-the second line, which was within the other, was
-earthen, of the nature of a field retrenchment and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_263"></a>[263]</span>
-well palisaded; the third line was similarly constructed
-and contained the two most elevated
-points of the hill, on one of which was an entrenched
-building called the White Church, and on
-the other the ancient keep of the castle; this last
-was the highest point, and was not only entrenched
-but surmounted with a heavy casemated work called
-the Napoleon battery. Thus there were five separate
-enclosures.</p>
-
-<p>The Napoleon battery commanded every thing
-around it, save to the north, where at the distance
-of three hundred yards there was a second height
-scarcely less elevated than that of the fortress.
-It was called the Hill of San Michael, and was
-defended by a large horn-work with a hard sloping
-scarp twenty-five, and a counterscarp ten feet
-high. This outwork was unfinished and only closed<span class="sidenote9">See <a href="#i_b_581fp_4">Plan 4.</a></span>
-by strong palisades, but it was under the fire of
-the Napoleon battery, was well flanked by the
-castle defences, and covered in front by slight
-entrenchments for the out picquets. The French
-had already mounted nine heavy guns, eleven field-pieces,
-and six mortars or howitzers in the fortress,
-and as the reserve artillery and stores of the army
-of Portugal were also deposited there, they could
-increase their armament.</p>
-
-
-<h4>FIRST ASSAULT.</h4>
-
-<p>The batteries so completely commanded all
-the bridges and fords over the Arlanzan that two
-days elapsed ere the allies could cross; but
-on the 19th the passage of the river being
-effected above the town, by the first division,
-major Somers Cocks, supported by Pack’s Portuguese,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_264"></a>[264]</span>
-drove in the French outposts on the hill
-of San Michael. In the night, the same troops,
-reinforced with the forty-second regiment, stormed
-the horn-work. The conflict was murderous. For
-though the ladders were fairly placed by the bearers
-of them, the storming column, which, covered
-by a firing party, marched against the front, was
-beaten with great loss, and the attack would have
-failed if the gallant leader of the seventy-ninth
-had not meanwhile forced an entrance by the
-gorge. The garrison was thus actually cut off,
-but Cocks, though followed by the second battalion
-of the forty-second regiment, was not closely
-supported, and the French being still five hundred
-strong, broke through his men and escaped. This
-assault gave room for censure, the troops complained
-of each other, and the loss was above four
-hundred, while that of the enemy was less than
-one hundred and fifty.</p>
-
-<p>Wellington was now enabled to examine the
-defences of the castle. He found them feeble and
-incomplete, and yet his means were so scant that
-he had slender hopes of success, and relied more
-upon the enemy’s weakness than upon his own
-power. It was however said that water was scarce
-with the garrison and that their provision magazines
-could be burned, wherefore encouraged by this information
-he adopted the following plan of attack.</p>
-
-<p>Twelve thousand men composing the first and
-sixth divisions and the two Portuguese brigades,
-were to undertake the works; the rest of the
-troops, about twenty thousand, exclusive of the
-Partidas, were to form the covering army.</p>
-
-<p>The trenches were to be opened from the suburb<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_265"></a>[265]</span>
-of San Pedro, and a parallel formed in the direction
-of the hill of San Michael.</p>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote">Jones’s Sieges.</span>
-A battery for five guns was to be established
-close to the right of the captured horn-work.</p>
-
-<p>A sap was to be pushed from the parallel as near
-the first wall as possible, without being seen into
-from the upper works, and from thence the engineer
-was to proceed by gallery and mine.</p>
-
-<p>When the first mine should be completed, the
-battery on the hill of San Michael was to open
-against the second line of defence, and the
-assault was to be given on the first line. If a
-lodgement was formed, the approaches were to be
-continued against the second line, and the battery
-on San Michael was to be turned against the third
-line, in front of the White Church, because the
-defences there were exceedingly weak. Meanwhile
-a trench for musketry was to be dug along
-the brow of San Michael, and a concealed battery
-was to be prepared within the horn-work itself,
-with a view to the final attack of the Napoleon
-battery.</p>
-
-<p>The head-quarters were fixed at Villa Toro,
-colonel Burgoyne conducted the operations of the
-engineers, colonel Robe and colonel Dickson those
-of the artillery, which consisted of three eighteen-pounders,
-and the five iron twenty-four-pound
-howitzers used at the siege of the Salamanca forts;
-and it was with regard to these slender means,
-rather than the defects of the fortress, that the line
-of attack was chosen.</p>
-
-<p>When the horn-work fell a lodgement had been
-immediately commenced in the interior, and it was
-continued vigorously, although under a destructive<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_266"></a>[266]</span>
-fire from the Napoleon battery, because the besiegers
-feared the enemy would at day-light endeavour
-to retake the work by the gorge; good
-cover was, however, obtained in the night, and the
-first battery was also begun.</p>
-
-<p>The 21st the garrison mounted several fresh
-field-guns, and at night kept up a heavy fire of
-grape, and shells, on the workmen who were digging
-the musketry trench in front of the first
-battery.</p>
-
-<p>The 22d the fire of the besieged was redoubled,
-but the besiegers worked with little loss, and their
-musketeers galled the enemy. In the night the
-first battery was armed with two eighteen-pounders
-and three howitzers, and the secret battery within
-the horn-work was commenced; but lord Wellington,
-deviating from his first plan, now resolved
-to try an escalade against the first line of defence.
-He selected a point half-way between the suburb
-of San Pedro and the horn-work, and at midnight
-four hundred men provided with ladders were
-secretly posted, in a hollow road, fifty yards from
-the wall, which was from twenty-three to twenty-five
-feet high but had no flanks; this was the
-main column, and a Portuguese battalion was also
-assembled in the town of Burgos to make a combined
-flank attack on that side.</p>
-
-
-<h4>SECOND ASSAULT.</h4>
-
-<p>The storm was commenced by the Portuguese,
-but they were repelled by the fire of the common
-guard alone, and the principal escalading party
-which was composed of detachments from different
-regiments under major Lawrie 79th regiment,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_267"></a>[267]</span>
-though acting with more courage, had as little
-success. The ladders were indeed placed, and the
-troops entered the ditch, yet all together, and confusedly;
-Lawrie was killed and the bravest soldiers
-who first mounted the ladders were bayonetted;
-combustible missiles were then thrown down in
-great abundance, and after a quarter of an hour’s
-resistance, the men gave way, leaving half their
-number behind. The wounded were brought off<span class="sidenote">Lord Wellesley’s speech, House of Lords, 12th March 1813.</span>
-the next day under a truce. It is said that on the
-body of one of the officers killed the French found
-a complete plan of the siege, and it is certain that
-this disastrous attempt, which delayed the regular
-progress of the siege for two days, increased the
-enemy’s courage, and produced a bad effect upon
-the allied troops, some of whom were already dispirited
-by the attack on the horn-work.</p>
-
-<p>The original plan being now resumed, the hollow
-way from whence the escaladers had advanced,
-and which at only fifty yards’ distance run along
-the front of defence, was converted into a parallel,
-and connected with the suburb of San Pedro.
-The trenches were made deep and narrow to secure
-them from the plunging shot of the castle, and
-musketeers were also planted to keep down the
-enemy’s fire; but heavy rains incommoded the
-troops, and though the allied marksmen got the
-mastery over those of the French immediately in
-their front, the latter, having a raised <ins class="corr" id="tn-267" title="Transcriber’s Note—Original text: 'and pallisaded work'">
-and palisaded work</ins> on their own right which in some<span class="sidenote9">See <a href="#i_b_581fp_4">Plan 4.</a></span>
-measure flanked the approaches, killed so many of
-the besiegers that the latter were finally withdrawn.</p>
-
-<p>In the night a flying sap was commenced, from
-the right of the parallel, and was pushed within<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_268"></a>[268]</span>
-twenty yards of the enemy’s first line of defence;
-but the directing engineer was killed, and with him
-many men, for the French plied their musketry
-sharply, and rolled large shells down the steep
-side of the hill. The head of the sap was indeed
-so commanded as it approached the wall, that a six-feet
-trench, added to the height of the gabion
-above, scarcely protected the workmen, wherefore
-the gallery of the mine was opened, and worked
-as rapidly as the inexperience of the miners, who
-were merely volunteers from the line, would permit.</p>
-
-<p>The concealed battery within the horn-work of
-San Michael being now completed, two eighteen-pounders
-were removed from the first battery to
-arm it, and they were replaced by two iron howitzers,
-which opened upon the advanced palisade
-below, to drive the French marksmen from that
-point; but after firing one hundred and forty
-rounds without success this project was relinquished,
-and ammunition was so scarce that the
-soldiers were paid to collect the enemy’s bullets.</p>
-
-<p>This day also a zigzag was commenced in front
-of the first battery and down the face of San Michael,
-to obtain footing for a musketry trench to overlook
-the enemy’s defences below; and though the workmen
-were exposed to the whole fire of the castle,
-at the distance of two hundred yards, and were
-knocked down fast, the work went steadily on.</p>
-
-<p>On the 26th the gallery of the mine was advanced
-eighteen feet, and the soil was found favourable,
-but the men in passing the sap, were hit
-fast by the French marksmen, and an assistant
-engineer was killed. In the night the parallel was
-prolonged on the right within twenty yards of the
-enemy’s ramparts, with a view to a second gallery<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_269"></a>[269]</span>
-and mine, and musketeers were planted there to
-oppose the enemy’s marksmen and to protect the
-sap; at the same time the zigzag on the hill of
-San Michael was continued, and the musket trench
-there was completed under cover of gabions, and
-with little loss, although the whole fire of the
-castle was concentrated on the spot.</p>
-
-<p>The 27th the French were seen strengthening
-their second line, and they had already cut a step,
-along the edge of the counterscarp, for a covered
-way, and had palisaded the communication. Meanwhile
-the besiegers finished the musketry trench on
-the right of their parallel, and opened the gallery
-for the second mine; but the first mine went on
-slowly, the men in the sap were galled and disturbed,
-by stones, grenades, and small shells,
-which the French threw into the trenches by hand;
-and the artillery fire also knocked over the gabions
-of the musketry trench, on San Michael, so fast,
-that the troops were withdrawn during the day.</p>
-
-<p>In the night a trench of communication forming
-a second parallel behind the first was begun and
-nearly completed from the hill of San Michael
-towards the suburb of San Pedro, and the musketry
-trench on the hill was deepened.</p>
-
-<p>The 28th an attempt was made to perfect this
-new parallel of communication, but the French
-fire was heavy, and the shells, which passed over,
-came rolling down the hill again into the trench, so
-the work was deferred until night and was then
-perfected. The back roll of the shells continued
-indeed to gall the troops, but the whole of this
-trench, that in front of the horn-work above, and
-that on the right of the parallel below, were filled
-with men whose fire was incessant. Moreover<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_270"></a>[270]</span>
-the first mine was now completed and loaded
-with more than a thousand weight of powder, the
-gallery was strongly tamped for fifteen feet with
-bags of clay, and all being ready for the explosion
-Wellington ordered the</p>
-
-
-<h4>THIRD ASSAULT.</h4>
-
-<p>At midnight the hollow road, fifty yards from
-the mine, was lined with troops to fire on the defences,
-and three hundred men, composing the
-storming party, were assembled there, attended by
-others who carried tools and materials to secure the
-lodgement when the breach should be carried. The
-mine was then exploded, the wall fell, and an
-officer with twenty men rushed forward to the
-assault. The effect of the explosion was not so
-great as it ought to have been, yet it brought the
-wall down, the enemy was stupified, and the forlorn
-hope, consisting of a sergeant and four daring
-soldiers, gained the summit of the breach, and
-there stood until the French, recovering, drove them
-down pierced with bayonet wounds. Meanwhile the
-officer and the twenty men, who were to have been
-followed by a party of fifty, and these by the remainder
-of the stormers, missed the breach in the
-dark, and finding the wall unbroken, returned, and
-reported that there was no breach. The main body
-immediately regained the trenches, and before the
-sergeant and his men returned with streaming
-wounds to tell their tale, the enemy was reinforced;
-and such was the scarcity of ammunition that no
-artillery practice could be directed against the
-breach, during the night; hence the French were
-enabled to raise a parapet behind it and to place<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_271"></a>[271]</span>
-obstacles on the ascent which deterred the besiegers
-from renewing the assault at day-light.</p>
-
-<p>This failure arose from the darkness of the night,
-and the want of a conducting engineer, for out of
-four regular officers, of that branch, engaged in the
-siege, one had been killed, one badly wounded, and
-one was sick, wherefore the remaining one was
-necessarily reserved for the conducting of the
-works. The aspect of affairs was gloomy. Twelve
-days had elapsed since the siege commenced, one
-assault had succeeded, two had failed, twelve
-hundred men had been killed, or wounded, little
-progress had been made, and the troops generally
-shewed symptoms of despondency, especially the
-Portuguese, who seemed to be losing their ancient
-spirit. Discipline was relaxed, the soldiers wasted
-ammunition, and the work in the trenches was
-avoided or neglected both by officers and men;
-insubordination was gaining ground, and reproachful
-orders were issued, the guards only being
-noticed as presenting an honourable exception.</p>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote7">October.</span>
-In this state it was essential to make some change
-in the operations, and as the French marksmen, in
-the advanced palisadoed work below, were now
-become so expert that every thing which could be
-seen from thence was hit, the howitzer battery on
-San Michael was reinforced with a French eight-pounder,
-by the aid of which this mischievous
-post was at last demolished. At the same time the
-gallery of the second mine was pushed forward,
-and a new breaching battery for three guns was
-constructed behind it, so close to the enemy’s defences
-that the latter screened the work from the
-artillery fire of their upper fortress; but the parapet
-of the battery was only made musket-proof because<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_272"></a>[272]</span>
-the besieged had no guns on the lower line of this
-front.</p>
-
-<p>In the night the three eighteen-pounders were
-brought from the hill of San Michael without being
-discovered, and at day-light, though a very galling
-fire of muskets thinned the workmen, they persevered
-until nine o’clock when the battery was
-finished and armed. But at that moment the
-watchful Dubreton brought a howitzer down from
-the upper works, and with a low charge threw
-shells into the battery; then making a hole through
-a flank wall, he thrust out a light gun which sent
-its bullets whizzing through the thin parapet at
-every round, and at the same time his marksmen
-plied their shot so sharply that the allies were driven
-from their pieces without firing a shot. More
-French cannon were now brought from the upper
-works, the defences of the battery were quite demolished,
-two of the gun-carriages were disabled,
-a trunnion was knocked off one of the eighteen-pounders,
-and the muzzle of another was split.
-And it was in vain that the besiegers’ marksmen,
-aided by some officers who considered themselves
-good shots, endeavoured to quell the enemy’s fire,
-the French being on a height were too well covered
-and remained masters of the fight.</p>
-
-<p>In the night a second and more solid battery
-was formed at a point a little to the left of the
-ruined one, but at day-light the French observed it;
-and their fire plunging from above made the parapet
-fly off so rapidly, that the English general
-relinquished his intention and returned to his
-galleries and mines, and to his breaching battery
-on the hill of San Michael. The two guns still
-serviceable were therefore removed towards the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_273"></a>[273]</span>
-upper battery to beat down a retrenchment formed
-by the French behind the old breach. It was intended
-to have placed them on this new position in
-the night of the 3d, but the weather was very wet
-and stormy, and the workmen, those of the guards
-only excepted, abandoned the trenches; hence at
-day-light the guns were still short of their destination
-and nothing more could be done until the
-following night.</p>
-
-<p>On the 4th, at nine o’clock in the morning, the
-two eighteen-pounders, and three iron howitzers,
-again opened from San Michael’s, and at four o’clock
-in the evening, the old breach being cleared of
-all incumbrances, and the second mine being
-strongly tamped for explosion, a double assault was
-ordered. The second battalion of the twenty-fourth
-British regiment, commanded by captain Hedderwick
-was selected for this operation, and was formed
-in the hollow way, having one advanced party,
-under Mr. Holmes, pushed forward as close to the
-new mine as it was safe to be, and a second party
-under Mr. Frazer in like manner pushed towards
-the old breach.</p>
-
-
-<h4>FOURTH ASSAULT.</h4>
-
-<p>At five o’clock the mine was exploded with a
-terrific effect, sending many of the French up into
-the air and breaking down one hundred feet of the
-wall, the next instant Holmes and his brave men
-went rushing through the smoke and crumbling
-ruins, and Frazer, as quick and brave as his
-brother officer, was already fighting with the
-defenders on the summit of the old breach. The
-supports followed closely, and in a few minutes
-both points were carried with a loss to the assailants<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_274"></a>[274]</span>
-of thirty-seven killed and two hundred
-wounded, seven of the latter being officers and
-amongst them the conducting engineer. During the
-night lodgements were formed, in advance of the
-old, and on the ruins of the new breach, yet very
-imperfectly, and under a heavy destructive fire
-from the upper defences. But this happy attack
-revived the spirits of the army, vessels with powder
-were coming coastwise from Coruña, a convoy was
-expected by land from Ciudad Rodrigo, and as a
-supply of ammunition sent by sir Home Popham
-had already reached the camp, from Santander, the
-howitzers continued to knock away the palisades in
-the ditch, and the battery on San Michael’s was
-directed to open a third breach at a point where
-the first French line of defence was joined to the
-second line.</p>
-
-<p>This promising state of affairs was of short duration.</p>
-
-<p>On the 5th, at five o’clock in the evening, while
-the working parties were extending the lodgements,
-three hundred French came swiftly down the hill,
-and sweeping away the labourers and guards from
-the trenches, killed or wounded a hundred and fifty
-men, got possession of the old breach, destroyed the
-works, and carried off all the tools. However in
-the night the allies repaired the damage and pushed
-saps from each flank to meet in the centre near the
-second French line, and to serve as a parallel to
-check future sallies. Meanwhile the howitzers on
-the San Michael continued their fire, yet ineffectually,
-against the palisades; the breaching battery
-in the horn-work also opened, but it was badly
-constructed, and the guns being unable to see the
-wall sufficiently low, soon ceased to speak, the embrasures
-were therefore masked. On the other hand<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_275"></a>[275]</span>
-the besieged were unable, from the steepness of the
-castle-hill, to depress their guns sufficiently to bear
-on the lodgement at the breaches in the first line,
-but their musquetry was destructive, and they rolled
-down large shells to retard the approaches towards
-the second line.</p>
-
-<p>On the 7th the besiegers had got so close to
-the wall below that the howitzers above could no
-longer play without danger to the workmen, wherefore
-two French field-pieces, taken in the horn-work,
-were substituted and did good service. The breaching
-battery on San Michael’s being altered, also renewed
-its fire, and at five o’clock had beaten down
-fifty feet from the parapet of the second line; but the
-enemy’s return was heavy, and another eighteen-pounder
-lost a trunnion. However in the night block-carriages
-with supports for the broken trunnions
-were provided, and the disabled guns were enabled
-to recommence their fire yet with low charges. But
-a constant rain had now filled the trenches, the
-communications were injured, the workmen were
-negligent, the approaches to the second line went
-on slowly, and again Dubreton came thundering
-down from the upper ground, driving the guards
-and workmen from the new parallel at the lodgements,
-levelling all the works, carrying off all the
-tools, and killing or wounding two hundred men.
-Colonel Cocks, promoted for his gallant conduct at
-the storming of San Michael, restored the fight, and
-repulsed the French, but he fell dead on the ground
-he had recovered. He was a young man of a modest
-demeanour, brave, thoughtful, and enterprising,
-and he lived and died a good soldier.</p>
-
-<p>After this severe check the approaches to the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_276"></a>[276]</span>
-second line were abandoned, and the trenches were
-extended so as to embrace the whole of the fronts
-attacked; the battery on San Michael had meantime
-formed a practicable breach twenty-five feet wide,
-and the parallel, at the old breach of the first line,
-was prolonged by zigzags on the left towards this new
-breach, while a trench was opened to enable marksmen
-to fire upon the latter at thirty yards distance.
-Nevertheless another assault could not be risked
-because the great expenditure of powder had again
-exhausted the magazines, and without a new supply,
-the troops might have found themselves without
-ammunition in front of the French army which
-was now gathering head near Briviesca. Heated
-shot were however thrown at the White Church with
-a view to burn the magazines; and the miners were
-directed to drive a gallery, on the other side of the
-castle, against the church of San Roman, a building
-pushed out a little beyond the French external line
-of defence on the side of the city.</p>
-
-<p>On the 10th, when the besiegers’ ammunition was
-nearly all gone, a fresh supply arrived from Santander,
-but no effect had been produced upon the White
-Church, and Dubreton had strengthened his works to
-meet the assault; he had also isolated the new breach<span class="sidenote9">See <a href="#i_b_581fp_4">Plan, No. 4.</a></span>
-on one flank by a strong stockade extending at right
-angles from the second to the third line of defence.
-The fire from the Napoleon battery had obliged the
-besiegers again to withdraw their battering guns
-within the horn-work, and the attempt to burn the
-White Church was relinquished, but the gallery
-against San Roman was continued. In this state
-things remained for several days with little change,
-save that the French, maugre the musketry from<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_277"></a>[277]</span>
-the nearest zigzag trench, had scarped eight feet at
-the top of the new breach and formed a small trench
-at the back.</p>
-
-<p>On the 15th the battery in the horn-work was
-again armed, and the guns pointed to breach the
-wall of the Napoleon battery; they were however
-over-matched and silenced in three-quarters of an
-hour, and the embrasures were once more altered,
-that the guns might bear on the breach in the
-second line. Some slight works and counter-works
-were also made on different points, but the besiegers
-were principally occupied repairing the mischief
-done by the rain, and in pushing the gallery under
-San Roman, where the French were now distinctly
-heard talking in the church, wherefore the mine
-there was formed and loaded with nine hundred
-pounds of powder.</p>
-
-<p>On the 17th the battery of the horn-work being
-renewed, the fire of the eighteen-pounders cleared
-away the enemy’s temporary defences at the breach,
-the howitzers damaged the rampart on each side,
-and a small mine was sprung on the extreme right
-of the lower parallel, with a view to take possession
-of a cavalier or mound which the French had raised
-there, and from which they had killed many men
-in the trenches; it was successful, and a lodgement
-was effected, but the enemy soon returned in force
-and obliged the besiegers to abandon it again. However
-on the 18th the new breach was rendered practicable,
-and Wellington ordered it to be stormed.
-The explosion of the mine under San Roman was to
-be the signal; that church was also to be assaulted;
-and at the same time a third detachment was to
-escalade the works in front of the ancient breach
-and thus connect the attacks.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_278"></a>[278]</span></p>
-
-
-<h4>FIFTH ASSAULT.</h4>
-
-<p>At half-past four o’clock the springing of the
-mine at San Roman broke down a terrace in front
-of that building, yet with little injury to the church
-itself; the latter was, however, resolutely attacked
-by colonel Browne, at the head of some Spanish and
-Portuguese troops, and though the enemy sprung a
-countermine which brought the building down, the
-assailants lodged themselves in the ruins. Meanwhile
-two hundred of the foot-guards, with strong
-supports, poured through the old breach in the first
-line, and escaladed the second line, beyond which
-in the open ground between the second and third
-lines, they were encountered by the French, and a
-sharp musketry fight commenced. At the same
-time a like number of the German legion, under
-major Wurmb, similarly supported, stormed the
-new breach, on the left of the guards, so vigourously,
-that it was carried in a moment, and some
-men, mounting the hill above, actually gained the
-third line. Unhappily at neither of these assaults
-did the supports follow closely, and the Germans
-being cramped on their left by the enemy’s stockade,
-extended by their right towards the guards, and at
-that critical moment Dubreton, who held his reserves
-well in hand, came dashing like a torrent
-from the upper ground, and in an instant cleared
-the breaches. Wurmb and many other brave men
-fell, and then the French, gathering round the
-guards, who were still unsupported, forced them
-beyond the outer line. More than two hundred men
-and officers were killed or wounded in this combat,
-and the next night the enemy recovered San Roman
-by a sally.</p>
-
-<p>The siege was thus virtually terminated, for<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_279"></a>[279]</span>
-though the French were beaten out of St. Roman
-again, and a gallery was opened from that church
-against the second line; and though two twenty-four
-pounders, sent from Santander, by sir Home
-Popham, had passed Reynosa on their way to
-Burgos, these were mere demonstrations. It is
-now time to narrate the different contemporary
-events which obliged the English general, with a
-victorious army, to abandon the siege of a third-rate
-fortress, strong in nothing but the skill and
-bravery of the governor and his gallant soldiers.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_280"></a>[280]</span><br /></p>
-
-<h3 id="CHAPTER_BXIX_IV">CHAPTER IV.</h3>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="sidenote7">1812. October.</span>
-When king Joseph retreated to Valencia he earnestly
-demanded a reinforcement of forty thousand
-men, from France, and, more earnestly, money. Three
-millions of francs he obtained from Suchet, yet his
-distress was greater even than that of the allies, and
-Wellington at one time supposed that this alone would
-drive the French from the Peninsula. The Anglo-Portuguese
-soldiers had not received pay for six
-months, but the French armies of the south, of the
-centre, and of Portugal, were a whole year behind-hand;
-and the salaries of the ministers, and civil
-servants of the court, were two years in arrears.
-Suchet’s army, the only one which depended entirely
-on the country, was by that marshal’s excellent
-management regularly paid, and the effect on its discipline
-was conformable; his troops refrained from
-plunder themselves, and repressed some excesses
-of Joseph’s and Soult’s soldiers so vigorously,
-as to come to blows in defence of the inhabitants.
-And thus it will ever be, since paid soldiers only
-may be kept under discipline. Soldiers without
-money must become robbers. Napoleon knew the
-king’s necessity to be extreme, but the war with
-Russia had so absorbed the resources of France,
-that little money, and only twenty thousand men,
-principally conscripts, could be sent to Spain.</p>
-
-<p>The army of Portugal, at the moment when the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_281"></a>[281]</span>
-siege of the castle commenced, had been quartered
-between Vittoria and Burgos; that is to say, at Pancorbo
-and along the Ebro as far as Logroña, an advanced
-guard only remaining at Briviesca; on this
-line they were recruited and reorganized, and Massena
-was appointed with full powers to command in
-the northern provinces. A fine opportunity to revenge
-his own retreat from Torres Vedras, was thus furnished
-to the old warrior; but whether he doubted
-the issue of affairs, or was really tamed by age, he
-pleaded illness, and sent general Souham to the
-army of Portugal. Then arose contentions, for
-Marmont had designated Clauzel as the fittest to
-lead, Massena insisted that Souham was the abler
-general, and the king desired to appoint Drouet.
-Clauzel’s abilities were certainly not inferior to
-those of any French general, and to more perfect<span class="sidenote">Letter from the duke of Feltre to king Joseph, 4th Oct. 1812, MSS.</span>
-acquaintance with the theatre of war, he added a
-better knowledge of the enemy he had to contend
-with; he was also more known to his own soldiers,
-and had gained their confidence by his recent operations,
-no mean considerations in such a matter.
-However, Souham was appointed.</p>
-
-<p>Caffarelli anxious to succour the castle of Burgos,
-which belonged to his command, had united at Vittoria
-a thousand cavalry, sixteen guns, and eight thousand
-infantry, of which three thousand were of the
-young guard. The army of Portugal, reinforced from
-France with twelve thousand men, had thirty-five
-thousand present under arms, reorganized in six
-divisions, and by Clauzel’s care, its former excellent
-discipline had been restored. Thus forty-four<span class="sidenote">Official report of general Souham, MSS.</span>
-thousand good troops were, in the beginning of
-October, ready to succour the castle of Burgos;
-but the generals, although anxious to effect that<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_282"></a>[282]</span>
-object, awaited, first the arrival of Souham, and then
-news from the king, with whose operations it was
-essential to combine their own. They had no direct
-tidings from him because the lines of correspondence
-were so circuitous, and so beset by the Partidas, that
-the most speedy as well as certain mode of communication,
-was through the minister of war at
-Paris; and that functionary found the information,
-best suited to his purpose, in the English newspapers.
-For the latter, while deceiving the British<span class="sidenote">Duke of Feltre’s correspondence, MSS.</span>
-public by accounts of battles which were never
-fought, victories which were never gained, enthusiasm
-and vigour which never existed, did, with most
-accurate assiduity, enlighten the enemy upon the
-numbers, situation, movements, and reinforcements
-of the allies.</p>
-
-<p>Souham arrived the 3rd of October with the last
-of the reinforcements from France, but he imagined
-that lord Wellington had sixty thousand troops<span class="sidenote">Souham’s official correspondence, MSS.</span>
-around Burgos, exclusive of the Partidas, and that
-three divisions were marching from Madrid to his
-aid; whereas none were coming from that capital,
-and little more than thirty thousand were present
-under arms round Burgos, eleven thousand being
-Gallicians scarcely so good as the Partidas. Wellington’s
-real strength was in his Anglo-Portuguese,
-then not twenty thousand, for besides those killed or
-wounded at the siege, the sick had gone to the rear
-faster than the recovered men came up. Some unattached
-regiments and escorts were, indeed, about
-Segovia, and other points north of the Guadarama,
-and a reinforcement of five thousand men had been
-sent from England in September; but the former
-belonged to Hill’s army, and of the latter, the lifeguards
-and blues had gone to Lisbon. Hence a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_283"></a>[283]</span>
-regiment of foot-guards, and some detachments for
-the line, in all about three thousand, were the only
-available force in the rear.</p>
-
-<p>During the first part of the siege, the English
-general seeing the French scattered along the Ebro,
-and only reinforced by conscripts, did not fear any
-interruption, and the less so, that sir Home Popham
-was again menacing the coast line. Even now,
-when the French were beginning to concentrate their
-troops, he cared little for them, and was resolved
-to give battle; for he thought that Popham and the
-guerillas would keep Caffarelli employed, and he
-felt himself a match for the <ins class="corr" id="tn-283" title="Transcriber’s Note—Original text: 'army of Porugal'">
-army of Portugal</ins>. Nor were the Partidas inactive on any point, and their
-successes though small in themselves, were exceedingly
-harassing to the enemy.</p>
-
-<p>Mina having obtained two or three thousand
-stand of English arms had re-entered Aragon
-and domineered on the left bank of the Ebro,
-while Duran, with four thousand men, operated
-uncontrolled on the right bank. The Empecinado,
-Villacampa, and Bassecour descended from Cuenca,
-the first against Requeña, the others against Albacete.
-The Frayle interrupted the communications
-between Valencia and Tortoza. Saornil,
-Cuesta, Firmin, and others, were in La Mancha
-and Estremadura, Juan Palarea, called the Medico,
-was near Segovia, and though Marquinez had been
-murdered by one of his own men, his partida and
-that of Julian Sanchez acted as regular troops with
-Wellington’s army. Meanwhile sir Home Popham,
-in conjunction with Mendizabel, Porlier, and Renovales,
-who had gathered all the minor partidas
-under their banners, assailed Gueteria; but unsuccessfully;
-for on the 30th of September, the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_284"></a>[284]</span>
-Spanish chiefs were driven away, and Popham
-lost some guns which had been landed. About
-the same time the Empecinado being defeated at
-Requeña, retired to Cuenca, yet he failed not from
-thence to infest the French quarters.</p>
-
-<p>Duran, when Soria was abandoned, fell upon
-Calatayud, but was defeated by Severoli, who withdrew
-the garrison. Then the Spanish chief attacked
-the castle of Almunia, which was only one
-march from Zaragoza, and when Severoli succoured
-this place also, and dismantled the castle,
-Duran attacked Borja between Tudela and Zaragoza,
-and took it before Severoli could come up.
-Thus Zaragoza was gradually deprived of its
-outposts, on the right of the Ebro; on the left,
-Mina hovered close to the gates, and his lieutenant,
-Chaplangara, meeting, near Ayerbe, with three
-hundred Italians, killed forty, and would have
-destroyed the whole but for the timely succour of
-some mounted gens-d’armes. At last Reille being
-undeceived as to Wellington’s march, restored the
-smaller posts which he had abandoned, and Suchet
-ordered the castle of Almunia to be refitted, but
-during these events, Bassecour and Villa Campa
-united to infest Joseph’s quarters about Albacete.</p>
-
-<p>Soult’s march from Andalusia and his junction
-with the king, has been described; but while he
-was yet at Grenada, Hill, leaving three Portuguese
-regiments of infantry and one of cavalry at Almendralejo
-and Truxillo, to protect his line of supply,
-had marched to cross the Tagus at Almaraz, and
-Arzobispo. He entered Toledo the 28th of September,
-and the same day Elio took a small French
-garrison left in Consuegra. Hill soon after occupied
-a line from Toledo to Aranjuez, where he<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_285"></a>[285]</span>
-was joined by the fourth division, Victor Alten’s
-cavalry, and the detachments quartered about Ildefonsos
-and Segovia. On the 8th, hearing of Soult’s
-arrival at Hellin, he pushed his cavalry to Belmonte
-on the San Clemente road, and here in La Mancha
-as in Old Castile the stories of French devastation
-were belied by the abundance of provisions.</p>
-
-<p>Bassecour, Villa Campa, and the Empecinado
-now united on the road leading from Cuenca to
-Valencia, while the Medico and other chiefs gathered
-in the Toledo mountains. In this manner
-the allies extended from Toledo on the right, by
-Belmonte, Cuenca, and Calatayud to near Jacca on
-the left, and were in military communication with
-the coast; for Caffarelli’s disposable force was now
-concentrated to relieve Burgos, and Mina had free
-intercourse with Mendizabal and Renovales, and
-with Popham’s fleet. But the French line of correspondence
-between the armies in the eastern and<span class="sidenote"><a href="#NO_VIII_B">Appendix, No. 8, B.</a></span>
-northern provinces, was so interrupted that the
-English newspapers became their surest, quickest,
-and most accurate channels of intelligence.</p>
-
-<p>Souham, who over-rated the force of his adversary,
-and feared a defeat as being himself the only
-barrier left between Wellington and France, was
-at first so far from meditating an advance, that he
-expected and dreaded an attack from the allies;
-and as the want of provisions would not let him
-concentrate his army permanently near Monasterio,
-his dispositions were made to fight on the Ebro.<span class="sidenote">Duke of Feltre’s official correspondence, MSS.</span>
-The minister of war had even desired him to
-detach a division against the partidas. But when
-by the English newspapers, and other information
-sent from Paris, he learned that Soult was in march
-from Grenada,—that the king intended to move<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_286"></a>[286]</span>
-upon Madrid,—that no English troops had left that
-capital to join Wellington,—that the army of the
-latter was not very numerous, and that the castle<span class="sidenote">General Souham’s official correspondence, MSS.</span>
-of Burgos was sorely pressed, he called up Caffarelli’s
-troops from Vittoria, concentrated his own at
-Briviesca and resolved to raise the siege.</p>
-
-<p>On the 13th a skirmish took place on the stream
-beyond Monasterio, where captain Perse of the sixteenth
-dragoons was twice forced from the bridge
-and twice recovered it in the most gallant manner,
-maintaining his post until colonel F. Ponsonby, who
-commanded the reserves, arrived. Ponsonby and
-Perse were both wounded, and this demonstration
-was followed by various others until the evening
-of the 18th, when the whole French army was
-united, and the advanced guard captured a picquet
-of the Brunswickers which contrary to orders had
-remained in St. Olalla. This sudden movement
-apparently prevented Wellington from occupying
-the position of Monasterio, his outposts fell back
-on the 19th to Quintanapala and Olmos, and on
-the ridges behind those places he drew up his army
-in order of battle. The right was at Ibeas on the
-Arlanzan; the centre at Riobena and Majarradas on
-the main road behind Olmos; the left was thrown
-back near Soto Palaccio, and rested on a small
-river.</p>
-
-<p>The 20th, Maucune, with two divisions of infantry
-and one of cavalry, drove the allies from
-Quintanapala, but Olmos was successfully defended
-by the Chasseurs Brittaniques, and Maucune, having
-no supports, was immediately outflanked on
-the right and forced back to Monasterio, by two
-divisions under sir Edward Paget. There were
-now in position, including Pack’s Portuguese, which<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_287"></a>[287]</span>
-blockaded the castle, about thirty-three thousand
-men under arms, namely, twenty-one thousand
-Anglo-Portuguese infantry and cavalry, eleven thousand
-Gallicians, and the horsemen of Marquinez and
-Julian Sanchez. Thus, there were four thousand
-troopers, but only two thousand six hundred of
-these were British and German, and the Spanish
-horsemen regular or irregular, could scarcely be
-counted in the line of battle. The number of guns
-and howitzers was only forty-two, including twelve
-Spanish pieces, extremely ill equipped and scant
-of ammunition.</p>
-
-<p>Lord Wellington had long felt the want of artillery
-and had sent a memoir upon the subject, to the
-British government, in the beginning of the year,
-yet his ordnance establishment had not been augmented,
-hence his difficulties during the siege;
-and in the field, instead of ninety British and Portuguese
-cannon, which was the just complement for
-his army, he had now only fifty serviceable pieces,
-of which twenty-four were with general Hill; and
-all were British, for the Portuguese artillery had
-from the abuses and the poverty of their government
-entirely melted away. Now the French had,<span class="sidenote">Official state of the army given to Massena, MSS.</span>
-as I have before stated, forty-four thousand men,
-of which nearly five thousand were cavalry, and
-they had more than sixty guns, a matter of no
-small importance; for besides the actual power of
-artillery in an action, soldiers are excited when the
-noise is greatest on their side. Wellington stood,
-therefore, at disadvantage in numbers, composition,
-and real strength. In his rear was the castle, and
-the river Arlanzan, the fords and bridges of which
-were commanded by the guns of the fortress; his
-generals of division, Paget excepted, were not of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_288"></a>[288]</span>
-any marked ability, his troops were somewhat desponding,
-and deteriorated in discipline. His situation
-was therefore dangerous, and critical; a
-victory could scarcely be expected, and a defeat
-would have been destructive; he should not have
-provoked a battle, nor would he have done so had
-he known that Caffarelli’s troops were united to
-Souham’s.</p>
-
-<p>On the other hand, Souham should by all means
-have forced on an action, because his ground was
-strong, his retreat open, his army powerful and
-compact, his soldiers full of confidence, his lieutenants
-Clauzel, Maucune, and Foy, men of distinguished
-talents, able to second, and able to succeed
-him in the chief command. The chances of victory
-and the profit to be derived were great, the
-chances of defeat, and the dangers to be incurred
-comparatively small. And it was thus indeed that
-he judged the matter himself, for Maucune’s advance
-was intended to be the prelude to a great<span class="sidenote"><a href="#NO_VIII_A">Appendix, No. 8. A.</a></span>
-battle, and the English general, as we have seen,
-was willing to stand the trial. But generals are not
-absolute masters of events, and as the extraneous
-influence which restrained both sides, on this
-occasion, came from afar, it was fitting to show how,
-in war, movements, distant, and apparently unconnected
-with those immediately under a general’s
-eye, will break his measures, and make him appear
-undecided or foolish when in truth he is both wise
-and firm.</p>
-
-<p>While Wellington was still engaged with the
-siege, the cortez made him commander of all the
-Spanish armies. He had before refused this responsible
-situation, but the circumstances were now
-changed, for the Spaniards, having lost nearly all<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_289"></a>[289]</span>
-their cavalry and guns in the course of the war,
-could not safely act, except in connexion with the
-Anglo-Portuguese forces, and it was absolutely
-necessary that one head should direct. The English
-general therefore demanded leave of his own government
-to accept the offer, although he observed,
-that the Spanish troops were not at all improved in
-their discipline, their equipments, or their military
-spirit; but he thought that conjoined with the
-British they might behave well, and so escape
-any more of those terrible disasters which had heretofore
-overwhelmed the country and nearly brought
-the war to a conclusion. He was willing to save
-the dignity of the Spanish government, by leaving
-it a certain body of men wherewith to operate after
-its own plans; but that he might exercise his own
-power efficiently, and to the profit of the troops
-under himself, he desired that the English government
-would vigorously insist upon the strict application
-of the subsidy to the payment of the Spanish
-soldiers acting with the British army, otherwise
-the care of the Spanish troops, he said, would only
-cramp his own operations.</p>
-
-<p>In his reply to the Cortez, his acceptance of the
-offer was rendered dependent upon the assent of
-his own government; and he was careful to guard
-himself from a danger, not unlikely to arise, namely,
-that the Cortez, when he should finally accept the
-offer, would in virtue of that acceptance assume
-the right of directing the whole operations of the
-war. The intermediate want of power to move the
-Spanish armies, he judged of little consequence,
-because hitherto his suggestions having been cheerfully
-attended to by the Spanish chiefs, he had no<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_290"></a>[290]</span>
-reason to expect any change in that particular, but
-there he was grievously mistaken.</p>
-
-<p>Previous to this offer the Spanish government
-had, at his desire, directed Ballesteros to cross the
-Morena, and place himself at Alcaraz and in support
-of the Chinchilla fort, where joined by Cruz
-Murgeon, by Elio, and by the Partidas, he would
-have had a corps of thirty thousand men, would
-have been supported by Hill’s army, and, having
-the mountains behind him for a retreat, could have
-safely menaced the enemy’s flank, and delayed the
-march against Madrid or at least have obliged the
-king to leave a strong corps of observation to watch
-him. But Ballesteros, swelling with arrogant folly,
-never moved from Grenada, and when he found
-that Wellington was created generalissimo, he published
-a manifesto appealing to the Spanish pride
-against the degradation of serving under a foreigner;
-he thus sacrificed to his own spleen the welfare of
-his country, and with a result he little expected;
-for while he judged himself a man to sway the
-destinies of Spain, he suddenly found himself a
-criminal and nothing more. The Cortez caused
-him to be arrested in the midst of his soldiers, who,
-indifferent to his fate, suffered him to be sent a
-prisoner to Ceuta. The count of Abisbal was then
-declared captain-general of Andalusia, and the
-duke del Parque was appointed to command Ballesteros’
-army, which general Verues immediately led
-by Jaen towards La Mancha, but Soult was then
-on the Tormes.</p>
-
-<p>That marshal united with the king on the 3d of
-October. His troops required rest, his numerous
-sick were to be sent to the Valencian hospitals, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_291"></a>[291]</span>
-his first interview with Joseph was of a warm
-nature, for each had his griefs and passions to declare.
-Finally the monarch yielded to the superior
-mental power of his opponent and resolved to
-profit from his great military capacity, yet reluctantly
-and more from prudence than liking; for the
-duke of Feltre, minister of war at Paris, although<span class="sidenote"><a href="#NO_VI_A">Appendix, No. 6. A.</a></span>
-secretly an enemy of Soult, and either believing, or
-pretending to believe in the foolish charges of disorderly
-ambition made against that commander, opposed
-any decided exercise of the king’s authority
-until the emperor’s will was known: yet this would
-not have restrained the king if the marshals Jourdan
-and Suchet had not each declined accepting the
-duke of Dalmatia’s command when Joseph offered
-it to them.</p>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote">Joseph’s Correspondence, MSS.</span>
-Soult’s first operation was to reduce Chinchilla,
-a well-constructed fort, which, being in the midst
-of his quarters, commanded the great roads so as to
-oblige his army to move under its fire or avoid it
-by circuitous routes. A vigorous defence was
-expected, but on the 6th it fell, after a few hours’
-attack; for a thunder-storm suddenly arising in a
-clear sky had discharged itself upon the fort, and
-killed the governor and many other persons, whereupon
-the garrison, influenced, it is said, by a superstitious
-fear, surrendered. This was the first bitter
-fruit of Ballesteros’ disobedience, for neither could
-Soult have taken Chinchilla, nor scattered his troops,
-as he did, at Albacete, Almanza, Yecla, and Hellin,
-if thirty thousand Spaniards had been posted between
-Alcaraz and Chinchilla, and supported by
-thirty thousand Anglo-Portuguese at Toledo under
-Hill. These extended quarters were however essential
-for the feeding of the French general’s numbers,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_292"></a>[292]</span>
-and now, covered by the fort of Chinchilla,
-his troops were well lodged, his great convoys of
-sick and maimed men, his Spanish families, and
-other impediments, safely and leisurely sent to
-Valencia, while his cavalry scouring the country of
-La Mancha in advance, obliged Bassecour and Villa
-Campa to fall back upon Cuenca.</p>
-
-<p>The detail of the operations which followed, belongs
-to another place. It will suffice to say here,
-that the king, being at the head of more than seventy
-thousand men, was enabled without risking Valencia
-to advance towards the Tagus, having previously
-sent Souham a specific order to combine his movements
-in co-operation but strictly to avoid fighting.
-General Hill also finding himself threatened by such
-powerful forces, and reduced by Ballesteros’ defection
-to a simple defence of the Tagus, at a moment
-when that river was becoming fordable in all places,
-gave notice of his situation to lord Wellington.
-Joseph’s letter was dispatched on the 1st, and six
-others followed in succession day by day, yet the last
-carried by colonel Lucotte, an officer of the royal staff,
-first reached Souham; the advantages derived from
-the allies’ central position, and from the Partidas,
-were here made manifest; for Hill’s letter, though
-only dispatched the 17th, reached Wellington at
-the same moment that Joseph’s reached Souham.
-The latter general was thus forced to relinquish his<span class="sidenote"><a href="#NO_VIII_A">Appendix, No. 8. A.</a></span>
-design of fighting on the 20th; nevertheless having
-but four days’ provisions left, he designed when
-those should be consumed, to attack notwithstanding
-the king’s prohibition, if Wellington should still confront
-him. But the English general considering that
-his own army, already in a very critical situation,
-would be quite isolated if the king should, as was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_293"></a>[293]</span>
-most probable, force the allies from the Tagus, now
-resolved, though with a bitter pang, to raise the
-siege and retreat so far as would enable him to secure
-his junction with Hill.</p>
-
-<p>While the armies were in presence some fighting
-<ins class="corr" id="tn-293" title="Transcriber’s Note—Original text: 'had place at'">
-had taken place at</ins> Burgos, Dubreton had again obtained
-possession of the ruins of the church of San Roman
-and was driven away next morning; and now in
-pursuance of Wellington’s determination to retreat,
-mines of destruction were formed in the horn-work
-by the besiegers, and the guns and stores were removed
-from the batteries to the parc at Villa Toro.
-But the greatest part of the draught animals had
-been sent to Reynosa, to meet the powder and artillery
-coming from Santander, and hence, the eighteen-pounders
-could not be carried off, nor, from some
-error, were the mines of destruction exploded.
-The rest of the stores and the howitzers were put
-in march by the road of Villaton and Frandovinez
-for Celada del Camino. Thus the siege was raised,
-after five assaults, several sallies and thirty-three
-days of investment, during which the besiegers
-lost more than two thousand men and the besieged
-six hundred in killed or wounded; the latter had
-also suffered severely, from continual labour, want of
-water, and bad weather, for the fortress was too
-small to afford shelter for the garrison and the
-greater part bivouacked between the lines of defence.</p>
-
-
-<h4>RETREAT FROM BURGOS.</h4>
-
-<p>This operation was commenced on the night of
-the 21st by a measure of great nicety and boldness,
-for the road, divaricating at Gamonal, led by<span class="sidenote9">See <a href="#i_b_581fp_5">Plan 5.</a></span>
-Villatoro to the bridge of Villaton on the one hand,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_294"></a>[294]</span>
-and the bridge of Burgos on the other, and Wellington
-chose the latter, which was the shortest,
-though it passed the Arlanzan river close under the
-guns of the castle. The army quitted the position
-after dark without being observed, and having the
-artillery-wheels muffled with straw, defiled over
-the bridge of Burgos with such silence and celerity,
-that Dubreton, watchful and suspicious as he
-was, knew nothing of their march until the Partidas,
-failing in nerve, commenced galloping; then
-he poured a destructive fire down, but soon lost
-the range. By this delicate operation the infantry
-gained Cellada del Camino and Hormillas that
-night, but the light cavalry halted at Estepar and
-the bridge of Villa Baniel. Souham, who did not
-discover the retreat until late in the evening of the
-22d, was therefore fain to follow, and by a forced
-march, to overtake the allies, whereas, if Wellington
-to avoid the fire of the castle had gone by Villaton,
-and Frandovinez, the French might have
-forestalled him at Cellada del Camino.</p>
-
-<p>The 23d the infantry renewing their march
-crossed the Pisuerga, at Cordovillas, and Torquemada,
-a little above and below its junction with
-the Arlanzan; but while the main body made this
-long march, the French having passed Burgos in
-the night of the 22d, vigorously attacked the allies’
-rear-guard. This was composed of the cavalry and
-some horse artillery, commanded by Norman Ramsay
-and Major Downman; of two battalions of
-Germans under Colin Halket; and of the Partidas
-of Marquinez and Sanchez, the latter being on the
-left of the Arlanzan and the whole under the command
-of sir Stapleton Cotton. The piquets of
-light cavalry were vigorously driven from the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_295"></a>[295]</span>
-bridge of Baniel as early as seven o’clock in the
-morning; but they rallied upon their reserves and
-gained the Hormaza stream which was disputed for
-some time, and a charge made by captain Perse of
-the sixteenth dragoons, was of distinguished bravery.
-However the French cavalry finally forced the
-passage and the British retiring behind Cellada
-Camino took post in a large plain. On their left
-was a range of hills the summit of which was occupied
-by the Partida of Marquinez, and on their right
-was the Arlanzan, beyond which Julian Sanchez
-was posted. Across the middle of the plain run
-a marshy rivulet cutting the main road, and only
-passable by a little bridge near a house called the
-Venta de Pozo, and half-way between this stream
-and Cellada there was a broad ditch with a second
-bridge in front of a small village. Cotton immediately
-retired over the marshy stream, leaving Anson’s
-horsemen and Halket’s infantry as a rear-guard beyond
-the ditch; and Anson to cover his own passage
-of that obstacle left the eleventh dragoons and the
-guns at Cellada Camino, which was situated on a
-gentle eminence.</p>
-
-
-<h4>COMBAT OF VENTA DE POZO.</h4>
-
-<p>When the French approached Cellada, major
-Money of the eleventh, who was in advance, galloping
-out from the left of the village at the head
-of two squadrons, overturned their leading horsemen,
-and the artillery plied them briskly with shot,
-but the main body advancing at a trot along the road
-soon outflanked the British, and obliged Money’s
-squadrons to rejoin the rest of the regiment while
-the guns went on beyond the bridge of Venta de
-Pozo. Meanwhile the French general Curto with<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_296"></a>[296]</span>
-a brigade of hussars ascended the hills on the left,
-and being followed by Boyer’s dragoons, put Marquinez’
-Partida to flight; but a deep ravine run
-along the foot of these hills, next the plain, it could
-only be passed at certain places, and towards the first
-of these the Partidas galloped, closely chased by
-the hussars, at the moment when the leading French
-squadrons on the plain were forming in front of
-Cellada to attack the eleventh regiment. The latter
-charged and drove the first line upon the second,
-but then both lines coming forward together, the
-British were pushed precipitately to the ditch, and
-got over by the bridge with some difficulty, though
-with little loss, being covered by the fire of Halket’s
-infantry which was in the little village behind
-the bridge.</p>
-
-<p>The left flank of this new line was already turned
-by the hussars on the hills, wherefore Anson fell back
-covered by the sixteenth dragoons, and in good order,
-with design to cross the second bridge at
-Venta de Pozo; during this movement Marquinez’
-Partida came pouring down from the hills in full
-flight, closely pursued by the French hussars, who
-mixed with the fugitives, and the whole mass fell
-upon the flank of the sixteenth dragoons; and at
-the same moment, these last were also charged by
-the enemy’s dragoons, who had followed them over
-the ditch. The commander of the Partida was
-wounded, colonel Pelly with another officer, and
-thirty men of the sixteenth, fell into the enemy’s
-hands, and all were driven in confusion upon the
-reserves. But while the French were reforming
-their scattered squadrons after this charge, Anson
-got his people over the bridge of Venta de Pozo
-and drew up beyond the rivulet and to the left<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_297"></a>[297]</span>
-of the road, on which Halket’s battalions and the
-guns had already taken post, and the heavy German
-cavalry, an imposing mass, stood in line on
-the right, and farther in the rear than the artillery.</p>
-
-<p>Hitherto the action had been sustained by the
-cavalry of the army of Portugal, but now Caffarelli’s
-horsemen consisting of the lancers of Berg,
-the fifteenth dragoons and some squadrons of “<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">gens-d’armes</i>,”
-all fresh men, came down in line to the
-rivulet, and finding it impassable, with a quick
-and daring decision wheeled to their right, and
-despite of the heavy pounding of the artillery,
-trotted over the bridge, and again formed line, in
-opposition to the German dragoons, having the
-stream in their rear. The position was dangerous
-but they were full of mettle, and though the Germans,
-who had let too many come over, charged
-with a rough shock and broke the right, the French
-left had the advantage and the others rallied; then
-a close and furious sword contest had place, but
-the “<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">gens-d’armes</i>” fought so fiercely, that the
-Germans, maugre their size and courage, lost
-ground and finally gave way in disorder. The
-French followed on the spur with shrill and eager
-cries, and Anson’s brigade which was thus outflanked
-and threatened on both sides, fell back also,
-but not happily, for Boyer’s dragoons having continued
-their march by the hills to the village of Balbaces
-there crossed the ravine and came thundering
-in on the left. Then the British ranks were broken,
-the regiments got intermixed, and all went to the
-rear in confusion; finally however the Germans,
-having extricated themselves from their pursuers
-turned and formed a fresh line on the left of the
-road, and the others rallied upon them.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_298"></a>[298]</span></p>
-
-<p>The “<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">gens-d’armes</i>” and lancers, who had
-suffered severely from the artillery, as well as in
-the sword-fight, now halted, but Boyer’s dragoons
-forming ten squadrons, again came to the charge,
-and with the more confidence that the allies’ ranks
-appeared still confused and wavering. When within
-a hundred yards, the German officers rode gallantly
-out to fight, and their men followed a short
-way, but the enemy was too powerful, disorder and
-tumult again ensued, the swiftness of the English
-horses alone prevented a terrible catastrophe, and
-though some favourable ground enabled the line
-to reform once more, it was only to be again
-broken. However Wellington, who was present,
-had placed Halket’s infantry and the guns in a position
-to cover the cavalry, and they remained tranquil
-until the enemy, in full pursuit after the last
-charge, came galloping down and lent their
-left flank to the infantry; then the power of this
-arm was made manifest; a tempest of bullets emptied
-the French saddles by scores, and their hitherto
-victorious horsemen after three fruitless attempts to
-charge, each weaker than the other, reined up and
-drew off to the hills, the British cavalry covered
-by the infantry made good their retreat to Quintana
-la Puente near the Pisuerga, and the bivouacs
-of the enemy were established at Villadrigo. The
-loss in this combat was very considerable on both
-sides, the French suffered most, but they took
-a colonel and seventy other prisoners, and they had
-before the fight, also captured a small commissariat
-store near Burgos.</p>
-
-<p>While the rear-guard was thus engaged, drunkenness
-and insubordination, the usual concomitants
-of an English retreat, were exhibited at Torquemada,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_299"></a>[299]</span>
-where the well-stored wine-vaults became the
-prey of the soldiery: it is said, that twelve thousand
-men were to be seen at one time in a state of
-helpless inebriety. This commencement was bad,
-and the English general, who had now retreated
-some fifty miles, seeing the enemy so hot and menacing
-in pursuit, judged it fitting to check his course;
-for though the arrangements were surprisingly well
-combined, the means of transport were so scanty and
-the weather so bad, that the convoys of sick and
-wounded were still on the wrong side of the Duero.
-Wherefore, having with a short march crossed the
-Carion river on the 24th at its confluence with the
-Pisuerga, he turned and halted behind it.</p>
-
-<p>Here he was joined by a regiment of the guards,
-and by detachments coming from Coruña, and
-his position extending from Villa Muriel to Dueñas
-below the meeting of the waters, was strong.
-The troops occupied a range of hills, lofty, yet descending
-with an easy sweep to the Carion; that
-river covered the front, and the Pisuerga did the same
-by the right wing. A detachment had been left to destroy
-the bridge of Baños on the Pisuerga; colonel
-Campbell with a battalion of the royals was sent to aid
-the Spaniards in destroying the bridges at Palencia;
-and in Wellington’s immediate front some houses
-and convents beyond the rivers, furnished good
-posts to cover the destruction of the bridges of
-Muriel and San Isidro on the Carion, and that of
-Dueñas on the Pisuerga.</p>
-
-<p>Souham excited by his success on the 23d followed
-from Villadrigo early on the 24th, and having
-cannonaded the rear-guard at Torquemada passed
-the Pisuerga. He immediately directed Foy’s division
-upon Palencia, and ordered Maucune with the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_300"></a>[300]</span>
-advanced guard to pursue the allies to the bridges
-of Baños, Isidro, and Muriel; but he halted himself
-at Magoz, and, if fame does not lie, because the number
-of French drunkards at Torquemada were even
-more numerous than those of the British army.</p>
-
-
-<h4>COMBAT ON THE CARION.</h4>
-
-<p>Before the enemy appeared, the summits of the
-hills were crowned by the allies, all the bridges
-were mined and that of San Isidro was strongly
-protected by a convent which was filled with troops.
-The left of the position was equally strong, yet
-general Oswald, who had just arrived from England
-and taken the command of the fifth division on the
-instant, overlooked the advantages to be derived
-from the dry bed of a canal with high banks,
-which, on his side, run parallel with the Carion,
-and he had not occupied the village of Muriel in
-sufficient strength. In this state of affairs Foy
-reached Palencia, where, according to some French
-writers, a treacherous attempt was made under cover
-of a parley, to kill him; he however drove the allies
-with some loss from the town and in such haste
-that all the bridges were abandoned in a perfect
-condition, and the French cavalry crossing the river
-and spreading abroad gathered up both baggage
-and prisoners.</p>
-
-<p>This untoward event obliged Wellington to throw
-back his left, composed of the fifth division and the
-Spaniards, at Muriel, thus offering two fronts, the
-one facing Palencia, the other the Carion. Oswald’s
-error then became manifest; for Maucune having dispersed
-the eighth caçadores who were defending a ford
-between Muriel and San Isidro, fell with a strong<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_301"></a>[301]</span>
-body of infantry and guns upon the allies at Muriel,
-and this at the moment when the mine having been
-exploded, the party covering the bridge were passing
-the broken arch by means of ladders. The
-play of the mine which was effectual, checked
-the advance of the French for an instant, but
-suddenly a horseman darting out at full speed
-from the column, rode down under a flight of
-bullets, to the bridge, calling out that he was a
-deserter; he reached the edge of the chasm made
-by the explosion, and then violently checking his
-foaming horse, held up his hands, exclaiming
-that he was a lost man, and with hurried accents
-asked if there was no ford near. The good-natured
-soldiers pointed to one a little way off and
-the gallant fellow having looked earnestly for a few
-moments as if to fix the exact point, wheeled his
-horse round, kissed his hand in derision, and bending
-over his saddle-bow dashed back to his own
-comrades, amidst showers of shot, and shouts of
-laughter from both sides. The next moment
-Maucune’s column covered by a concentrated fire
-of guns passed the river at the ford thus discovered,
-made some prisoners in the village, and
-lined the dry bed of the canal.</p>
-
-<p>Lord Wellington who came up at this instant immediately
-turned some guns upon the enemy and desired
-that the village and canal might be retaken; Oswald
-thought that they could not be held, yet Wellington,
-whose retreat was endangered by the presence of the
-enemy on that side of the river was peremptory; he
-ordered one brigade under general Barnes to attack
-the main body, while another brigade under general
-Pringle, cleared the canal, and he strengthened the
-left with the Spanish troops and Brunswickers. A<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_302"></a>[302]</span>
-very sharp fire of artillery and musquetry ensued,
-and the allies suffered some loss, especially by cannon-shot
-which from the other side of the river
-plumped into the reserves. The Spaniards, unequal
-to any regular movement, got into confusion, and
-were falling back, when their fiery countryman
-Miguel Alava, running to their head, with exhortation
-and example, for though wounded he would
-not retire, urged them forward to the fight; finally
-the enemy was driven over the river, the village
-was re-occupied in force, and the canal was
-lined by the allied troops. During these events at
-Villa Muriel, other troops attempted without success
-to seize the bridge of San Isidro, and the mine
-was exploded; but they were more fortunate at
-the bridge of Baños on the Pisuerga, for the mine
-there failed, and the French cavalry galloping
-over, made both the working and covering party
-prisoners.</p>
-
-<p>The strength of the position was now sapped,
-for Souham could assemble his army on the allies’
-left, by Palencia, and force them to an action with
-their back upon the Pisuerga, or he could pass that
-river on his own left, and forestall them on the
-Duero at Tudela. If Wellington pushed his army
-over the Pisuerga by the bridge of Duenas, Souham,
-having the initial movement, might be first on the
-ground, and could attack the heads of the allied columns
-while Foy’s division came down on the rear. If
-Wellington, by a rapid movement along the right
-bank of the Pisuerga, endeavoured to cross at
-Cabezon, which was the next bridge in his rear, and
-so gain the Duero, Souham by moving along the
-left bank, might fall upon him while in march to
-the Duero, and hampered between that river the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_303"></a>[303]</span>
-Pisuerga and the Esquevilla. An action under
-such circumstances would have been formidable,
-and the English general once cut off from the Duero
-must have retired through Valladolid and Simancas
-to Tordesillas, or Toro, giving up his communications
-with Hill. In this critical state of affairs
-Wellington made no delay. He kept good watch
-upon the left of the Pisuerga, and knowing that the
-ground there was rugged, and the roads narrow and
-bad, while on the right bank they were good and
-wide, sent his baggage in the night to Valladolid,
-and withdrawing the troops before day-break on
-the 26th, made a clean march of sixteen miles to
-Cabezon, where he passed to the left of the Pisuerga
-and barricaded and mined the bridge. Then
-sending a detachment to hold the bridge of Tudela
-on the Duero behind him, he caused the seventh
-division, under lord Dalhousie, to secure the bridges
-of Valladolid, Simancas, and Tordesillas. His retreat
-behind the Duero, which river was now in full
-water, being thus assured, he again halted, partly
-because the ground was favourable, partly to give
-the commissary-general Kennedy time for some indispensible
-arrangements.</p>
-
-<p>This functionary, who had gone to England sick
-in the latter end of 1811, and had returned to the
-army only the day before the siege of Burgos was
-raised, in passing from Lisbon by Badajoz to Madrid,
-and thence to Burgos, discovered that the inexperience
-of the gentleman who conducted the department
-during his absence had been productive of some
-serious errors. The magazines established between
-Lisbon and Badajos, and from thence by Almaraz to
-the valley of the Tagus, for the supply of the army
-in Madrid, had not been removed again when the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_304"></a>[304]</span>
-retreat commenced, and Soult would have found
-them full, if his march had been made rapidly on
-that side; on the other hand the magazines on the
-line of operations, between Lisbon and Salamanca,
-were nearly empty. Kennedy had therefore the
-double task on hand to remove the magazines from
-the south side of the Tagus, and to bring up stores
-upon the line of the present retreat; and his dispositions
-were not yet completed when Wellington
-desired him to take measures for the removal of the
-sick and wounded, and every other incumbrance,
-from Salamanca, promising to hold his actual position
-on the Pisuerga until the operation was effected. Now
-there was sufficient means of transport for the
-occasion, but the negligence of many medical and
-escorting officers, conducting the convoys of sick to
-the rear, and the consequent bad conduct of the
-soldiers, for where the officers are careless the
-soldiers will be licentious, produced the worst effects.
-Such outrages were perpetrated on the inhabitants
-along the whole line of march that terror was every
-where predominant, and the ill-used drivers and muleteers
-deserted, some with, some without their cattle,
-by hundreds. Hence Kennedy’s operation in some
-measure failed, the greatest distress was incurred,
-and the commissariat lost nearly the whole of the
-animals and carriages employed; the villages were
-abandoned, and the under-commissaries were bewildered,
-or paralyzed, by the terrible disorder thus
-spread along the line of communication.</p>
-
-<p>Souham having repaired the bridges on the
-Carion, resumed the pursuit on the 26th, by the
-right of the Pisuerga, being deterred probably from
-moving to the left bank, by the rugged nature of the
-ground, and by the king’s orders not to risk a serious<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_305"></a>[305]</span>
-action. In the morning of the 27th his whole army
-was collected in front of Cabezon, but he contented
-himself with a cannonade and a display of his
-force; the former cost the allies colonel Robe of the
-artillery, a practised officer and a worthy man; the
-latter enabled the English general, for the first
-time, to discover the numbers he had to contend
-with, and they convinced him that he could hold
-neither the Pisuerga nor the Duero permanently.
-However his object being to gain time, he held his
-position, and when the French, leaving a division in
-front of Cabezon, extended their right, by Cigales
-and Valladolid, to Simancas, he caused the bridges at
-the two latter places to be destroyed in succession.</p>
-
-<p>Congratulating himself that he had not fought
-in front of Burgos with so powerful an army,
-Wellington now resolved to retire behind the Duero
-and finally, if pressed, behind the Tormes. But
-as the troops on the Tagus would then be exposed
-to a flank attack, similar to that which the
-siege of Burgos had been raised to avoid on his
-own part; and as this would be more certain if any
-ill fortune befell the troops on the Duero, he ordered
-Hill to relinquish the defence of the Tagus
-at once and retreat, giving him a discretion as to
-the line, but desiring him, if possible, to come by
-the Guadarama passes; for he designed, if all went
-well, to unite on the Adaja river in a central position,
-intending to keep Souham in check with a
-part of his army, and with the remainder to fall
-upon Soult.</p>
-
-<p>On the 28th Souham, still extending his right,
-with a view to dislodge the allies by turning their
-left, endeavoured to force the bridges at Valladolid<span class="sidenote9">See <a href="#i_b_581fp_5">plan 5.</a></span>
-and Simancas on the Pisuerga, and that of Tordesillas<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_306"></a>[306]</span>
-on the Duero. The first was easily defended
-by the main body of the seventh division, but
-Halket, an able officer, finding the French strong
-and eager at the second, destroyed it, and detached
-the regiment of Brunswick Oels to ruin that of
-Tordesillas. It was done in time, and a tower behind
-the ruins was occupied by a detachment, while
-the remainder of the Brunswickers took post in a
-pine-wood at some distance. The French arrived
-and seemed for some time at a loss, but very soon
-sixty French officers and non-commissioned officers,
-headed by captain Guingret, a daring man, formed
-a small raft to hold their arms and clothes, and
-then plunged into the water, holding their swords
-with their teeth, and swimming and pushing their
-raft before them. Under protection of a cannonade,
-they thus crossed this great river, though
-it was in full and strong water, and the weather
-very cold, and having reached the other side, naked
-as they were, stormed the tower. The Brunswick
-regiment then abandoned its position, and these
-gallant soldiers remained masters of the bridge.</p>
-
-<p>Wellington having heard of the attack at Simancas,
-and having seen the whole French army in march
-to its right along the hill beyond the Pisuerga on
-the evening of the 28th, destroyed the bridges at
-Valladolid and Cabeçon, and crossed the Duero at
-Tudela and Puente de Duero on the 29th, but
-scarcely had he effected this operation when intelligence
-of Guingret’s splendid action at Tordesillas
-reached him. With the instant decision of a great
-captain he marched by his left, and having reached
-the heights between Rueda and Tordesillas on the
-30th, fronted the enemy and forbad further progress
-on that point; the bridge was indeed already<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_307"></a>[307]</span>
-repaired by the French, but Souham’s main body
-had not yet arrived, and Wellington’s menacing
-position was too significant to be misunderstood.
-The bridges of Toro and Zamora were now destroyed
-by detachments, and though the French,
-spreading along the river bank, commenced repairing
-the former, the junction with Hill’s army was
-insured; and the English general, judging that the
-bridge of Toro could not be restored for several
-days, even hoped to maintain the line of the Duero
-permanently, because he expected that Hill, of
-whose operations it is now time to speak, would be
-on the Adaja by the 3d of November.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_308"></a>[308]</span><br /></p>
-
-<h3 id="CHAPTER_BXIX_V">CHAPTER V.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<h4>FRENCH PASSAGE OF THE TAGUS—RETREAT FROM MADRID.</h4>
-
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="sidenote7">1812. October.</span>
-King Joseph’s first intention was to unite a great<span class="sidenote9">See <a href="#i_b_581fp_6">Plan 6.</a></span>
-part of Suchet’s forces as well as Soult’s with his
-own, and Soult, probably influenced by a false report
-that Ballesteros had actually reached La
-Mancha, urged this measure. Suchet resisted, observing
-that Valencia must be defended against the
-increasing power of the Anglo-Sicilian and Spanish
-armies at Alicant, and the more so that, until the
-French army could cross the Tagus and open a new
-line of communication with Zaragoza, Valencia
-would be the only base for the king’s operations.
-Joseph then resolved to incorporate a portion of the
-army of the south with the army of the centre,
-giving the command to Drouet, who was to move
-by the road of Cuenca and Tarancon towards the
-Tagus; but this arrangement, which seems to have
-been dictated by a desire to advance Drouet’s authority,
-was displeasing to Soult. He urged that
-his army, so powerfully constituted, physically and
-morally, as to be the best in the Peninsula, owed
-its excellence to its peculiar organization and it
-would be dangerous to break that up. Nor was
-there any good reason for this change; for if
-Joseph only wished to have a strong body of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_309"></a>[309]</span>
-troops on the Cuenca road, the army of the centre
-could be reinforced with one or two divisions, and
-the whole could unite again on the Tagus without
-injury to the army of the south. It would however
-be better, he said, to incorporate the army of the
-centre with the army of the south and march altogether
-by the road of San Clemente, leaving only a
-few troops on the Cuenca road, who might be reinforced
-by Suchet. But if the king’s plan arose
-from a desire to march in person with a large body
-he could do so with greater dignity by joining the
-army of the south, which was to act on the main
-line of operations. Joseph’s reply was a peremptory
-order to obey or retire to France, and Drouet
-marched to Cuenca.</p>
-
-<p>Soult’s army furnished thirty-five thousand infantry,
-six thousand excellent cavalry under arms with seventy-two<span class="sidenote">Imperial muster-rolls, MSS.</span>
-guns, making with the artillery-men a total
-of forty-six thousand veteran combatants. The army
-of the centre including the king’s guards furnished
-about twelve thousand, of which two thousand were
-good cavalry with twelve guns. Thus fifty-eight<span class="sidenote">Joseph’s correspondence, MSS.</span>
-thousand fighting men, eight thousand being cavalry,
-with eighty-four pieces of artillery, were put in motion
-to drive Hill from the Tagus. Joseph’s project
-was to pass that river, and operate against Wellington’s
-rear, if he should continue the siege of Burgos;
-but if he concentrated on the Tagus, Souham
-was in like manner to operate on his rear by Aranda<span class="sidenote">Official papers from the Bureau de la Guerre, MSS.</span>
-de Duero, and the Somosierra, sending detachments
-towards Guadalaxara to be met by other detachments,
-coming from the king through Sacedon.
-Finally if Wellington, as indeed happened, should
-abandon both Burgos and Madrid, the united
-French forces were to drive him into Portugal.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_310"></a>[310]</span>
-The conveying of Soult’s convoys of sick men to
-Valencia and other difficulties, retarded the commencement
-of operations to the king’s great discontent,
-and meanwhile he became very uneasy for his
-supplies, because the people of La Mancha, still
-remembering Montbrun’s devastations, were flying
-with their beasts and grain, and from frequent repetition,
-were become exceedingly expert in evading
-the researches of the foragers. Such however
-is the advantage of discipline and order, that while
-La Mancha was thus desolated from fear, confidence
-and tranquillity reigned in Valencia.</p>
-
-<p>However on the 18th of October Joseph marched
-from Requeña upon Cuenca, where he found Drouet
-with a division of Soult’s infantry and some cavalry.
-He then proceeded to Tarancon, which was the
-only artillery road, on that side, leading to the
-Tagus, and during this time Soult marched by San
-Clemente upon Ocaña and Aranjuez. General Hill
-immediately sent that notice to Lord Wellington
-which caused the retreat, from Burgos, but he was
-in no fear of the enemy, for he had withdrawn all
-his outposts and united his whole force behind the
-Tagus. His right was at Toledo, his left at Fuente
-Dueñas, and there were Spanish and Portuguese
-troops in the valley of the Tagus extending as far as
-Talavera. The Tagus was however fordable, from its
-junction with the Jarama near Aranjuez, upwards;
-and moreover, this part of the line, weak from its
-extent, could not easily be supported, and the troops
-guarding it, would have been too distant from the
-point of action if the French should operate against
-Toledo. Hill therefore drew his left behind the Tajuna
-which is a branch of the Jarama, and running
-nearly parallel to the Tagus. His right occupied<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_311"></a>[311]</span>
-very strong ground from Añover to Toledo, he destroyed
-the bridges at Aranjuez, and securing that
-below the confluence of the Jarama and Henares,
-called the Puente Larga, threw one of boats over
-the former river a little above Bayona. The light
-division and Elio’s troops forming the extreme left
-were directed to march upon Arganda, and the head-quarters
-were fixed at Cienpozuelos.</p>
-
-<p>The bulk of the troops were thus held in hand,
-ready to move to any menaced point, and as Skerrit’s
-brigade had just arrived from Cadiz, there was,
-including the Spanish regulars, forty thousand men
-in line, and a multitude of partidas were hovering
-about. The lateral communications were easy and
-the scouts passing over the bridge of Toledo covered
-all the country beyond the Tagus. In this state of
-affairs the bridges at each end of the line furnished
-the means of sallying upon the flanks of any force
-attacking the front; the French must have made
-several marches to force the right, and on the left
-the Jarama with its marshy banks, and its many
-confluents, offered several positions, to interpose between
-the enemy and Madrid.</p>
-
-<p>Drouet passed the Tagus the 29th at the abandoned
-fords of Fuente Dueñas and Villa Maurique,
-and the king, with his guards, repaired to Zarza de la
-Cruz. Meanwhile Soult whose divisions were coming
-fast up to Ocaña, restored the bridge of Aranjuez,
-and passed the Tagus also with his advanced guard.
-On the 30th he attacked general Cole who commanded
-at the Puente Larga with several regiments
-and some guns, but though the mines failed and
-the French attempted to carry the bridge with the
-bayonet they were vigorously repulsed by the forty-seventh
-under Colonel Skerrit. After a heavy cannonade<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_312"></a>[312]</span>
-and a sharp musketry which cost the allies
-sixty men, Soult relinquished the attempt and
-awaited the arrival of his main body. Had the Puente
-Larga been forced, the fourth division which was at<span class="sidenote">Soult’s official correspondence with the king, MSS.</span>
-Añover would have been cut off from Madrid, but
-the weather being thick and rainy, Soult could not
-discover what supporting force was on the high
-land of Valdemoro behind the bridge and was
-afraid to push forward too fast.</p>
-
-<p>The king discontented with this cautious mode of
-proceeding now designed to operate by Toledo, but
-during the night the Puente Larga was abandoned,
-and Soult, being still in doubt of Hill’s real object,
-advised Joseph to unite the army of the centre at
-Arganda and Chinchon, throwing bridges for retreat
-at Villa Maurique and Fuente Dueñas as a precaution
-in case a battle should take place. Hill’s
-movement was however a decided retreat, which
-would have commenced twenty-four hours sooner
-but for the failure of the mines and the combat at
-the Puente Larga. Wellington’s orders had reached
-him at the moment when Soult first appeared on the
-Tagus, and the affair was so sudden, that the light
-division, which had just come from Alcala to Arganda
-to close the left of the position, was obliged,
-without halting, to return again in the night, the
-total journey being nearly forty miles.</p>
-
-<p>Wellington, foreseeing that it might be difficult
-for Hill to obey his instructions, had given him a
-discretionary power to retire either by the valley
-of the Tagus, or by the Guadarama; and a position
-taken up in the former, on the flank of the enemy,
-would have prevented the king from passing the
-Guadarama, and at the same time have covered
-Lisbon; whereas a retreat by the Guadarama exposed<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_313"></a>[313]</span>
-Lisbon. Hill, thinking the valley of the
-Tagus, in that advanced season, would not support
-the French army, and knowing Wellington to be
-pressed by superior forces in the north, chose the
-Guadarama. Wherefore, burning his pontoons, and
-causing La China and the stores remaining there to
-be destroyed in the night of the 30th, he retreated
-by different roads, and united his army on the 31st
-of October near Majadahonda. Meanwhile the
-magazines along the line of communication to
-Badajos were, as I have already noticed, in danger
-if the enemy had detached troops to seize them,
-neither were the removal and destruction of the
-stores in Madrid effected without disorders of a
-singular nature.</p>
-
-<p>The municipality had demanded all the provision
-remaining there as if they wanted them for the enemy,
-and when this was refused, they excited a mob to
-attack the magazines; some firing even took place,
-and the assistance of the fourth division was required
-to restore order; a portion of wheat was finally
-given to the poorest of the people, and Madrid was
-abandoned. It was affecting to see the earnest
-and true friendship of the population. Men and
-women, and children, crowded around the troops
-bewailing their departure. They moved with them
-in one vast mass, for more than two miles, and left
-their houses empty at the very instant when the
-French cavalry scouts were at the gates on the other
-side. This emotion was distinct from political feeling,
-because there was a very strong French party
-in Madrid; and amongst the causes of wailing the
-return of the plundering and cruel partidas, unchecked
-by the presence of the British, was very
-loudly proclaimed. The “Madrileños” have been<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_314"></a>[314]</span>
-stigmatized as a savage and faithless people, the
-British army found them patient, gentle, generous,
-and loyal; nor is this fact to be disputed, because
-of the riot which occurred in the destruction of the
-magazines, for the provisions had been obtained by
-requisition from the country around Madrid, under
-an agreement with the Spanish government to pay
-at the end of the war; and it was natural for the
-people, excited as they were by the authorities, to
-endeavour to get their own flour back, rather than
-have it destroyed when they were starving.</p>
-
-<p>With the Anglo-Portuguese troops marched
-Penne Villemur, Morillo, and Carlos D’España, and
-it was Wellington’s wish that Elio, Bassecour, and
-Villa Campa should now throw themselves into the
-valley of the Tagus, and crossing the bridge of Arzobispo,
-join Ballesteros’s army, now under Virues.
-A great body of men, including the Portuguese
-regiments left by Hill in Estremadura, would thus
-have been placed on the flank of any French army
-marching upon Lisbon, and if the enemy neglected
-this line, the Spaniards could operate against Madrid
-or against Suchet at pleasure. Elio, however, being
-cut off from Hill by the French advance, remained
-at the bridge of Auñion, near Sacedon, and was
-there joined by Villa Campa and the Empecinado.</p>
-
-<p>Soult now brought up his army as quickly as
-possible to Valdemoro, and his information, as to
-Hill’s real force, was becoming more distinct; but
-there was also a rumour that Wellington was close
-at hand with three British divisions, and the French
-general’s movements were consequently cautious, lest
-he should find himself suddenly engaged in battle
-before his whole force was collected, for his rear
-was still at Ocaña, and the army of the centre had<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_315"></a>[315]</span>
-not yet passed the Tajuña. This disposition of his
-troops was probably intentional to prevent the king
-from fighting, for Soult did not think this a fitting
-time for a great battle unless upon great advantage.
-In the disjointed state of their affairs, a defeat
-would have been more injurious to the French than
-a victory would have been beneficial; the former
-would have lost Spain, the latter would not have
-gained Portugal.</p>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote9">November.</span>
-On the 1st of November, the bulk of Soult’s
-army being assembled at Getafé, he sent scouting
-parties in all directions to feel for the allies, and
-to ascertain the direction of their march; the next
-day the army of the centre and that of the south
-were reunited not far from Madrid, but Hill was
-then in full retreat for the Guadarama covered by
-a powerful rear-guard under general Cole.</p>
-
-<p>The 3d Soult pursued the allies, and the king
-entering Madrid, placed a garrison in the Retiro
-for the protection of his court and of the Spanish
-families attached to his cause; this was a sensible
-relief, for hitherto in one great convoy they had impeded
-the movements of the army of the centre.
-On the 4th Joseph rejoined Soult at the Guadarama
-with his guards, which always moved as a separate
-body; but he had left Palombini beyond the Tagus
-near Tarancon to scour the roads on the side of
-Cuenca, and some dragoons being sent towards
-Huete were surprised by the partidas, and lost
-forty men, whereupon Palombini rejoined the army.</p>
-
-<p>General Hill was moving upon Arevalo, slowly
-followed by the French, when fresh orders from
-Wellington, founded on new combinations, changed
-the direction of his march. Souham had repaired
-the bridge of Toro on the 4th, several days sooner<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_316"></a>[316]</span>
-than the English general had expected, and thus
-when he was keenly watching for the arrival of
-Hill on the Adaja, that he might suddenly join
-him and attack Soult, his designs were again
-baffled; for he dared not make such a movement
-lest Souham, possessing both Toro and Tordesillas,
-should fall upon his rear; neither could he bring
-up Hill to the Duero and attack Souham, because
-he had no means to pass that river, and meanwhile
-Soult moving by Fontiveros would reach the
-Tormes. Seeing then that his combinations had
-failed, and his central position no longer available,
-either for offence or defence, he directed Hill to
-gain Alba de Tormes at once by the road of<span class="sidenote">See <a href="#i_b_581fp_3">Plans 3</a> and <a href="#i_b_581fp_5">5.</a></span>
-Fontiveros, and on the 6th he fell back himself,
-from his position in front of Tordesillas, by Naval
-del Rey and Pituega to the heights of San Christoval.</p>
-
-<p>Joseph, thinking to prevent Hill’s junction with
-Wellington, had gained Arevalo by the Segovia
-road on the 5th and 6th; the 8th Souham’s scouts
-were met with at Medina del Campo, and for the
-first time, since he had quitted Valencia, the king
-obtained news of the army of Portugal. One hundred
-thousand combatants, of which above twelve
-thousand were cavalry, with a hundred and thirty
-pieces of artillery, were thus assembled on those
-plains over which, three months before, Marmont
-had marched with so much confidence to his own
-destruction. Soult then expelled from Andalusia by
-Marmont’s defeat, was now, after having made half
-the circuit of the Peninsula, come to drive into
-Portugal, that very army whose victory had driven
-him from the south; and thus, as Wellington had
-foreseen and foretold, the acquisition of Andalusia,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_317"></a>[317]</span>
-politically important and useful to the cause, proved
-injurious to himself at the moment, insomuch as the
-French had concentrated a mighty power, from
-which it required both skill and fortune to escape.
-Meanwhile the Spanish armies let loose by this
-union of all the French troops, kept aloof, or coming
-to aid, were found a burthen, rather than a help.</p>
-
-<p>On the 7th Hill’s main body passed the Tormes,
-at Alba, and the bridge there was mined; the
-light division and Long’s cavalry remained on the
-right bank during the night but the next day the
-former also crossed the river. Wellington himself
-was in the position of San Christoval, and it is
-curious, that the king, even at this late period,<span class="sidenote">Joseph’s correspondence, MSS.</span>
-was doubtful if Ballesteros’s troops had or had not
-joined the allied army at Avila. Wellington also
-was still uncertain of the real numbers of the enemy,
-but he was desirous to maintain the line of the
-Tormes permanently, and to give his troops repose.
-He had made a retreat of two hundred miles; Hill
-had made one of the same distance besides his
-march from Estremadura; Skerrit’s people had
-come from Cadiz, and the whole army required
-rest, for the soldiers, especially those who besieged
-Burgos, had been in the field, with scarcely an
-interval of repose, since January; they were bare-footed,
-and their equipments were spoiled, the
-cavalry were becoming weak, their horses were out
-of condition, and the discipline of all was failing.</p>
-
-<p>The excesses committed on the retreat from
-Burgos have already been touched upon, and during
-the first day’s march from the Tagus to Madrid,
-some of general Hill’s men had not behaved better.
-Five hundred of the rear-guard under Cole, chiefly
-of one regiment, finding the inhabitants had fled<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_318"></a>[318]</span>
-according to their custom whichever side was approaching,
-broke open the houses, plundered and
-got drunk. A multitude were left in the cellars of
-Valdemoro, and two hundred and fifty fell into the
-hands of the enemy. The rest of the retreat being
-unmolested, was made with more regularity, but
-the excesses still committed by some of the soldiers
-were glaring and furnished proof that the moral
-conduct of a general cannot be fairly judged by
-following in the wake of a retreating army. On
-this occasion there was no want of provisions, no
-hardships to exasperate the men, and yet I the
-author of this history, counted on the first day’s
-march from Madrid, seventeen bodies of murdered
-peasants; by whom killed, or for what, whether by
-English, or Germans, by Spaniards, or Portuguese,
-whether in dispute, in robbery, or in <ins class="corr" id="tn-318" title="Transcriber’s Note—Original text: 'wanton villany'">
-wanton villainy</ins>, I know not, but their bodies were in the
-ditches, and a shallow observer might thence have
-drawn the most foul and false conclusions against
-the English general and nation.</p>
-
-<p>Another notable thing was the discontent of the
-veteran troops with the arrangements of the staff
-officers. For the assembling of the sick men, at the
-place and time prescribed to form the convoys,
-was punctually attended to by the regimental officers;
-not so by the others, nor by the commissaries
-who had charge to provide the means of transport;
-hence delay and great suffering to the sick and the
-wearing out of the healthy men’s strength by waiting
-with their packs on for the negligent. And
-when the light division was left on the right bank
-of the Tormes to cover the passage at Alba, a prudent
-order that all baggage or other impediments,
-should pass rapidly over the narrow bridge at that<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_319"></a>[319]</span>
-place without halting at all on the enemy’s side,
-was, by those charged with the execution, so rigorously
-interpreted, as to deprive the light division
-of their ration bullocks and flour mules, at the
-very moment of distribution; and the tired soldiers,
-thus absurdly denied their food, had the farther
-mortification to see a string of commissariat carts
-deliberately passing their post many hours afterwards.
-All regimental officers know that the anger
-and discontent thus created is one of the surest
-means of ruining the discipline of an army, and it
-is in these particulars that the value of a good and
-experienced staff is found.</p>
-
-<p>Lord Wellington’s position extended from Christoval
-to Aldea Lengua on the right bank of the
-Tormes, and on the left of that river, to the bridge
-of Alba, where the castle which was on the right
-bank was garrisoned by Howard’s brigade of the
-second division. Hamilton’s Portuguese were on
-the left bank as a reserve for Howard; the remainder
-of the second division watched the fords
-of Huerta and Enciña, and behind them in second
-line the third and fourth divisions occupied the
-heights of Calvariza de Ariba. The light division
-and the Spanish infantry entered Salamanca, the
-cavalry were disposed beyond the Tormes, covering
-all the front, and thus posted, the English general
-desired to bring affairs to the decision of a battle.
-For the heights of Christoval were strong and
-compact, the position of the Arapiles on the other
-side of the Tormes was glorious as well as strong,
-and the bridge of Salamanca, and the fords furnished
-the power of concentrating on either side of
-that river by a shorter line than the enemy could
-move upon.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_320"></a>[320]</span></p>
-
-<p>But while Wellington prepared for a battle, he
-also looked to a retreat. His sick were sent to the
-rear, small convoys of provisions were ordered
-up from Ciudad Rodrigo to certain halting places
-between that place and Salamanca; the overplus
-of ammunition in the latter town was destroyed
-daily by small explosions, and large stores of
-clothing, of arms and accoutrements, were delivered
-to the Spanish troops, who were thus completely
-furnished; one hour after the English
-general had the mortification to see them selling
-their equipments even under his own windows.
-Indeed Salamanca presented an extraordinary scene,
-and the Spaniards, civil and military, began to
-evince hatred of the British. Daily did they attempt
-or perpetrate murder, and one act of peculiar
-atrocity merits notice. A horse, led by an English
-soldier, being frightened, backed against a Spanish
-officer commanding at a gate, he caused the soldier
-to be dragged into his guard-house and there
-bayonetted him in cold blood, and no redress could
-be had for this or other crimes, save by counter-violence,
-which was not long withheld. A Spanish
-officer while wantonly stabbing at a rifleman was
-shot dead by the latter; and a British volunteer
-slew a Spanish officer at the head of his own regiment
-in a sword-fight, the troops of both nations
-looking on, but here there was nothing dishonourable
-on either side.</p>
-
-<p>The civil authorities, not less savage, were more
-insolent than the military, treating every English
-person with an intolerable arrogance. Even the
-prince of Orange was like to have lost his life;
-for upon remonstrating about quarters with the
-sitting junta, they ordered one of their guards to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_321"></a>[321]</span>
-kill him; and he would have been killed had
-not Mr. Steele of the forty-third, a bold athletic
-person, felled the man before he could stab; yet
-both the prince and his defender were obliged to
-fly instantly to avoid the soldier’s comrades. The
-exasperation caused by these things was leading to
-serious mischief when the enemy’s movements gave
-another direction to the soldiers’ passions.</p>
-
-<p>On the 9th Long’s cavalry had been driven in
-upon Alba, and on the 10th Soult opened a concentrated
-fire of eighteen guns against that place. The
-castle, which crowned a bare and rocky knoll, had
-been hastily entrenched, and furnished scarcely any
-shelter from this tempest; for two hours the garrison
-could only reply with musketry, but finally
-it was aided by the fire of four pieces from the left
-bank of the river, and the post was defended until
-dark, with such vigour that the enemy dared not
-venture on an assault. During the night general
-Hamilton reinforced the garrison, repaired the damaged
-walls, and formed barricades, but the next
-morning after a short cannonade, and some musketry
-firing the enemy withdrew. This combat cost
-the allies above a hundred men.</p>
-
-<p>On the 11th the king coming up from Medina del
-Campo reorganized his army. That is, he united the
-army of the centre with the army of the south, placing
-the whole under Soult, and he removed Souham from
-the command of the army of Portugal to make way
-for Drouet. Caffarelli had before this returned to
-Burgos, with his divisions and guns, and as Souham,
-besides his losses and stragglers, had placed garrisons
-in Toro, Tordesillas, Zamora, and Valladolid;
-and as the king also, had left a garrison in the
-Retiro, scarcely ninety thousand combatants of all<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_322"></a>[322]</span>
-arms were assembled on the Tormes; but twelve
-thousand were cavalry, nearly all were veteran
-troops, and they had at least one hundred and
-twenty pieces of artillery. Such a mighty power
-could not remain idle, for the country was exhausted
-of provisions, the soldiers were already wanting
-bread, and the king, eager enough for battle, for he
-was of a brave spirit and had something of his
-brother’s greatness of soul, sought counsel how to
-deliver it with most advantage.</p>
-
-<p>Jourdan with a martial fire unquenched by age,
-was for bringing affairs to a crisis by the boldest
-and shortest mode. He had observed that Wellington’s
-position was composed of three parts, namely,<span class="sidenote"><a href="#NO_IX">Appendix, No. 9.</a></span>
-the right at Alba; the centre at Calvariza Ariba;
-the left, separated from the centre by the Tormes,
-at San Christoval; the whole distance being about
-fifteen miles. Now the Tormes was still fordable
-in many places above Salamanca, and hence he
-proposed to assemble the French army in the night,
-pass the river at day-break, by the fords between
-Villa Gonzalo and Huerta, and so make a concentrated
-attack upon Calvariza de Ariba, which would
-force Wellington to a decisive battle.</p>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote">French Official correspondence, MSS.</span>
-Soult opposed this project, he objected to attacking
-Wellington in a position which he was so well
-acquainted with, which he might have fortified, and
-where the army must fight its way, even from the
-fords, to gain room for an order of battle. He proposed
-instead, to move by the left to certain fords,
-three in number, between Exéme and Galisancho,
-some seven or eight miles above Alba de Tormes.
-They were easy in themselves, he said, and well
-suited from the conformation of the banks, for
-forcing a passage if it should be disputed; and by<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_323"></a>[323]</span>
-making a slight circuit the troops in march could
-not be seen by the enemy. Passing there, the
-French army would gain two marches upon the
-allies, would be placed upon their flank and rear,
-and could fight on ground chosen by its own generals,
-instead of delivering battle on ground chosen
-by the enemy; or it could force on an action in a
-new position whence the allies could with difficulty
-retire in the event of disaster. Wellington must
-then fight to disadvantage, or retire hastily, sacrificing
-part of his army to save the rest; and the
-effect, whether militarily or politically, would be the
-same as if he was beaten by a front attack. Jourdan
-replied, that this was prudent, and might be successful
-if Wellington accepted battle, but that
-general could not thereby be forced to fight,
-which was the great object; he would have time to
-retreat before the French could reach the line of
-his communications with Ciudad Rodrigo, and it
-was even supposed by some generals that he would
-retreat to Almeida at once by San Felices and Barba
-de Puerco.</p>
-
-<p>Neither Soult nor Jourdan knew the position of
-the Arapiles in detail, and the former, though he<span class="sidenote">Letter to the king, MS.</span>
-urged his own plan, offered to yield if the king was
-so inclined. Jourdan’s proposition was supported
-by all the generals of the army of Portugal, except
-Clausel who leaned to Soult’s opinion; but as that
-marshal commanded two-thirds of the army, while
-Jourdan had no ostensible command, the question
-was finally decided agreeably to his counsel. Nor
-is it easy to determine which was right, for though
-Jourdan’s reasons were very strong, and the result
-did not bear out Soult’s views, we shall find the
-failure was only in the execution. Nevertheless it<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_324"></a>[324]</span>
-would seem so great an army and so confident, for
-the French soldiers eagerly demanded a battle,
-should have grappled in the shortest way; a just
-and rapid development of Jourdan’s plan would probably
-have cut off Hamilton’s Portuguese and the brigade
-in the castle of Alba, from Calvariza Ariba.</p>
-
-<p>On the other hand, Wellington, who was so well
-acquainted with his ground, desired a battle on either
-side of the Tormes; his hope was indeed to prevent
-the passage of that river until the rains rendered
-it unfordable, and thus force the French to retire
-from want of provisions, or engage him on the position
-of Christoval; yet he also courted a fight on
-the Arapiles, those rocky monuments of his former
-victory. He had sixty-eight thousand combatants
-under arms, fifty-two thousand of which, including<span class="sidenote">Letter to lord Liverpool, MS.</span>
-four thousand British cavalry, were Anglo-Portuguese,
-and he had nearly seventy guns. This force
-he had so disposed, that besides Hamilton’s Portuguese,
-three divisions guarded the fords, which
-were moreover defended by entrenchments, and the
-whole army might have been united in good time
-upon the strong ridges of Calvariza Ariba, and on
-the two Arapiles, where the superiority of fifteen
-thousand men would scarcely have availed the
-French. A defeat would only have sent the allies
-to Portugal, whereas a victory would have taken
-them once more to Madrid. To draw in Hamilton’s
-Portuguese, and the troops from Alba, in time,
-would have been the vital point; but as the French,
-if they did not surprise the allies, must have fought
-their way up from the river, this danger might
-have proved less than could have been supposed
-at first view. In fine the general was Wellington
-and he knew his ground.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_325"></a>[325]</span></p>
-
-
-<h4>FRENCH PASSAGE OF THE TORMES. RETREAT
-TO CIUDAD RODRIGO.</h4>
-
-<p>Soult’s plan being adopted, the troops in the
-distant quarters were brought up; the army of
-Portugal was directed to make frequent demonstrations
-against Christoval, Aldea Lengua, and the
-fords between Huerta and Alba; the road over the
-hills to the Galisancho fords was repaired, and two
-trestle-bridges were constructed for the passage of
-the artillery. The design was to push over the
-united armies of the centre and the south, by these
-fords; and if this operation should oblige the allies
-to withdraw from Alba de Tormes, the army of
-Portugal was to pass by the bridge at that place
-and by the fords, and assail Wellington’s rear; but
-if the allies maintained Alba, Drouet was to follow
-Soult at Galisancho.</p>
-
-<p>At day-break on the 14th the bridges were thrown,
-the cavalry and infantry passed by the fords, the
-allies’ outposts were driven back, and Soult took a
-position at Mozarbes, having the road from Alba to
-Tamames, under his left flank. Meanwhile Wellington
-remained too confidently in Salamanca,
-and when the first report informed him that the
-enemy were over the Tormes, made the caustic
-observation, that he would not recommend it to
-some of them. Soon, however, the concurrent
-testimony of many reports convinced him of his
-mistake, he galloped to the Arapiles, and having
-ascertained the direction of Soult’s march drew off
-the second division, the cavalry, and some guns
-to attack the head of the French column. The
-fourth division and Hamilton’s Portuguese remained
-at Alba, to protect this movement; the third<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_326"></a>[326]</span>
-division secured the Arapiles rocks until the troops
-from San Christoval should arrive; and Wellington
-was still so confident to drive the French back over
-the Tormes, that the bulk of the troops did not
-quit San Christoval that day. Nevertheless when
-he reached Mozarbes, he found the French, already
-assembled there, too strong to be seriously meddled
-with. However under cover of a cannonade, which
-kept off their cavalry, he examined their position,
-which extended from Mozarbes to the heights of
-Nuestra Señora de Utiero, and it was so good that
-the evil was without remedy; wherefore drawing off
-the troops from Alba, and destroying the bridge,
-he left three hundred Spaniards in the castle,
-with orders, if the army retired the next day, to
-abandon the place and save themselves as they
-best could.</p>
-
-<p>During the night and the following morning the
-allied army was united in the position of the Arapiles,
-and Wellington still hoped the French would
-give battle there; yet he placed the first division
-at Aldea Tejada, on the Junguen stream, to secure
-that passage in case Soult should finally oblige him
-to choose between Salamanca and Ciudad Rodrigo.
-Meantime the army of Portugal finding the bridge
-of Alba broken, and the castle occupied, crossed
-the Tormes at Galisancho, and moved up to the
-ridge of Señora de Utiera; Soult, who had commenced
-fortifying Mozarbes, extended his left at the
-same time to the height of Señora de la Buena, near
-the Ciudad Rodrigo road, yet slowly because the
-ground was heavy, deep, and the many sources of
-the Junguen and the Valmusa streams were fast
-filling from the rain and impeded his march.
-This evolution was nearly the same as that practised<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_327"></a>[327]</span>
-by the duke of Ragusa at the battle of Salamanca;
-but it was made on a wider circle, by a
-second range of heights enclosing as it were those
-by which the duke of Ragusa moved on that day,
-and consequently, beyond the reach of such a
-sudden attack and catastrophe. The result in each
-case was remarkable. Marmont closing with a short
-quick turn, a falcon striking at an eagle, received a
-buffet that broke his pinions, and spoiled his flight.
-Soult, a wary kite, sailing slowly and with a wide
-wheel to seize a helpless prey, lost it altogether.</p>
-
-<p>About two o’clock lord Wellington, feeling himself
-too weak to attack, and seeing the French
-cavalry pointing to the Ciudad Rodrigo road,
-judged the king’s design was to establish a fortified
-head of cantonments at Mozarbes, and then
-operate against the allies’ communication with
-Ciudad Rodrigo; wherefore suddenly casting his
-army into three columns, he crossed the Junguen,
-and then covering his left flank with his cavalry
-and guns, defiled, in order of battle, before the
-enemy at little more than cannon-shot. With a
-wonderful boldness and facility, and good fortune
-also, for there was a thick fog and a heavy rain
-which rendered the bye-ways and fields, by which
-the enemy moved, nearly impassable, while the
-allies had the use of the high roads, he carried his
-whole army in one mass quite round the French left:
-thus he gained the Valmusa river, where he halted
-for the night, in the rear of those who had been
-threatening him in front, only a few hours before.
-This exploit was certainly surprising, but it was
-not creditable to the generalship on either side; for
-first it may be asked why the English commander,
-having somewhat carelessly suffered Soult to pass<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_328"></a>[328]</span>
-the Tormes and turn his position, waited so long
-on the Arapiles as to render this dangerous movement
-necessary, a movement which a combination
-of bad roads, bad weather, and want of vigour on
-the other side, rendered possible and no more.</p>
-
-<p>It has been said, that the only drawback to the
-duke of Dalmatia’s genius, is his want of promptness
-to strike at the decisive moment. It is certainly
-a great thing to fight a great battle; and
-against such a general as Wellington, and such
-troops as the British, a man may well be excused,
-if he thinks twice, ere he puts his life and fame,
-and the lives and fame of thousands of his countrymen,
-the weal or woe of nations, upon the hazard
-of an event, which may be decided by the existence
-of a ditch five feet wide, or the single
-blunder of a single fool, or the confusion of a
-coward, or by any other circumstance however
-trivial. To make such a throw for such a stake is
-no light matter. It is no mean consideration, that
-the praise or the hatred of nations, universal glory
-or universal, perhaps eternal contempt, waits on
-an action, the object of which may be more safely
-gained by other means, for in war there is infinite
-variety. But in this case it is impossible not to
-perceive, that the French general vacillated after
-the passage of the river, purposely perhaps to
-avoid an action, since, as I have before shown, he
-thought it unwise, in the disjointed state of the
-French affairs and without any fixed base or reserves
-in case of defeat, to fight a decisive battle.
-Nor do I blame this prudence, for though it be
-certain that he who would be great in war must be
-daring, to set all upon one throw belongs only to
-an irresponsible chief, not to a lieutenant whose<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_329"></a>[329]</span>
-task is but a portion of the general plan; neither
-is it wise, in monarch or general, to fight when
-all may be lost by defeat, unless all may be won
-by victory. However, the king, more unfettered
-than Soult, desired a battle, and with an army so
-good and numerous, the latter’s prudence seems
-misplaced; he should have grappled with his
-enemy, and, once engaged at any point, Wellington
-could not have continued his retreat, especially
-with the Spaniards, who were incapable of dexterous
-movements.</p>
-
-<p>On the 16th the allies retired by the three roads
-which lead across the Matilla stream, through Tamames,
-San Munos, and Martin del Rio, to Ciudad
-Rodrigo; the light division and the cavalry closed
-the rear, and the country was a forest, penetrable in
-all directions. The army bivouacked in the evening
-behind the Matilla stream; but though this march
-was not more than twelve miles, the stragglers were
-numerous, for the soldiers meeting with vast herds
-of swine, quitted their colours by hundreds to shoot
-them, and such a rolling musketry echoed through
-the forest, that Wellington at first thought the
-enemy was upon him. It was in vain that the staff
-officers rode about to stop this disgraceful practice,
-which had indeed commenced the evening before;
-it was in vain that Wellington himself caused two
-offenders to be hanged, the hungry soldiers still
-broke from the columns, the property of whole districts
-was swept away in a few hours, and the
-army was in some degree placed at the mercy of
-the enemy. The latter however were contented to
-glean the stragglers, of whom they captured two
-thousand, and did not press the rear until evening
-near Matilla where their lancers fell on, but<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_330"></a>[330]</span>
-were soon checked by the light companies of the
-twenty-eighth, and afterwards charged by the fourteenth
-dragoons.</p>
-
-<p>The 17th presented a different yet a not less
-curious scene. During the night the cavalry
-immediately in front of the light division, had, for
-some unknown reason, filed off by the flanks to the
-rear without giving any intimation to the infantry,
-who, trusting to the horsemen, had thrown out their
-picquets at a very short distance in front. At day-break,
-while the soldiers were rolling their blankets
-and putting on their accoutrements, some strange
-horsemen were seen in the rear of the bivouac and
-were at first taken for Spaniards, but very soon
-their cautious movements and vivacity of gestures,
-shewed them to be French; the troops stood to
-arms, and in good time, for five hundred yards in
-front, the wood opened on to a large plain on which,
-in place of the British cavalry, eight thousand
-French horsemen were discovered advancing in one
-solid mass, yet carelessly and without suspecting
-the vicinity of the British. The division was immediately
-formed in columns, a squadron of the fourteenth
-dragoons and one of the German hussars
-came hastily up from the rear, Julian Sanchez’
-cavalry appeared in small parties on the right flank,
-and every precaution was taken to secure the retreat.
-This checked the enemy, but as the infantry fell
-back, the French though fearing to approach their
-heavy masses in the wood, sent many squadrons
-to the right and left, some of which rode on
-the flanks near enough to bandy wit, in the
-Spanish tongue, with the British soldiers, who
-marched without firing. Very soon however the
-signs of mischief became visible, the road was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_331"></a>[331]</span>
-strewed with baggage, and the bât-men came running
-in for protection, some wounded, some without
-arms, and all breathless as just escaped from a
-surprise. The thickness of the forest had enabled
-the French horsemen to pass along unperceived on
-the flanks of the line of march, and, as opportunity
-offered, they galloped from side to side, sweeping
-away the baggage and sabring the conductors and
-guards; they had even menaced one of the columns
-but were checked by the fire of the artillery. In one
-of these charges general Paget was carried off, as it
-were from the midst of his own men, and it might
-have been Wellington’s fortune, for he also was
-continually riding between the columns and without
-an escort. However the main body of the army
-soon passed the Huebra river and took post behind
-it, the right at Tamames, the left near Boadilla,
-the centre at San Munoz, Buena Barba, and
-Gallego de Huebra.</p>
-
-<p>When the light division arrived at the edge of
-the table-land, which overhangs the fords at the
-last-named place, the French cavalry suddenly
-thickened, and the sharp whistle of musket-bullets
-with the splintering of branches on the left showed
-that their infantry were also up. Soult in the
-hope of forestalling the allies at Tamames, had
-pushed his columns towards that place, by a road
-leading from Salamanca through Vecinos, but finding
-Hill’s troops in his front turned short to his right
-in hopes to cut off the rear-guard, which led to the</p>
-
-
-<h4>COMBAT OF THE HUEBRA.</h4>
-
-<p>The English and German cavalry, warned by the
-musketry, crossed the fords in time, and the light<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_332"></a>[332]</span>
-division should have followed without delay; because
-the forest ended on the edge of the table-land, and the
-descent from thence to the river, about eight hundred
-yards, was open and smooth, and the fords of the Huebra
-were deep. Instead of taking the troops down
-quickly, an order, more respectful to the enemy’s cavalry
-than to his infantry, was given to form squares.
-The officers looked at each other in amazement but at
-that moment Wellington fortunately appeared, and
-under his directions the battalions instantly glided off
-to the fords, leaving four companies of the forty-third
-and one of the riflemen to cover the passage. These
-companies, spreading as skirmishers, were immediately
-assailed in front and on both flanks, and
-with such a fire that it was evident a large force
-was before them; moreover a driving rain and mist
-prevented them from seeing their adversaries, and
-being pressed closer each moment, they gathered by
-degrees at the edge of the wood, where they maintained
-their ground for a quarter of an hour, then
-seeing the division was beyond the river, they
-swiftly cleared the open slope of the hill, and
-passed the fords under a very sharp musketry.
-Only twenty-seven soldiers fell, for the tempest,
-beating in the Frenchmen’s faces, baffled their
-aim, and Ross’s guns, playing from the low
-ground with grape, checked the pursuit, but the
-deep bellowing of thirty pieces of heavy French
-artillery showed how critically timed was the
-passage.</p>
-
-<p>The banks of the Huebra were steep and broken,
-but the enemy spread his infantry to the right and
-left along the edge of the forest, making demonstrations
-on every side, and there were several fords
-to be guarded; the fifty-second and the Portuguese<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_333"></a>[333]</span>
-defended those below, Ross’s guns supported by the
-riflemen and the forty-third defended those above,
-and behind the right of the light division, on higher
-ground was the seventh division. The second division,
-Hamilton’s Portuguese, and a brigade of
-cavalry, were in front of Tamames, and thus the
-bulk of the army was massed on the right, hugging
-the Pena de Francia, and covering the roads leading
-to Ciudad, as well as those leading to the passes
-of the Gata hills.</p>
-
-<p>In this situation one brisk attempt made to force
-the fords guarded by the fifty-second, was vigorously
-repulsed by that regiment, but the skirmishing,
-and the cannonade, which never slackened, continued
-until dark; and heavily the French artillery
-played upon the light and seventh divisions.
-The former, forced to keep near the fords, and in
-column, lest a sudden rush of cavalry should carry
-off the guns on the flat ground, were plunged into
-at every round, yet suffered little loss, because the
-clayey soil, saturated with rain, swallowed the shot
-and smothered the shells; but it was a matter of
-astonishment to see the seventh division kept on
-open and harder ground by its commander, and in
-one huge mass tempting the havoc of this fire for
-hours, when a hundred yards in its rear the rise of
-the hill, and the thick forest, would have entirely
-covered it without in any manner weakening the
-position.</p>
-
-<p>On the 18th the army was to have drawn off before
-day-light, and the English general was anxious
-about the result, because the position of the Huebra,
-though good for defence, was difficult to remove from
-at this season; the roads were hollow and narrow,
-and led up a steep bank to a table-land, which was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_334"></a>[334]</span>
-open, flat, marshy, and scored with water gullies;
-and from the overflowing of one of the streams the
-principal road was impassable a mile in rear of the
-position; hence to bring the columns off in time,
-without jostling, and if possible without being
-attacked, required a nice management. All the
-baggage and stores had marched in the night, with
-orders not to halt until they reached the high lands
-near Ciudad Rodrigo, but if the preceding days
-had produced some strange occurrences, the 18th
-was not less fertile in them.</p>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote7">Vol. I.</span>
-In a former part of this work it has been observed,
-that even the confirmed reputation of lord Wellington
-could not protect him from the vanity and presumption
-of subordinate officers. The allusion
-fixes here. Knowing that the most direct road was
-impassable, he had directed the divisions by another
-road, longer, and apparently more difficult; this
-seemed such an extraordinary proceeding to some
-general officers, that, after consulting together, they
-deemed their commander unfit to conduct the army,
-and led their troops by what appeared to them the
-fittest line of retreat! Meanwhile Wellington, who
-had, before day-light, placed himself at an important
-point on his own road, waited impatiently
-for the arrival of the leading division until dawn, and
-then suspecting something of what had happened,
-galloped to the other road and found the would-be
-commanders, stopped by that flood which his
-arrangements had been made to avoid. The insubordination,
-and the danger to the whole army,
-were alike glaring, yet the practical rebuke was
-so severe and well timed, the humiliation so complete,
-and so deeply felt, that, with one proud sarcastic
-observation, indicating contempt more than<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_335"></a>[335]</span>
-anger, he led back the troops and drew off all his
-forces safely. However some confusion and great
-danger still attended the operation, for even on
-this road one water-gully was so deep that the
-light division, which covered the rear, could only
-pass it man by man over a felled tree, and it was
-fortunate that Soult unable to feed his troops a
-day longer, stopped on the Huebra with his main
-body and only sent some cavalry to Tamames.
-Thus the allies retired unmolested, but whether
-from necessity, or from negligence in the subordinates,
-the means of transport were too scanty for
-the removal of the wounded men, most of whom
-were hurt by cannon-shot; many were left behind,
-and as the enemy never passed the Huebra at this
-point, those miserable creatures perished by a horrible
-and lingering death.</p>
-
-<p>The marshy plains, over which the army was
-now marching, exhausted the strength of the
-wearied soldiers, thousands straggled, the depredations
-on the herds of swine were repeated, and
-the temper of the army, generally, prognosticated
-the greatest misfortunes if the retreat should be
-continued. This was however the last day of trial,
-for towards evening the weather cleared up, the
-hills near Ciudad Rodrigo afforded dry bivouacs
-and fuel, the distribution of good rations restored
-the strength and spirits of the men, and the next
-day Ciudad Rodrigo and the neighbouring villages
-were occupied in tranquillity. The cavalry was
-then sent out to the forest, and being aided by
-Julian Sanchez’ Partidas, brought in from a thousand
-to fifteen hundred stragglers who must otherwise
-have perished. During these events Joseph
-occupied Salamanca, but colonel Miranda, the Spanish
-officer left at Alba de Tormes, held that place<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_336"></a>[336]</span>
-until the 27th and then carried off his garrison in
-the night.</p>
-
-<p>Thus ended the retreat from Burgos. The
-French gathered a good spoil of baggage; what
-the loss of the allies, in men, was, cannot be
-exactly determined, because no Spanish returns
-were ever seen. An approximation may however be
-easily made. According to the muster-rolls, the
-Anglo-Portuguese under Wellington, had about
-one thousand men killed, wounded, and missing
-between the 21st and 29th of October, which was
-the period of their crossing the Duero, but this
-only refers to loss in action; Hill’s loss between
-the Tagus and the Tormes was, including stragglers,
-about four hundred, and the defence of the
-castle of Alba de Tormes cost one hundred. Now
-if the Spanish regulars, and Partidas, marching
-with the two armies, be reckoned to have lost a
-thousand, which considering their want of discipline
-is not exaggerated, the whole loss, previous
-to the French passage of the Tormes, will amount
-perhaps to three thousand men. But the loss
-between the Tormes and the Agueda was certainly
-greater, for nearly three hundred were killed and<span class="sidenote">See <a href="#NO_IX">Appendix, No. 9.</a></span>
-wounded at the Huebra, many stragglers died in
-the woods, and we have marshal Jourdan’s testimony,
-that the prisoners, Spanish Portuguese and
-English, brought into Salamanca up to the 20th
-November, were three thousand five hundred and
-twenty. The whole loss of the double retreat cannot
-therefore be set down at less than nine thousand
-including the cost of men in the siege of Burgos.</p>
-
-<p>I have been the more precise on this point, because
-some French writers have spoken of ten
-thousand being taken between the Tormes and the
-Agueda, and general Souham estimated the previous<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_337"></a>[337]</span>
-loss, including the siege of Burgos, at seven
-thousand. But the king in his despatches called
-the whole loss twelve thousand, including therein
-the garrison of Chinchilla, and he observed that if
-the generals of cavalry, Soult and Tilley, had followed
-the allies vigorously from Salamanca, the
-loss would have been much greater. Certainly the
-army was so little pressed that none would have
-supposed the French horsemen were numerous.
-On the other hand English authors have most unaccountably
-reduced the British loss to as many
-hundreds.</p>
-
-<p>Although the French halted on the Huebra, the
-English general kept his troops together behind
-the Agueda, because Soult retired with the troops
-under his immediate command to Los Santos on the
-Upper Tormes, thus pointing towards the pass of
-Baños, and it was rumoured he designed to march
-that way, with a view to invade Portugal by the
-valley of the Tagus. Wellington disbelieved this
-rumour, but he could not disregard it, because
-nearly all his channels of intelligence had been
-suddenly dried up by a tyrannical and foolish
-decree of the Cortez, which obliged every man to
-justify himself for having remained in a district
-occupied by the enemy, and hence to avoid persecution,
-those who used to transmit information, fled
-from their homes. Hill’s division was therefore
-moved to the right as far as Robledo, to cover the
-pass of Perales, the rest of the troops were ready to
-follow, and Penne Villemur, leading the fifth Spanish
-army over the Gata mountains occupied Coria.</p>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote9">December.</span>
-Joseph, after hesitating whether he should leave
-the army of the south, or the army of Portugal in
-Castile, finally ordered the head-quarters of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_338"></a>[338]</span>
-latter to be fixed at Valladolid, and of the former
-at Toledo; the one to maintain the country between
-the Tormes and the Esla, the other to occupy La
-Mancha with its left, the valley of the Tagus, as
-far as the Tietar, with its centre, and Avila with its
-right. The army of the centre went to Segovia,
-where the king joined it with his guards, and when
-these movements, which took place in December,
-were known, Wellington placed his army also in
-winter-quarters.</p>
-
-<p>The fifth Spanish army crossing the Tagus at
-Alcantara entered Estremadura.</p>
-
-<p>Hill’s division occupied Coria, and Placentia,
-and held the town of Bejar by a detachment.</p>
-
-<p>Two divisions were quartered on a second line
-behind Hill about Castelo Branco, and in the
-Upper Beira.</p>
-
-<p>The light division remained on the Agueda, and
-the rest of the infantry were distributed along the
-Duero from Lamego downwards.</p>
-
-<p>The Portuguese cavalry were placed in Moncorvo,
-and the British cavalry, with the exception
-of Victor Alten’s brigade which was attached to the
-light division, occupied the valley of the Mondego.</p>
-
-<p>Carlos D’España’s troops garrisoned Ciudad
-Rodrigo, and the Gallicians marched through the
-Tras os Montes to their own country.</p>
-
-<p>In these quarters the Anglo-Portuguese were
-easily fed, because the improved navigation of the
-Tagus, the Douro, and the Mondego, furnished
-water carriage close to all their cantonments; moreover
-the army could be quickly collected on either
-frontier, for the front line of communication from
-Estremadura passed by the bridge of Alcantara to
-Coria, and from thence through the pass of Perales<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_339"></a>[339]</span>
-to the Agueda. The second line run by Penamacor
-and Guinaldo, and both were direct; but the
-post of Bejar, although necessary to secure Hill’s
-quarters from a surprise, was itself exposed.</p>
-
-<p>The French also had double and direct communications
-across the Gredos mountains. On their
-first line they restored a Roman road leading from
-Horcajada, on the Upper Tormes, by the Puerto de
-Pico to Monbeltran, and from thence to Talavera.
-To ease their second line they finished a road, begun
-the year before by Marmont, leading from Avila,
-by the convent of Guisando and Escalona to Toledo.
-But these communications though direct, were in
-winter so difficult, that general Laval crossing the
-mountains from Avila was forced to harness forty
-horses to a carriage; moreover Wellington having
-the interior and shorter lines, was in a more menacing
-position for offence, and a more easy position
-for defence; wherefore, though he had ordered all
-boats to be destroyed at Almaraz, Arzobispo, and
-other points where the great roads came down to
-the Tagus, the French, as anxious to prevent him
-from passing that river, as he was to prevent them,
-sent parties to destroy what had been overlooked.
-Each feared that the other would move, and yet
-neither wished to continue the campagin, Wellington,
-because his troops wanted rest, more than one-third
-being in the hospitals! the French because
-they could not feed their men and had to refix their
-general base of operations, broken up and deranged
-as it was by the Guerillas.</p>
-
-<p>The English general was however most at his
-ease. He knew that the best French officers
-thought it useless to continue the contest in Spain,
-unless the British army was first mastered, Soult’s<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_340"></a>[340]</span>
-intercepted letters showed him how that general desired
-to fix the war in Portugal, and there was now a
-most powerful force on the frontier of that kingdom.
-But on the other hand Badajos, Ciudad Rodrigo,
-and Almeida blocked the principal entrances, and
-though the two former were very ill provided
-by the Spaniards, they were in little danger because
-<ins class="corr" id="tn-340" title="Transcriber’s Note—Original text: 'the last compaign'">
-the last campaign</ins> had deprived the French of all
-their ordnance, arsenals, and magazines, in Andalusia,
-Almaraz, Madrid, Salamanca, and Valladolid;
-and it was nearly impossible for them to make any
-impression upon Portugal, until new establishments
-were formed. Wherefore Wellington did not fear
-to spread his troops in good and tranquil quarters,
-to receive reinforcements, restore their equipments,
-and recover their health and strength.</p>
-
-<p>This advantage was not reciprocal. The secondary
-warfare which the French sustained, and which
-it is now time again to notice, would have been
-sufficient to establish the military reputation of
-any nation before Napoleon’s exploits had raised the
-standard of military glory. For when disembarrassed
-of their most formidable enemy, they were still
-obliged to chase the Partidas, to form sieges, to recover
-and restore the posts they had lost by concentrating
-their armies, to send moveable columns
-by long winter marches over a vast extent of country
-for food, fighting for what they got, and living
-hard because the magazines filled from the fertile
-districts were of necessity reserved for the field
-operations against Wellington. Certainly it was a
-great and terrible war they had in hand, and good
-and formidable soldiers they were to sustain it so
-long and so manfully amidst the many errors of their
-generals.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_341"></a>[341]</span><br /></p>
-
-<h3 id="CHAPTER_BXIX_VI">CHAPTER VI.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<h4>CONTINUATION OF THE PARTIZAN WARFARE.</h4>
-
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="sidenote7">1812.</span>
-In the north, while Souham was gathering in front
-of Wellington, some of Mendizabel’s bands blockaded
-Santona by land, and Popham, after his failure
-at Gueteria blockaded it by sea. It was not very
-well provisioned, but Napoleon, always watchful,
-had sent an especial governor, general Lameth, and
-a chosen engineer, general D’Abadie, from Paris
-to complete the works. By their activity a hundred
-and twenty pieces of cannon were soon mounted,
-and they had including the crew of a corvette a garrison
-of eighteen hundred men. Lameth who was
-obliged to fight his way into the place in September,
-also formed an armed flotilla, with which, when the
-English squadron was driven off the port by gales
-of wind, he made frequent captures. Meanwhile
-Mendizabel surprised the garrison of Briviesca,
-Longa captured a large convoy with its escort, near
-Burgos, and all the bands had visibly increased in
-numbers and boldness.</p>
-
-<p>When Caffarelli returned from the Duero, Reille
-took the command of the army of Portugal, Drouet
-assumed that of the army of the centre, and Souham
-being thus cast off returned to France. The
-army of Portugal was then widely spread over
-the country. Avila was occupied, Sarrut took
-possession of Leon, the bands of Marquinez and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_342"></a>[342]</span>
-Salazar were beaten, and Foy marching to seize
-Astorga, surprised and captured ninety men employed
-to dismantle that fortress; but above twenty
-breaches had already been opened and the place
-ceased to be of any importance. Meanwhile Caffarelli
-troubled by the care of a number of convoys, one
-of which under general Frimont, although strongly
-escorted, and having two pieces of cannon, fell into
-Longa’s hands the 30th of November, was unable
-to commence active operations until the 29th of
-December. Then his detachments chased the bands
-from Bilbao, while he marched himself to succour
-and provision Santona and Gueteria, and to re-establish
-his other posts along the coasts; but while
-he was near Santona the Spaniards attacked St.
-Domingo in Navarre, and invested Logroña.</p>
-
-<p>Sir Home Popham had suddenly quitted the Bay
-of Biscay with his squadron, leaving a few vessels to
-continue the littoral warfare, which enabled Caffarelli
-to succour Santona; important events followed
-but the account of them must be deferred as belonging
-to the transactions of 1813. Meanwhile tracing
-the mere chain of Guerilla operations from
-Biscay to the other parts, we find Abbé, who
-commanded in Pampeluna, Severoli who guarded
-the right of the Ebro, and Paris who had returned
-from Valencia to Zaragoza, continually and at times
-successfully attacked in the latter end of 1812; for
-after Chaplangarra’s exploit near Jacca, Mina intercepted
-all communication with France, and on the
-22d of November surprised and drove back to Zaragoza
-with loss a very large convoy. Then he besieged
-the castle of Huesca, and when a considerable
-force, coming from Zaragoza, forced him to desist,
-he reappeared at Barbastro. Finally in a severe<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_343"></a>[343]</span>
-action fought on the heights of Señora del Poya,
-towards the end of December, his troops were dispersed
-by Colonel Colbert, yet the French lost
-seventy men, and in a few weeks Mina took the
-field again, with forces more numerous than he had
-ever before commanded.</p>
-
-<p>About this time Villa Campa, who had entrenched
-himself near Segorbé to harass Suchet’s rear, was
-driven from thence by general Panetier, but being
-afterwards joined by Gayan, they invested the castle
-of Daroca with three thousand men. Severoli marching
-from Zaragoza succoured the place, yet Villa
-Campa reassembled his whole force near Carineña
-behind Severoli who was forced to fight his way home
-to Zaragoza. The Spaniards reappeared at Almunia,
-and on the 22nd of December, another battle was
-fought, when Villa Campa being defeated with considerable
-slaughter retired to New Castile, and there
-soon repaired his losses. Meanwhile, in the centre
-of Spain, Elio, Bassecour, and Empecinado, having
-waited until the great French armies passed in pursuit
-of Hill came down upon Madrid. Wellington,
-when at Salamanca, expected that this movement
-would call off some troops from the Tormes, but the
-only effect was to cause the garrison left by Joseph to
-follow the great army, which it rejoined, between the
-Duero and the Tormes, with a great encumbrance
-of civil servants and families. The Partidas then
-entered the city and committed great excesses, treating
-the people as enemies.</p>
-
-<p>Soult and Joseph had been earnest with Suchet to
-send a strong division by Cuenca as a protection for
-Madrid, and that marshal did move in person with
-a considerable body of troops as far as Requeña on
-the 28th of November, but being in fear for his line<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_344"></a>[344]</span>
-towards Alicant soon returned to Valencia in a state
-of indecision, leaving only one brigade at Requeña.
-He had been reinforced by three thousand fresh men
-from Catalonia, yet he would not undertake any
-operation until he knew something of the king’s
-progress, and at Requeña he had gained no intelligence
-even of the passage of the Tagus. The
-Spaniards being thus uncontrolled gathered in all
-directions.</p>
-
-<p>The duke del Parque advanced with Ballesteros’
-army to Villa Nueva de los Infantes, on the La
-Mancha side of the Sierra Morena, his cavalry entered
-the plains and some new levies from Grenada,
-came to Alcaraz on his right. Elio and Bassecour,
-leaving Madrid to the Partidas, marched to Albacete,
-without hindrance from Suchet, and re-opened
-the communication with Alicant; hence exclusive
-of the Sicilian army, nearly thirty thousand
-regular Spanish troops were said to be assembled
-on the borders of Murcia, and six thousand
-new levies came to Cordoba as a reserve. However
-on the 3d of December, Joseph at the head of his
-guards and the army of the centre, drove all the
-Partidas from the capital, and re-occupied Guadalaxara
-and the neighbouring posts; Soult entered
-Toledo and his cavalry advanced towards Del
-Parque, who immediately recrossed the Morena,
-and then the French horsemen swept La Mancha to
-gather contributions and to fill the magazines at
-Toledo.</p>
-
-<p>By these operations, Del Parque, now joined by
-the Grenadan troops from Alcaraz, was separated
-from Elio, and Suchet was relieved from a danger
-which he had dreaded too much, and by his own
-inaction contributed to increase. It is true he had<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_345"></a>[345]</span>
-all the sick men belonging to the king’s and to Soult’s
-army on his hands, but he had also many effective
-men of those armies; and though the yellow fever had
-shewn itself in some of his hospitals, and though he
-was also very uneasy for the security of his base in
-Aragon, where the Partida warfare was reviving,
-yet, with a disposable force of fifteen thousand infantry,
-and a fine division of cavalry, he should not
-have permitted Elio to pass his flank in the manner
-he did. He was afraid of the Sicilian army which
-had indeed a great influence on all the preceding
-operations, for it is certain that Suchet would otherwise
-have detached troops to Madrid by the Cuenca
-road, and then Soult would probably have sought
-a battle between the Tagus and the Guadarama
-mountains; but this influence arose entirely from
-the position of the Alicant army, not from its operations,
-which were feeble and vacillating.</p>
-
-<p>Maitland had resigned in the beginning of
-October, and his successor Mackenzie immediately
-pushed out some troops to the front, and there was
-a slight descent upon Xabea by the navy, but the
-general remained without plan or object, the only
-signs of vitality being a fruitless demonstration
-against the castle of Denia, where general Donkin
-disembarked on the 4th of October with a detachment
-of the eighty-first regiment. The walls had
-been represented as weak, but they were found to
-be high and strong, and the garrison had been unexpectedly
-doubled that morning, hence no attack
-took place, and in the evening a second reinforcement
-arrived, whereupon the British re-embarked.
-However the water was so full of pointed rocks that
-it was only by great exertions lieutenant Penruddocke
-of the Fame could pull in the boats, and the soldiers<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_346"></a>[346]</span>
-wading and fighting, got on board with little loss
-indeed but in confusion.</p>
-
-<p>Soon after this, general William Clinton came
-from Sicily to take the command, and Wellington
-who was then before Burgos, thinking Suchet would
-weaken his army to help the king, recommended an
-attempt upon the city of Valencia either by a coast
-attack or by a land operation, warning Clinton
-however to avoid an action in a cavalry country.
-This was not very difficult, because the land
-was generally rocky and mountainous, but Clinton
-would not stir without first having possession of the
-citadel of Alicant, and thus all things fell into disorder
-and weakness. For the jealous Spanish governor
-would not suffer the British to hold even a gate
-of the town, nay, he sent Elio a large convoy of
-clothing and other stores with an escort of only
-twenty men, that he might retain two of that general’s
-battalions to resist the attempt which he believed
-or pretended to believe Clinton would make
-on the citadel. Meanwhile that general, leaving
-Whittingham and Roche at Alcoy and Xixona,
-drew in his other troops from the posts previously
-occupied in front by Mackenzie; he feared Suchet’s
-cavalry, but the marshal, estimating the allied<span class="sidenote">Suchet’s official correspondence, MS.</span>
-armies at more than fifty thousand men, would
-undertake no serious enterprize while ignorant
-of the king’s progress against lord Wellington.
-He however diligently strengthened his camp at
-St. Felipe de Xativa, threw another bridge over the
-Xucar, entrenched the passes in his front, covered
-Denia with a detachment, obliged Whittingham to
-abandon Alcoy, dismantled the extensive walls of
-Valencia, and fortified a citadel there.</p>
-
-<p>It was in this state of affairs that Elio came down<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_347"></a>[347]</span>
-to Albacete, and priding himself upon the dexterity
-with which he had avoided the French armies, proposed
-to Clinton a combined attack upon Suchet.
-Elio greatly exaggerated his own numbers, and
-giving out that Del Parque’s force was under his command,
-pretended that he could bring forty thousand
-men into the field, four thousand being cavalry.
-But the two Spanish armies if united would scarcely<span class="sidenote">General Donkin’s correspondence, MS.</span>
-have produced twenty thousand really effective infantry;
-moreover Del Parque, a sickly unwieldy
-person, was extremely incapable, his soldiers were
-discontented and mutinous, and he had no intention
-of moving beyond Alcaraz.</p>
-
-<p>With such allies it was undoubtedly difficult for
-the English general to co-operate, yet it would seem,
-something considerable might have been effected
-while Suchet was at Requeña, even before Elio
-arrived, and more surely after that general had
-reached Albacete. Clinton had then twelve thousand
-men, of which five thousand were British:
-there was a fleet to aid his operations, and the
-Spanish infantry under Elio were certainly ten
-thousand. Nothing was done, and it was because
-nothing was attempted, that Napoleon, who watched
-this quarter closely, assured Suchet, that however<span class="sidenote">Official correspondence of the duke of Feltre, MS.</span>
-difficult his position was from the extent of country
-he had to keep in tranquillity, the enemy in his
-front was not really formidable. Events justified
-this observation. The French works were soon
-completed and the British army fell into such disrepute,
-that the Spaniards with sarcastic malice
-affirmed it was to be put under Elio to make it useful.</p>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote">General Donkin’s correspondence, MSS.</span>
-Meanwhile Roche’s and Whittingham’s division
-continued to excite the utmost jealousy in the other<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_348"></a>[348]</span>
-Spanish troops, who asked, very reasonably, what
-they did to merit such advantages? England paid<span class="sidenote"><a href="#NO_XVII">Appendix, No. 17.</a></span>
-and clothed them and the Spaniards were bound
-to feed them; they did not do so, and Canga
-Arguelles, the intendant of the province, asserted
-that he had twice provided magazines for them in
-Alicant, which were twice plundered by the governor;
-and yet it is certain that the other Spanish
-troops were far worse off than these divisions. But
-on every side intrigues, discontent, vacillation, and
-weakness were visible, and again it was shewn that
-if England was the stay of the Peninsula, it was
-Wellington alone who supported the war.</p>
-
-<p>On the 22d of November the obstinacy of the governor
-being at last overcome he gave up the citadel
-of Alicant to the British, yet no offensive operations
-followed, though Suchet on the 26th drove Roche’s
-troops out of Alcoy with loss, and defeated the
-Spanish cavalry at Yecla. However on the 2d of
-December, general Campbell arriving from Sicily,
-with four thousand men, principally British, assumed
-the command, making the fourth general-in-chief
-in the same number of months. His presence,
-the strong reinforcement he brought, and the intelligence
-that lord William Bentinck was to follow
-with another reinforcement, again raised the public
-expectation, and Elio immediately proposed that the
-British should occupy the enemy on the Lower
-Xucar, while the Spaniards crossing that river attacked
-Requeña. However general Campbell after
-making some feeble demonstrations declared he
-would await lord William Bentinck’s arrival. Then
-the Spanish general, who had hitherto abstained
-from any disputes with the British, became extremely<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_349"></a>[349]</span>
-discontented, and dispersed his army for
-subsistence. On the other hand the English general
-complained that Elio had abandoned him.</p>
-
-<p>Suchet expecting Campbell to advance had
-withdrawn his outposts to concentrate at Xativa,
-but when he found him as inactive as his predecessors
-and saw the Spanish troops scattered, he surprised
-one Spanish post at Onteniente, another in Ibi,
-and re-occupied all his former offensive positions in
-front of Alicant. Soult’s detachments were now
-also felt in La Mancha, wherefore Elio retired into
-Murcia, and Del Parque, as we have seen, went
-over the Morena. Thus the storm which had menaced
-the French disappeared entirely, for Campbell,<span class="sidenote"><a href="#NO_XVII">Appendix, No. 17</a>, <a href="#NO_XVIII">18.</a></span>
-following his instructions, refused rations to
-Whittingham’s corps and desired it to separate for
-the sake of subsistence; and as the rest of the
-Spanish troops were actually starving, no danger
-was to be apprehended from them: nay, Habert
-marched up to Alicant, killed and wounded some
-men almost under the walls, and the Anglo-Italian
-soldiers deserted to him by whole companies when
-opportunity offered.</p>
-
-<p>Suchet did as he pleased towards his front but he
-was unquiet for his rear, for besides the operations
-of Villa Campa, Gayan, Duran and Mina in Aragon,
-the Frayle and other partida chiefs continually
-vexed his communications with Tortoza. Fifty men
-had been surprised and destroyed near Segorbe the
-22d of November, by Villa Campa; and general
-Panetier, who was sent against that chief, though
-he took and destroyed his entrenched camp was
-unable to bring him to action or to prevent him
-from going to Aragon, and attacking Daroca as I
-have before shown. Meanwhile the Frayle surprised<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_350"></a>[350]</span>
-and destroyed an ordnance convoy, took
-several guns and four hundred horses, and killed in
-cold blood after the action above a hundred artillery-men
-and officers. A moveable column being immediately
-despatched against him, destroyed his dépôts
-and many of his men, but the Frayle himself escaped
-and soon reappeared upon the communications.
-The loss of this convoy was the first disgrace of
-the kind which had befallen the army of Aragon,<span class="sidenote">Suchet, official correspondence with the king, MSS.</span>
-and to use Suchet’s expression a battle would have
-cost him less.</p>
-
-<p>Nor were the Spaniards quite inactive in Catalonia,
-although the departure of general Maitland
-had so dispirited them that the regular warfare
-was upon the point of ceasing altogether. The<span class="sidenote">Captain Codrington’s papers, MS.</span>
-active army was indeed stated to be twenty thousand
-strong, and the tercios of reserve forty-five thousand;
-yet a column of nine hundred French controuled
-the sea-line and cut off all supplies landed
-for the interior. Lacy who remained about Vich
-with seven thousand men affirmed that he could not
-feed his army on the coast, but captain Codrington
-says that nineteen feluccas laden with flour had in
-two nights only, landed their cargoes between Mattaro
-and Barcelona for the supply of the latter city,
-and that these and many other ventures of the same
-kind might have been captured without difficulty;
-that Claros and Milans continued corruptly to connive
-at the passage of French convoys; that the rich
-merchants of Mattaro and Arens invited the enemy
-to protect their contraband convoys going to France,
-and yet accused him publicly of interrupting their
-lawful trade when in fact he was only disturbing a
-treasonable commerce, carried on so openly that he
-was forced to declare a blockade of the whole coast.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_351"></a>[351]</span>
-A plot to deliver up the Medas islands was also
-discovered, and when Lacy was pressed to call out
-the Somatenes, a favorite project with the English
-naval officers, he objected that he could scarcely
-feed and provide ammunition for the regular troops.
-He also observed that the general efforts of that nature
-hitherto made, and under more favourable circumstances,
-had produced only a waste of life, of
-treasure, of provisions, of ammunition and of arms,
-and now the French possessed all the strong places.</p>
-
-<p>At this time so bitter were the party dissensions
-that sir Edward Pellew anticipated the ruin of the
-principality from that cause alone. Lacy, Sarzfield,
-Eroles and captain Codrington, continued
-their old disputes, and Sarzfield who was then in
-Aragon had also quarrelled with Mina; Lacy made
-a formal requisition to have Codrington recalled,
-the junta of Catalonia made a like demand to the
-regency respecting Lacy, and meanwhile such was
-the misery of the soldiers that the officers of one
-regiment actually begged at the doors of private
-houses to obtain old clothing for their men, and even
-this poor succour was denied. A few feeble isolated
-efforts by some of the partizan generals, were
-the only signs of war when Wellington’s victory at
-Salamanca again raised the spirit of the province.
-Then also for the first time the new constitution
-adopted by the cortez was proclaimed in Catalonia,
-the junta of that province was suppressed, Eroles
-the people’s favorite obtained greater powers, and
-was even flattered with the hope of becoming captain-general,
-for the regency had agreed at last to
-recal Lacy. In fine the aspect of affairs changed
-and many thousand English muskets and other
-weapons were by sir Edward Pellew, given to the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_352"></a>[352]</span>
-partizans as well as to the regular troops which
-enabled them to receive cartridges from the ships
-instead of the loose powder formerly demanded on
-account of the difference in the bore of the Spanish
-muskets. The effect of these happy coincidences
-was soon displayed. Eroles who had raised a new
-division of three thousand men, contrived in concert
-with Codrington, a combined movement in September
-against Taragona. Marching in the night of
-the 27th from Reus to the mouth of the Francoli he
-was met by the boats of the squadron and having
-repulsed a sally from the fortress, drove some Catalans
-in the French service, from the ruins of the
-Olivo, while the boats swept the mole, taking five
-vessels. After this affair Eroles encamped on the
-hill separating Lerida, Taragona, and Tortoza, meaning
-to intercept the communication between those
-places and to keep up an intercourse with the fleet,
-now the more necessary because Lacy had lost this
-advantage eastward of Barcelona. While thus
-posted he heard that a French detachment had
-come from Lerida to Arbeça, wherefore making a
-forced march over the mountains he surprised and
-destroyed the greatest part on the 2d of October,
-and then returned to his former quarters.</p>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote7">October.</span>
-Meanwhile Lacy embarked scaling-ladders and battering
-guns on board the English ships, and made a
-pompous movement against Mattaro with his whole
-force, yet at the moment of execution changed
-his plan and attempted to surprise Hostalrich, but
-he let this design be known, and as the enemy
-prepared to succour the place, he returned to Vich
-without doing any thing. During these operations
-Manso defeated two hundred French near Molino
-del Rey, gained some advantages over one Pelligri,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_353"></a>[353]</span>
-a French miguelette partizan, and captured some
-French boats at Mattaro after Lacy’s departure.
-However Sarzfield’s mission to raise an army in Aragon
-had failed, and Decaen desiring to check the
-reviving spirit of the Catalans, made a combined
-movement against Vich in the latter end of October.
-Lacy immediately drew Eroles, Manso, and Milans
-towards that point, and thus the fertile country about
-Reus was again resigned to the French, the intercourse
-with the fleet totally lost, and the garrison of
-Taragona, which had been greatly straitened by the
-previous operations of Eroles, was relieved. Yet
-the defence of Vich was not secured, for on the
-3d of November one division of the French forced
-the main body of the Spaniards, under Lacy and
-Milans, at the passes of Puig Gracioso and Congosto,
-and though the other divisions were less successful
-against Eroles and Manso, at St. Filieu de Codenas,
-Decaen reached Vich the 4th. The Catalans, who
-had lost altogether above five hundred men, then
-separated; Lacy went to the hills near Momblanch,
-Milans and Rovira towards Olot, and Manso to
-Montserrat.</p>
-
-<p>Eroles returned to Reus, and was like to have surprised
-the Col de Balaguer, for he sent a detachment
-under colonel Villamil, dressed in Italian uniforms
-which had been taken by Rovira in Figueras, and
-his men were actually admitted within the palisade
-of the fort before the garrison perceived the deceit.
-A lieutenant with sixteen men placed outside were
-taken, and this loss was magnified so much to Eroles
-that he ordered Villamil to make a more regular attack.
-To aid him Codrington brought up the Blake,
-and landed some marines, yet no impression was
-made on the garrison, and the allies retired on the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_354"></a>[354]</span>
-17th at the approach of two thousand men sent from
-Tortoza. Eroles and Manso then vainly united near
-Manresa to oppose Decaen, who, coming down from
-Vich, forced his way to Reus, seized a vast quantity
-of corn, supplied Taragona, and then marched to
-Barcelona.</p>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote9">November.</span>
-These operations indisputably proved that there
-was no real power of resistance in the Catalan army,
-but as an absurd notion prevailed that Soult, Suchet,
-and Joseph were coming with their armies in one<span class="sidenote">Captain Codrington’s correspondence, MSS.</span>
-body, to France, through Catalonia, Lacy endeavoured
-to cover his inactivity by pretending a design to
-raise a large force in Aragon, with which to watch
-this retreat, and to act as a flanking corps to lord
-Wellington, who was believed to be then approaching
-Zaragoza. Such rumours served to amuse the
-Catalans for a short time, but the sense of their
-real weakness soon returned. In December Bertoletti,
-the governor of Taragona, marched upon Reus,
-and defeated some hundred men who had reassembled
-there; and at the same time a French convoy
-for Barcelona, escorted by three thousand men,
-passed safely in the face of six thousand Catalan
-soldiers, who were desirous to attack but were prevented
-by Lacy.</p>
-
-<p>The anger of the people and of the troops also, on
-this occasion was loudly expressed, Lacy was openly
-accused of treachery, and was soon after recalled.
-However, Eroles who had come to Cape Salou to
-obtain succour from the squadron for his suffering
-soldiers, acknowledged that the resources of Catalonia
-were worn out, the spirit of the people broken
-by Lacy’s misconduct, and the army, reduced to
-less than seven thousand men, naked and famishing.
-Affairs were so bad, that expecting to be made<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_355"></a>[355]</span>
-captain-general he was reluctant to accept that
-office, and the regular warfare was in fact extinguished,
-for Sarzfield was now acting as a partizan
-on the Ebro. Nevertheless the French were greatly
-dismayed at the disasters in Russia; their force was
-weakened by the drafts made to fill up the ranks of
-Napoleon’s new army; and the war of the partidas
-continued, especially along the banks of the Ebro,
-where Sarzfield, at the head of Eroles’ ancient
-division, which he had carried with him out of
-Catalonia, acted in concert with Mina, Duran,
-Villa Campa, the Frayle, Pendencia, and other
-chiefs, who were busy upon Suchet’s communication
-between Tortoza and Valencia.</p>
-
-<p>Aragon being now unquiet, and Navarre and
-Biscay in a state of insurrection, the French forces
-in the interior of Spain were absolutely invested.
-Their front was opposed by regular armies, their
-flanks annoyed by the British squadrons, and their
-rear, from the Bay of Biscay to the Mediterranean,
-plagued and stung by this chain of partidas and
-insurrections. And England was the cause of all
-this. England was the real deliverer of the Peninsula.
-It was her succours thrown into Biscay that
-had excited the new insurrection in the northern
-provinces, and enabled Mina and the other chiefs
-to enter Aragon, while Wellington drew the great
-masses of the French towards Portugal. It was
-that insurrection, so forced on, which, notwithstanding
-the cessation of the regular warfare in Catalonia,
-gave life and activity to the partidas of the
-south. It was the army from Sicily which, though
-badly commanded, by occupying the attention of
-Suchet in front, obliged him to keep his forces
-together instead of hunting down the bands on his<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_356"></a>[356]</span>
-communications. In fine, it was the troops of
-England who had shocked the enemy’s front of
-battle, the fleets of England which had menaced
-his flanks with disembarkations, the money and
-stores of England which had supported the partidas.
-Every part of the Peninsula was pervaded
-by her influence, or her warriors, and a trembling
-sense of insecurity was communicated to the French
-wherever their armies were not united in masses.</p>
-
-<p>Such then were the various military events of the
-year 1812, and the English general taking a view of
-the whole, judged that however anxious the French
-might be to invade Portugal, they would be content
-during the winter to gather provisions and wait for
-reinforcements from France wherewith to strike a
-decisive blow at his army. But those reinforcements
-never came. Napoleon, unconquered of man,
-had been vanquished by the elements. The fires
-and the snows of Moscow combined, had shattered
-his strength, and in confessed madness, nations and
-rulers rejoiced, that an enterprize, at once the
-grandest, the most provident, the most beneficial,
-ever attempted by a warrior-statesman, had been
-foiled: they rejoiced that Napoleon had failed to
-re-establish unhappy Poland as a barrier against the
-most formidable and brutal, the most swinish tyranny,
-that has ever menaced and disgraced European
-civilization.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_357"></a>[357]</span><br /></p>
-
-<h3 id="CHAPTER_BXIX_VII">CHAPTER VII.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<h4>GENERAL OBSERVATIONS.</h4>
-
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="sidenote7">1812.</span>
-Lord Wellington exasperated by the conduct of
-the army and by the many crossings he had experienced
-during the campaign, had no sooner taken
-his winter-quarters, than he gave vent to his indignation
-in a circular letter, addressed to the superior
-officers, which, being ill-received by the army at
-the time, has been frequently referred to since with
-angry denunciations of its injustice. In substance it
-declared, “that discipline had deteriorated during
-the campaign <em>in a greater degree than he had ever
-witnessed or ever read of in any army</em>, and this without
-any disaster, any unusual privation or hardship
-save that of inclement weather; that the officers
-had, from the first, lost all command over their men,
-and hence excesses, outrages of all kinds, and inexcusable
-losses had occurred; that no army had ever
-made shorter marches in retreat, or had longer
-rests; no army had ever been so little pressed by a
-pursuing enemy, and that the true cause of this
-unhappy state of affairs was to be found in the
-habitual neglect of duty by the regimental officers.”</p>
-
-<p>These severe reproaches were generally deserved,
-and only partially unjust; yet the statements, on
-which they were founded, were in some particulars
-unintentionally inaccurate, especially as regarded
-the retreat from Salamanca. The marches, though
-short as to distance, after quitting the Tormes, were<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_358"></a>[358]</span>
-long as to time, and it is the time an English soldier
-bears his burthen, for like the ancient Roman he
-carries the load of an ass, that crushes his strength.
-Some regiments had come from Cadiz without
-halting, and as long garrison duty had weakened
-their bodies, both their constitutions and their inexperience
-were too heavily taxed. The line of march
-from Salamanca was through a flooded, and flat,
-clayey country, not much easier to the allies than
-the marshes of the Arnus were to Hannibal’s army;
-and mounted officers, as that great general well knew
-when he placed the Carthaginian cavalry to keep
-up the Gallic rear, never judge correctly of a foot-soldier’s
-exertions; they measure his strength by
-their horses’ powers. On this occasion the troops,
-stepping ankle-deep in clay, mid-leg in water, lost
-their shoes, and with strained sinews heavily made
-their way, and withal they had but two rations in
-five days.</p>
-
-<p>Wellington thought otherwise, for he knew not
-that the commissariat stores, which he had ordered
-up, did not arrive regularly because of the extreme
-fatigue of the animals who carried them; and those
-that did arrive were not available for the troops,
-because, as the rear of an army, and especially a
-retreating army, is at once the birth-place and the
-recipient of false reports, the subordinate commissaries
-and conductors of the temporary dépôts,
-alarmed with rumours that the enemy’s cavalry had
-forestalled the allies on the march, carried off
-or destroyed the field-stores: hence the soldiers
-were actually feeding on acorns when their commander
-supposed them to be in the receipt of good
-rations. The destruction of the swine may be
-therefore, in some measure, palliated; but there is
-neither palliation nor excuse to be offered for the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_359"></a>[359]</span>
-excesses and outrages committed on the inhabitants,
-nor for many officers’ habitual inattention to their
-duty, of which the general justly complained. Certainly
-the most intolerable disorders had marked
-the retreat, and great part of the sufferings of the
-army arose from these and previous disorders, for it
-is too common with soldiers, first to break up the
-arrangements of their general by want of discipline,
-and then to complain of the misery which those
-arrangements were designed to obviate. Nevertheless
-Wellington’s circular was not strictly just, because
-it excepted none from blame, though in conversation
-he admitted the reproach did not apply to
-the light division nor to the guards.</p>
-
-<p>With respect to the former the proof of its discipline
-was easy though Wellington had not said so
-much in its favour; for how could those troops
-be upbraided, who held together so closely with
-their colours, that, exclusive of those killed in action,
-they did not leave thirty men behind. Never
-did the extraordinary vigour and excellence of their
-discipline merit praise more than in this retreat.
-But it seems to be a drawback to the greatness of
-lord Wellington’s character, that while capable of
-repressing insubordination, either by firmness or
-dexterity as the case may require, capable also of
-magnanimously disregarding, or dangerously resenting
-injuries, his praises and his censures are
-bestowed indiscriminately, or so directed as to acquire
-partizans and personal friends rather than the
-attachment of the multitude. He did not make the
-hard-working military crowd feel that their honest
-unobtrusive exertions were appreciated. In this
-he differs not from many other great generals and
-statesmen, but he thereby fails to influence masses,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_360"></a>[360]</span>
-and his genius falls short of that sublime flight by
-which Hannibal in ancient, and Napoleon in modern
-times, commanded the admiration of the world.
-Nevertheless it is only by a comparison with such
-great men that he can be measured, nor will any
-slight examination of his exploits suffice to convey
-a true notion of his intellectual power and resources.
-Let this campaign be taken as an example.</p>
-
-<p>It must be evident that it in no manner bears out
-the character of an easy and triumphant march,
-which English writers have given to it. Nothing
-happened according to the original plan. The
-general’s operations were one continual struggle to
-overcome obstacles, occasioned by the enemy’s
-numbers, the insubordination of his own troops, the
-slowness, incapacity, and unfaithful conduct of the
-Spanish commanders, the want of money, and the
-active folly of the different governments he served.
-For first his design was to menace the French in
-Spain so as to bring their forces upon him from
-other parts, and then to retire into Portugal, again
-to issue forth when want should cause them to disperse.
-He was not without hopes indeed to strike
-a decisive blow, yet he was content, if the occasion
-came not, to wear out the French by continual
-marching, and he trusted that the frequent opportunities
-thus given to the Spaniards would finally
-urge them to a general effort. But he found his
-enemy, from the first, too powerful for him, even
-without drawing succour from distant parts, and he
-would have fallen back at once, were it not for
-Marmont’s rashness. Nor would the victory of the
-Arapiles itself have produced any proportionate
-effect but for the errors of the king, and his rejection
-of Soult’s advice. Those errors caused the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_361"></a>[361]</span>
-evacuation of Andalusia, yet it was only to concentrate
-an overwhelming force with which the French
-finally drove the victors back to Portugal.</p>
-
-<p>Again, Wellington designed to finish his campaign
-in the southern provinces, and circumstances
-obliged him to remain in the northern provinces.
-He would have taken Burgos and he could not; he
-would have rested longer on the Carrion, and his flanks
-were turned by the bridges of Palencia and Baños;
-he would have rested behind the Douro, to profit of
-his central position, but the bridge at Tordesillas
-was ravished from him, and the sudden reparation
-of that at Toro, obliged him to retire. He would
-have united with Hill on the Adaja, and he could
-only unite with him behind the Tormes; and on this
-last river also he desired either to take his winter
-quarters, or to have delivered a great battle with a
-view to regain Madrid, and he could do neither.
-Finally he endeavoured to make an orderly and an
-easy retreat to Ciudad Rodrigo, and his army was
-like to have dissolved altogether. And yet in all
-these varying circumstances, his sagacity as to the
-general course of the war, his promptness in taking
-advantage of particular opportunities, was conspicuous.
-These are the distinguishing characteristics
-of real genius.</p>
-
-<p>Passing over as already sufficiently illustrated
-that master-stroke, the battle of Salamanca, the
-reader would do well to mark, how this great commander
-did, after that event, separate the king’s
-army from Marmont’s, forcing the one to retreat
-upon Burgos, and driving the other from Madrid;
-how he thus broke up the French combinations, so
-that many weeks were of necessity required to
-reunite a power capable of disturbing him in the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_362"></a>[362]</span>
-field; how he posted Clinton’s division and the
-Gallicians, to repress any light excursion by the
-beaten army of Portugal; how, foreseeing Soult’s
-plan to establish a new base of operations in Andalusia,
-he was prepared, by a sudden descent from
-Madrid, to drive Soult himself from that province;
-how promptly, when the siege of Burgos failed,
-and his combinations were ruined by the fault of
-others, how promptly I say, he commenced his
-retreat, sacrificing all his high-wrought expectation
-of triumph in a campaign which he burned to
-finish, and otherwise would have finished, even
-with more splendour than it had commenced.</p>
-
-<p>If Burgos, a mean fortress of the lowest order,
-had fallen early, the world would have seen a
-noble stroke. For the Gallicians, aided by a weak
-division of Wellington’s army, and by the British
-reinforcements making up from Coruña, would,
-covered by Burgos, have sufficed to keep the army
-of Portugal in check, while Popham’s armament
-would have fomented a general insurrection of the
-northern provinces. Meanwhile Wellington, gathering
-forty-five thousand Anglo-Portuguese, and
-fifteen thousand Spaniards, on the Tagus, would
-have marched towards Murcia; Ballesteros’ army,
-and the sixteen thousand men composing the Alicant
-army, would there have joined him, and with
-a hundred thousand soldiers he would have delivered
-such a battle to the united French armies,
-if indeed they could have united, as would have
-shaken all Europe with its martial clangor. To
-exchange this glorious vision, for the cold desolate
-reality of a dangerous winter retreat was, for Wellington,
-but a momentary mental struggle, and it
-was simultaneous with that daring conception, the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_363"></a>[363]</span>
-passage of the bridge of Burgos under the fire of
-the castle.</p>
-
-<p>Let him be traced now in retreat. Pursued by a
-superior army and seeing his cavalry defeated, he
-turned as a savage lion at the Carrion, nor would
-he have removed so quickly from that lair, if the
-bridges at Palencia and Baños had been destroyed
-according to his order. Neither is his cool self-possession
-to be overlooked; for when both his
-flanks were thus exposed, instead of falling back
-in a hurried manner to the Duero, he judged exactly
-the value of the rugged ground on the left
-bank of the Pisuerga, in opposition to the double
-advantage obtained by the enemy at Palencia and
-Baños; nor did the difficulty which Souham and
-Caffarelli, independent commanders and neither of
-them accustomed to move large armies, would find
-in suddenly changing their line of operations escape
-him. His march to Cabeçon and his position
-on the left of the Pisuerga was not a retreat, it
-was the shift of a practised captain.</p>
-
-<p>When forced to withdraw Hill from the Tagus,
-he, on the instant, formed a new combination to
-fight that great battle on the Adaja which he had
-intended to deliver near the Guadalaviar; and
-though the splendid exploit of captain Guingret, at
-Tordesillas, baffled this intent, he, in return, baffled
-Souham by that ready stroke of generalship, the
-posting of his whole army in front of Rueda,
-thus forbidding a passage by the restored bridge.
-Finally, if he could not maintain the line of the
-Duero, nor that of the Tormes, it was because rivers
-can never be permanently defended against superior
-forces, and yet he did not quit the last without
-a splendid tactical illustration. I mean that<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_364"></a>[364]</span>
-surprising movement from the Arapiles to the Valmusa,
-a movement made not in confusion and half
-flight, but in close order of battle, his columns
-ready for action, his artillery and cavalry skirmishing,
-passing the Junguen without disorder, filing
-along the front of and winding into the rear of
-a most powerful French army, the largest ever collected
-in one mass in the Peninsula, an army
-having twice as many guns as the allies, and twelve
-thousand able horsemen to boot. And all these
-great and skilful actions were executed by lord
-Wellington with an army composed of different
-nations; soldiers, fierce indeed, and valiant, terrible
-in battle, but characterised by himself, as more
-deficient in good discipline than any army of which
-he had ever read!</p>
-
-<p>Men engaged only in civil affairs and especially
-book-men are apt to undervalue military genius,
-talking as if simple bravery were the highest qualification
-of a general; and they have another
-mode of appeasing an inward sense of inferiority,
-namely, to attribute the successes of a great captain,
-to the prudence of some discreet adviser, who
-in secret rules the general, amends his errors, and
-leaves him all the glory. Thus Napoleon had
-Berthier, Wellington has sir George Murray! but
-in this, the most skilful, if not the most glorious of
-Wellington’s campaigns, sir George Murray was
-not present, and the staff of the army was governed
-by three young lieutenant-colonels, namely, lord
-Fitzroy Somerset, Waters, and Delancey; for though
-sir Willoughby Gordon joined the army as quarter-master-general
-after the battle of Salamanca, he
-was inexperienced, and some bodily suffering impeded
-his personal exertions.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_365"></a>[365]</span></p>
-
-<p>Such then were the principal points of skill displayed
-by Wellington; yet so vast and intricate an
-art is war, that the apophthegm of Turenne will
-always be found applicable: “<em>he who has made no
-mistakes in war, has seldom made war</em>.” Some
-military writers, amongst them the celebrated
-Jomini, blame the English general, that with a
-conquering army, and an insurgent nation at his
-beck, he should in three months after his victory
-have attempted nothing more than the unsuccessful
-siege of Burgos. This censure is not entirely
-unfounded; the king certainly escaped very easily
-from Madrid; yet there are many points to be
-argued ere the question can be decided. The want
-of money, a want progressively increasing, had
-become almost intolerable. Wellington’s army was
-partly fed from Ciudad Rodrigo, partly from the
-valley of the Pisuerga, Hill’s troops were fed from
-Lisbon; the Portuguese in their own country, and
-the Spaniards every where, lived as the French did,
-by requisition; but the British professed to avoid
-that mode of subsistence, and they made it a
-national boast to all Europe that they did so; the
-movements of the army were therefore always subservient
-to this principle, and must be judged accordingly,
-because want of money was with them
-want of motion.</p>
-
-<p>Now four modes of operation were open to
-Wellington.</p>
-
-<p>1º. <em>After the victory of Salamanca to follow the
-king to Valencia, unite with the Alicant army, and,
-having thus separated Soult from Joseph and Suchet,
-to act according to events.</em></p>
-
-<p>To have thus moved at once, without money, into
-Valencia, or Murcia, new countries where he had<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_366"></a>[366]</span>
-no assured connexions, and which were scarcely able
-to feed the French armies, would have exposed him
-to great difficulties; and he must have made extensive
-arrangements with the fleet ere he could have
-acted vigorously, if, as was probable, the French
-concentrated all their forces behind the Guadalaviar.
-Meanwhile the distance between the main allied army
-and those troops necessarily left in the north, being
-considered, the latter must have been strengthened
-at the expense of those in the south, unless the army
-of Portugal joined the king, and then Wellington
-would have been quite over-matched in Valencia;
-that is, if Soult also joined the king, and if not he
-would have placed the English general between
-two fires. If a force was not left in the north the
-army of Portugal would have had open field, either
-to march to the king’s assistance by Zaragoza, or
-to have relieved Astorga, seized Salamanca, recovered
-the prisoners and the trophies of the Arapiles,
-and destroyed all the great lines of magazines and
-dépôts even to the Tagus. Moreover, the yellow
-fever raged in Murcia, and this would have compelled
-the English general to depend upon the
-contracted base of operations offered by Alicant,
-because the advance of Clauzel would have rendered
-it impossible to keep it on the Tagus. Time, therefore,
-was required to arrange the means of operating
-in this manner, and meanwhile the army was not
-unwisely turned another way.</p>
-
-<p>2º. <em>To march directly against Soult in Andalusia.</em></p>
-
-<p>This project Wellington was prepared to execute,
-when the king’s orders rendered it unnecessary,
-but if Joseph had adopted Soult’s plan a grand
-field for the display of military art would have been<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_367"></a>[367]</span>
-opened. The king going by the Despenas Peros,
-and having the advantage of time in the march,
-could have joined Soult, with the army of the centre,
-before the English general could have joined
-Hill. The sixty thousand combatants thus united
-could have kept the field until Suchet had also
-joined; but they could scarcely have maintained
-the blockade of Cadiz also, and hence the error
-of Wellington seems to have been, that he did
-not make an effort to overtake the king, either
-upon or beyond the Tagus; for the army of the
-centre would certainly have joined Soult by the
-Despenas Peros, if Maitland had not that moment
-landed at Alicant.</p>
-
-<p>3º. <em>To follow the army of Portugal after the victory
-of Salamanca.</em></p>
-
-<p>The reasons for moving upon Madrid instead of
-adopting this line of operations having been already
-shewn in former observations, need not be here
-repeated, yet it may be added that the destruction
-of the great arsenal and dépôt of the Retiro was no
-small object with reference to the safety of Portugal.</p>
-
-<p>4º. <em>The plan which was actually followed.</em></p>
-
-<p>The English general’s stay in the capital was
-unavoidable, seeing that to observe the development
-of the French operations in the south was of such
-importance. It only remains therefore to trace
-him after he quitted Madrid. Now the choice of
-his line of march by Valladolid certainly appears
-common-place, and deficient in vigour, but it was
-probably decided by the want of money, and of means
-of transport; to which may be added the desire to
-bring the Gallicians forward, which he could only
-attain by putting himself in actual military communication
-with them, and covering their advance.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_368"></a>[368]</span>
-Yet this will not excuse the feeble pursuit of Clauzel’s
-retreating army up the valley of the Pisuerga.
-The Spaniards would not the less have come up if
-that general had been defeated, nor would the want
-of their assistance have been much felt in the action.
-Considerable loss would, no doubt, have been suffered
-by the Anglo-Portuguese, and they could ill
-bear it, but the result of a victory would have amply
-repaid the damage received; for the time gained by
-Clauzel was employed by Caffarelli to strengthen
-the castle of Burgos, which contained the greatest
-French dépôt in this part of Spain. A victory
-therefore would have entirely disarranged the
-enemy’s means of defence in the north, and would
-have sent the twice-broken and defeated army of
-Portugal, behind the Ebro; then neither the conscript
-reinforcements, nor the junction of Caffarelli’s
-troops, would have enabled Clauzel, with all his
-activity and talent, to re-appear in the field before
-Burgos would have fallen. But that fortress would
-most probably have fallen at once, in which case
-the English general might have returned to the
-Tagus, and perhaps in time to have met Soult as he
-issued forth from the mountains in his march from
-Andalusia.</p>
-
-<p>It may be objected, that as Burgos did not yield,
-it would not have yielded under any circumstances
-without a vigorous defence. This is not so certain,
-the effect of a defeat would have been very different
-from the effect of such a splendid operation as
-Clauzel’s retreat; and it appears also, that the prolonged
-defence of the castle may be traced to some
-errors of detail in the attack, as well as to want of
-sufficient artillery means. In respect of the great
-features of the campaign, it may be assumed that<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_369"></a>[369]</span>
-Wellington’s judgement on the spot, and with a full
-knowledge both of his own and his adversaries’ situations,
-is of more weight than that of critics, however
-able and acute, who knew nothing of his difficulties.
-But in the details there was something of error exceedingly
-strange. It is said, I believe truly, that
-sir Howard Douglas being consulted, objected to
-the proceeding by gallery and mine against an outward,
-a middle, and an inward line of defence, as
-likely to involve a succession of tedious and difficult
-enterprizes, which even if successful, would still
-leave the White Church, and the upper castle or
-keep, to be carried;—that this castle, besides other
-artillery armament, was surmounted by a powerful
-battery of heavy guns, bearing directly upon the
-face of the horn-work of San Michael, the only point
-from which it could be breached, and until it was
-breached, the governor, a gallant man, would certainly
-not surrender. It could not however be
-breached without a larger battering train than the
-allies possessed, and would not, as he supposed, be
-effected by mines; wherefore proposing to take the
-guns from two frigates, then lying at Santander, he
-proffered to bring them up in time.</p>
-
-<p>In this reasoning lord Wellington partly acquiesced,
-but his hopes of success were principally founded
-on the scarcity of water in the castle, and upon the
-facility of burning the provision magazines; nor was
-he without hope that his fortune would carry him
-through, even with the scanty means he possessed.
-Towards the end of the siege, however, he did
-resort, though too late, to the plan of getting guns
-up from Santander. But while sir Howard Douglas
-thus counselled him on the spot, sir Edward
-Pakenham, then in Madrid, assured the author of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_370"></a>[370]</span>
-this history, at the time, that he also, foreseeing the
-artillery means were too scanty, had proposed to
-send by the Somosierra twelve fine Russian battering
-guns, then in the Retiro; and he pledged himself
-to procure, by an appeal to the officers in the
-capital, animals sufficient to transport them and their
-ammunition to Burgos in a few days. The offer
-was not accepted.</p>
-
-<p>Something also may be objected to the field
-operations, as connected with the siege; for it is
-the rule, although not an absolute one, that the
-enemy’s active army should first be beaten, or
-driven beyond some strong line, such as a river, or
-chain of mountains, before a siege is commenced.
-Now if Wellington had masked the castle after the
-horn-work was carried on the 19th, and had then
-followed Clauzel, the French generals, opposed to<span class="sidenote">Souham’s Official Correspondence, MSS.</span>
-him, admit, that they would have gone over the
-Ebro, perhaps even to Pampeluna and St. Sebastian.
-In that case all the minor dépôts must have
-been broken up, and the reorganization of the
-army of Portugal retarded at least a month; before
-that time, the guns from Santander would have arrived
-and the castle of Burgos would have fallen.
-In Souham’s secret despatches, it is said, of course
-on the authority of spies, that Castaños urged an
-advance beyond Burgos instead of a siege; of this
-I know nothing, but it is not unlikely, because to
-advance continually, and to surround an enemy, constituted,
-with Spanish generals, the whole art of
-war. Howbeit on this occasion, the advice, if
-given, was not unreasonable; and it needed
-scarcely even to delay the siege while the covering
-army advanced, because one division of infantry
-might have come up from Madrid, still leaving<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_371"></a>[371]</span>
-two of the finest in the army, and a brigade of cavalry,
-at that capital, which was sufficient, seeing
-that Hill was coming up to Toledo, that Ballesteros’
-disobedience was then unknown, and that the king
-was in no condition to advance before Soult arrived.</p>
-
-<p>The last point to which it is fitting to advert, was
-the stopping too long on the Tormes in hopes of
-fighting in the position of the Arapiles. It was a
-stirring thought indeed for a great mind, and the
-error was brilliantly redeemed, but the remedy does
-not efface the original fault; and this subject leads
-to a consideration, of some speculative interest,
-namely, why Wellington, desirous as he was to
-keep the line of the Tormes, and knowing with
-what difficulty the French fed their large army, did
-not order every thing in his rear to take refuge in
-Ciudad Rodrigo and Almeida, and entrench himself
-on St. Christoval and in Salamanca. Thus
-posted with a bridge-head on the left bank that he
-might operate on either side of the Tormes, he
-might have waited until famine obliged the enemy
-to separate, which would have been in a very few
-days; but perhaps the answer would be that the
-Spaniards had left Ciudad Rodrigo in a defenceless
-state.</p>
-
-<p>Turning now to the French side we shall find that
-they also committed errors.</p>
-
-<p>Souham’s pursuit after the cavalry combat at
-Vente de Pozo was feeble. Wellington, speaking
-of his own army, said, “no troops were ever less
-pressed by an enemy.” The king’s orders were
-however positive not to fight, and as the English
-general continually offered Souham battle
-in strong positions, the man had no power to do
-mischief. Soult’s pursuit of Hill, which was also<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_372"></a>[372]</span>
-remarkably cautious, arose from other motives.
-He was not desirous of a battle, and until the
-Guadarama was passed, Hill had the larger force,
-for then only was the whole French army united.
-The duke of Dalmatia wished to have marched in
-one great mass through La Mancha, leaving only a
-small corps, or a detachment of Suchet’s army, on
-the Cuenca road; but the king united the whole of
-the army of the centre, his own guards and seven
-thousand men of the army of the south, on the
-Cuenca line, and there were no good cross communications
-except by Taracon. Soult therefore advanced
-towards the Tagus with only thirty-five thousand
-men, and from commissariat difficulties and
-other obstacles, he was obliged to move by divisions,
-which followed each other at considerable distances;
-when his advanced guard was at Valdemoro, his rear-guard
-not having reached Ocaña was two marches
-distant. The danger of this movement is evident.
-Hill might have turned and driven him over the
-Tagus; or if his orders had permitted him to act
-offensively at first, he might, after leaving a small
-corps on the Upper Tagus, to watch the king, have
-passed that river at Toledo, and without abandoning
-his line of operations by the valley of the Tagus,
-have attacked Soult while on the march towards
-Ocaña. The latter in despite of his numerous cavalry
-must then have fallen back to concentrate his forces,
-and this would have deranged the whole campaign.</p>
-
-<p>The duke of Dalmatia, who thought Ballesteros
-was with Hill, naturally feared to press his adversary
-under such a vicious disposition of the French
-army, neither could that disposition be changed
-during the operation, because of the want of good
-cross roads, and because Souham had been taught<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_373"></a>[373]</span>
-that the king would meet him on the side of Guadalaxara.
-In fine Soult had learned to respect his
-adversaries, and with the prudence of a man whose
-mental grasp embraced the whole machinery of the
-war, he avoided a doubtful battle where a defeat
-would, from the unsettled state of the French
-affairs, have lost the whole Peninsula. Wellington
-had Portugal to fall back upon, but the French
-armies must have gone behind the Ebro.</p>
-
-<p>These seem to be the leading points of interest
-in this campaign, but it will not be uninteresting
-to mark the close affinities between Wellington’s retreat
-and that of sir John Moore. This last-named
-general marched from Portugal into the north of
-Spain, with the political view of saving Andalusia,
-by drawing on himself the French power, having
-before-hand declared that he expected to be overwhelmed.
-In like manner Wellington moved into
-the same country, to deliver Andalusia, and thus
-drew on himself the whole power of the enemy;
-like Moore declaring also before-hand, that the political
-object being gained, his own military position
-would be endangered. Both succeeded, and
-both were, as they had foretold, overwhelmed by
-superior forces. Moore was to have been aided by
-Romana’s Spanish army, but he found it a burthen;
-so also Wellington was impeded, not assisted, by the
-Gallicians, and both generals were without money.</p>
-
-<p>Moore having approached Soult, and menaced
-Burgos, was forced to retreat, because Napoleon
-moved from Madrid on his right flank and towards
-his rear. Wellington having actually besieged Burgos
-was obliged to raise the siege and retire, lest the
-king, coming through Madrid, should pass his right
-flank and get into his rear. Moore was only followed<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_374"></a>[374]</span>
-by Soult to the Esla, Wellington was only followed
-by Souham to the Duero. The one general looked
-to the mountains of Gallicia for positions which he
-could maintain, but the apathy of the Spanish people,
-in the south, permitted Napoleon to bring up
-such an overwhelming force that this plan could
-not be sustained; the other general had the same
-notion with respect to the Duero, and the defection
-of Ballesteros enabled the king to bring up such a
-power that further retreat became necessary.</p>
-
-<p>Moore’s soldiers at the commencement of the operation
-evinced want of discipline, they committed
-great excesses at Valderas, and disgraced themselves
-by their inebriety at Bembibre and Villa
-Franca. In like manner Wellington’s soldiers
-broke the bonds of discipline, disgraced themselves
-by drunkenness at Torquemada and on the
-retreat from the Puente Larga to Madrid; and they
-committed excesses every where. Moore stopped
-behind the Esla river to check the enemy, to restore
-order, and to enable his commissariat to remove
-the stores; Wellington stopped behind the Carrion
-for exactly the same purposes. The one general
-was immediately turned on his left, because the
-bridge of Mancilla was abandoned unbroken to
-Franceschi; the other general was also turned on his
-left, because the bridge of Palencia was abandoned
-unbroken to Foy.</p>
-
-<p>Moore’s retreat was little short of three hundred
-miles; Wellington’s was nearly as long, and both
-were in the winter season. The first halted at
-Benevente, at Villa Franca, and at Lugo; the last
-halted at Duenas, at Cabeçon, Tordesillas, and
-Salamanca. The principal loss sustained by the
-one, was in the last marches between Lugo and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_375"></a>[375]</span>
-Coruña; so also the principal loss sustained by the
-other, was in the last marches between the Tormes
-and the Agueda. Some of Moore’s generals murmured
-against his proceedings, some of Wellington’s
-generals, as we have seen, went further; the first
-were checked by a reprimand, the second were
-humbled by a sarcasm. Finally both generals
-reproached their armies with want of discipline,
-both attributed it to the negligence of the officers
-generally, and in both cases the justice of the
-reproaches was proved by the exceptions. The
-reserve and the foot-guards in Moore’s campaign,
-the light division and the foot-guards in Wellington’s,
-gave signal proof, that it was negligence of
-discipline, not hardships, though the latter were
-severe in both armies, that caused the losses. Not
-that I would be understood to say that those
-regiments only preserved order; it is certain that
-many others were eminently well conducted, but
-those were the troops named as exceptions at the
-time.</p>
-
-<p>Such were the resemblances of these two retreats.
-The differences were, that Moore had only twenty-three
-thousand men in the first part of his retreat,
-and only nineteen thousand in the latter part,
-whereas Wellington had thirty-three thousand in
-the first part of his retreat, and sixty-eight thousand
-men in the latter part. Moore’s army were all of one
-nation and young soldiers, Wellington’s were of different
-nations but they were veterans. The first
-marched through mountains, where the weather was
-infinitely more inclement than in the plains, over
-which the second moved, and until he reached the
-Esla, Moore’s flank was quite exposed, whereas
-Wellington’s flank was covered by Hill’s army until<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_376"></a>[376]</span>
-he gained the Tormes. Wellington with veteran
-troops was opposed to Souham, to Soult, to the king,
-and to Jourdan, men not according in their views,
-and their whole army, when united, did not exceed
-the allies by more than twenty thousand men. Moore
-with young soldiers was at first opposed to four times,
-and latterly to three times his own numbers, for it is
-remarkable, that the French army assembled at Astorga
-was above eighty thousand, including ten thousand
-cavalry, which is nearly the same as the number assembled
-against Wellington on the Tormes; but Moore
-had little more than twenty thousand men to oppose
-to this overwhelming mass, and Wellington had
-nearly seventy thousand. The Partidas abounded at
-the time of Wellington’s retreat, they were unknown
-at the time of Moore’s retreat, and this general was
-confronted by Napoleon, who, despotic in command,
-was also unrivalled in skill, in genius, and in vigour.
-Wellington’s army was not pressed by the enemy,
-and he made short marches, yet he lost more stragglers
-than Moore, who was vigorously pressed,
-made long marches, and could only secure an
-embarkation by delivering a battle, in which he
-died most honourably. His character was immediately
-vilified. Wellington was relieved from his
-pursuers by the operation of famine, and had therefore
-no occasion to deliver a battle, but he also was
-vilified at the time, with equal injustice; and if he
-had then died it would have been with equal malice.
-His subsequent successes, his great name and power,
-have imposed silence upon his detractors, or converted
-censure into praise, for it is the nature of
-mankind, especially of the ignorant, to cling to
-fortune.</p>
-
-<p>Moore attributed his difficulties to the apathy of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_377"></a>[377]</span>
-the Spaniards; his friends charged them on the
-incapacity of the English government. Wellington
-attributed his ultimate failure to the defection of
-Ballesteros; his brother, in the House of Lords,
-charged it on the previous contracted policy of
-Perceval’s government, which had crippled the
-general’s means; and certainly Wellington’s reasoning,
-relative to Ballesteros, was not quite sound.
-That general, he said, might either have forced
-Soult to take the circuitous route of Valencia,
-Requeña, and Cuenca, or leave a strong corps in
-observation, and then Hill might have detached
-men to the north. He even calculated upon Ballesteros
-being able to stop both Soult and Souham,
-altogether; for as the latter’s operations were prescribed
-by the king, and dependent upon his proceedings,
-Wellington judged that he would have
-remained tranquil if Joseph had not advanced.
-This was the error. Souham’s despatches<span class="sidenote"><a href="#NO_VIII_A">Appendix, No. 8, A.</a></span>
-clearly shew, that the king’s instructions checked,
-instead of forwarding his movements; and that
-it was his intention to have delivered battle
-at the end of four days, without regard to the
-king’s orders; and such was his force, that Wellington
-admitted his own inability to keep the field.
-Ballesteros’ defection therefore cannot be pleaded
-in bar of all further investigation; but whatever
-failures there were, and however imposing the
-height to which the English general’s reputation
-has since attained, this campaign, including the
-sieges of Ciudad Rodrigo, Badajos, the forts of
-Salamanca, and of Burgos, the assault of Almaraz,
-and the battle of Salamanca, will probably be considered
-his finest illustration of the art of war.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_378"></a>[378]</span>
-Waterloo may be called a more glorious exploit
-because of the great man who was there vanquished;
-Assye may be deemed a more wonderful action, one
-indeed to be compared with the victory which
-Lucullus gained over Tygranes, but Salamanca
-will always be referred to as the most skilful of
-Wellington’s battles.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_379"></a>[379]</span><br /></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="BOOK_XX">BOOK XX.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<h3 id="CHAPTER_BXX_I">CHAPTER I.</h3>
-
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="sidenote7">1812.</span>
-While the armies were striving, the political
-affairs had become exceedingly complicated and
-unsteady. Their workings were little known or
-observed by the public, but the evils of bad government
-in England, Spain, and Portugal, the incongruous
-alliance of bigoted aristocracy with awakened
-democracy, and the inevitable growth of national
-jealousies as external danger seemed to recede,
-were becoming so powerful, that if relief had not
-been obtained from extraneous events, even the
-vigour of Wellington must have sunk under the
-pressure. The secret causes of disturbance shall
-now be laid bare, and it will then be seen that the
-catastrophe of Napoleon’s Russian campaign was
-absolutely necessary to the final success of the
-British arms in the Peninsula. I speak not of the
-physical power which, if his host had not withered
-on the snowy wastes of Muscovy, the emperor could
-have poured into Spain, but of those moral obstacles,
-which, springing up on every side, corrupted
-the very life-blood of the war.</p>
-
-<p>If Russia owed her safety in some degree to the
-contest in the Peninsula, it is undoubted that the
-fate of the Peninsula was in return, decided on<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_380"></a>[380]</span>
-the plains of Russia; for had the French veterans
-who there perished, returned victorious, the war
-could have been maintained for years in Spain,
-with all its waste of treasures and of blood, to
-the absolute ruin of England, even though her
-army might have been victorious in every battle.
-Yet who shall say with certainty what termination
-any war will ever have? Who shall prophecy of
-an art always varying, and of such intricacy that
-its secrets seem beyond the reach of human intellect?
-What vast preparations, what astonishing
-combinations were involved in the plan, what vigour
-and ability displayed in the execution of Napoleon’s
-march to Moscow! And yet when the winter
-came, only four days sooner than he expected,
-the giant’s scheme seemed a thing for children to
-laugh at!</p>
-
-<p>Nevertheless the political grandeur of that expedition
-will not be hereafter judged from the wild
-triumph of his enemies, nor its military merits from
-the declamation which has hitherto passed as the
-history of the wondrous, though unfortunate enterprise.
-It will not be the puerilities of Labaume,
-of Segur, and their imitators, nor even that splendid
-military and political essay of general Jomini, called
-the “<cite>Life of Napoleon</cite>,” which posterity will accept
-as the measure of a general, who carried four
-hundred thousand men across the Niemen, and a
-hundred and sixty thousand men to Moscow. And
-with such a military providence, with such a vigilance,
-so disposing his reserves, so guarding his
-flanks, so guiding his masses, that while constantly
-victorious in front, no post was lost in his rear, no
-convoy failed, no courier was stopped, not even a
-letter was missing: the communication with his<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_381"></a>[381]</span>
-capital was as regular and certain as if that immense
-march had been but a summer excursion of
-pleasure! However it failed, and its failure was
-the safety of the Peninsula.</p>
-
-<p>In England the retreat from Burgos was viewed
-with the alarm and anger which always accompanies
-the disappointment of high-raised public
-expectation; the people had been taught to believe
-the French weak and dispirited, they saw them so
-strong and daring, that even victory could not
-enable the allies to make a permanent stand beyond
-the frontiers of Portugal. Hence arose murmurs,
-and a growing distrust as to the ultimate
-result, which would not have failed to overturn the
-war faction, if the retreat of the French from Moscow,
-the defection of Prussia, and the strange unlooked-for
-spectacle of Napoleon vanquished, had
-not come in happy time as a counterpoise.</p>
-
-<p>When the parliament met, lord Wellesley undertook,
-and did very clearly show, that if the
-successes in the early part of the year had not
-been, by his brother, pushed to the extent expected,
-and had been followed by important reverses,
-the causes were clearly to be traced to the imbecile
-administration of Mr. Perceval and his coadjutors,
-whose policy he truly characterized as having in it
-“<em>nothing regular but confusion</em>.” With a very accurate
-knowledge of facts he discussed the military
-question, and maintained that twelve thousand infantry
-and three thousand cavalry, added to the
-army in the beginning of the year, would have
-rendered the campaign decisive, because the
-Russian contest, the incapacity of Joseph, and the
-dissentions of the French generals in Spain, had
-produced the most favourable crisis for striking a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_382"></a>[382]</span>
-vital blow at the enemy’s power. The cabinet were
-aware of this, and in good time, but though there
-were abundance of soldiers idling at home, when
-the welfare of the state required their presence in
-the Peninsula, nay, although the ministers had actually
-sent within five thousand as many men as
-were necessary, they had, with the imbecility which
-marked all their proceedings, so contrived, that
-few or none should reach the theatre of war until
-the time for success had passed away. Then touching
-upon the financial question, with a rude hand
-he tore to pieces the minister’s pitiful pretexts, that
-the want of specie had necessarily put bounds to
-their efforts, and that the general himself did not
-complain. “No!” exclaimed lord Wellesley, “he
-does not complain because it is the sacred duty of
-a soldier not to complain. But he does not say
-that with greater means he could not do greater
-things, and his country will not be satisfied if these
-means are withheld by men, who having assumed
-the direction of affairs in such a crisis, have
-only incapacity to plead in extenuation of their
-failures.”</p>
-
-<p>This stern accuser was himself fresh from the
-ministry, versed in state matters, and of unquestionable
-talents; he was well acquainted with the
-actual resources and difficulties of the moment; he
-was sincere in his opinions because he had abandoned
-office rather than be a party to such a
-miserable mismanagement of England’s power; he
-was in fine no mean authority against his former
-colleagues, even though the facts did not so clearly
-bear him out in his views.</p>
-
-<p>That England possessed the troops and that they<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_383"></a>[383]</span>
-were wanted by Wellington is undeniable. Even in
-September there were still between fifty and sixty
-thousand soldiers present under arms at home, and
-that any additional force could have been fed in
-Portugal is equally beyond doubt, because the reserve
-magazines contained provisions for one hundred
-thousand men for nine months. The only question<span class="sidenote">Wellington’s Correspondence, MSS.</span>
-then was the possibility of procuring enough of specie
-to purchase those supplies which could not be had
-on credit. Lord Wellington had indeed made the
-campaign almost without specie, and a small additional
-force would certainly not have overwhelmed
-his resources; but setting this argument aside, what
-efforts, what ability, what order, what arrangements
-were made by the government to overcome
-the difficulties of the time? Was there less extravagance
-in the public offices, the public works,
-public salaries, public contracts? The very snuff-boxes
-and services of plate given to diplomatists,
-the gorgeous furniture of palaces, nay the gaudy
-trappings wasted on Whittingham’s, Roche’s, and
-Downie’s divisions, would almost have furnished the
-wants of the additional troops demanded by lord
-Wellesley. Where were all the millions lavished
-in subsidies to the Spaniards, where the millions
-which South America had transmitted to Cadiz,
-where those sums spent by the soldiers during the
-war? Real money had indeed nearly disappeared
-from England, and a base paper had usurped its
-place; but gold had not disappeared from the
-world, and an able ministry would have found it.
-These men only knew how to squander.</p>
-
-<p>The subsidy granted to Portugal was paid by
-the commercial speculation of lord Wellington<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_384"></a>[384]</span>
-and Mr. Stuart, speculations which also fed the<span class="sidenote">Stuart’s Correspondence, MSS.</span>
-army, saved the whole population of Portugal from
-famine, and prevented the war from stopping in
-1811; and yet so little were the ministers capable
-even of understanding, much less of making such
-arrangements, that they now rebuked their general
-for having adopted them and after their own imbecile
-manner insisted upon a new mode of providing
-supplies. Every movement they made
-proved their incapacity. They had permitted lord
-William Bentinck to engage in the scheme of invading
-Italy when additional troops were wanted
-in Portugal; and they suffered him to bid, in the
-money-market, against lord Wellington, and thus
-sweep away two millions of dollars at an exorbitant
-premium, for a chimera, when the war in the
-Peninsula was upon the point of stopping altogether
-in default of that very money which Wellington
-could have otherwise procured—nay, had
-actually been promised at a reasonable cost. Nor
-was this the full measure of their folly.</p>
-
-<p>Lord Wellesley affirmed, and they were unable to
-deny the fact, that dollars might have been obtained
-from South America to any amount, if the government
-would have consented to pay the market-price
-for them; they would not do it, and yet afterwards
-sought to purchase the same dollars at a higher
-rate in the European markets. He told them, and
-they could not deny it, that they had empowered
-five different agents, to purchase dollars for five different
-services, without any controlling head; that
-these independent agents were bidding against each
-other in every money-market, and the restrictions
-as to the price were exactly in the inverse proportion<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_385"></a>[385]</span>
-to the importance of the service: the agent
-for the troops in Malta was permitted to offer the
-highest price, lord Wellington was restricted to
-the lowest. And besides this folly lord Wellesley
-shewed that they had, under their licensing system,
-permitted French vessels to bring French goods,
-silks and gloves, to England, and to carry bullion
-away in return. Napoleon thus paid his army in
-Spain with the very coin which should have subsisted
-the English troops.</p>
-
-<p>Incapable however as the ministers were of
-making the simplest arrangements; neglecting, as
-they did, the most obvious means of supplying the
-wants of the army; incapable even, as we have
-seen, of sending out a few bales of clothing and
-arms for the Spaniards without producing the utmost
-confusion, they were heedless of the counsels
-of their general, prompt to listen to every intriguing
-adviser, and ready to plunge into the most absurd
-and complicated measures, to relieve that distress
-which their own want of ability had produced.
-When the war with the United States broke out, a
-war provoked by themselves, they suffered the
-Admiralty, contrary to the wishes of Mr. Stuart, to
-reduce the naval force at Lisbon, and to neglect
-Wellington’s express recommendation as to the stationing
-of ships for the protection of the merchantmen
-bringing flour and stores to Portugal. Thus
-the American privateers, being unmolested, run down
-the coast of Africa, intercepted the provision trade
-from the Brazils, which was one of the principal resources
-of the army, and then, emboldened by impunity,
-infested the coast of Portugal, captured
-fourteen ships loaded with flour off the Douro, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_386"></a>[386]</span>
-a large vessel in the very mouth of the Tagus.
-These things happened also when the ministers
-were censuring and interfering with the general’s
-commercial transactions, and seeking to throw the
-feeding of his soldiers into the hands of British
-speculators; as if the supply of an army was like
-that of a common market! never considering that
-they thus made it the merchant’s interest to starve
-the troops with a view to increase profits; never
-considering that it was by that very commerce,
-which they were putting an end to, that the general
-had paid the Portuguese subsidy for them, and had
-furnished his own military chest with specie, when
-their administrative capacity was quite unequal to
-the task.</p>
-
-<p>Never was a government better served than the
-British government was by lord Wellington and
-Mr. Stuart. With abilities, vigilance, and industry
-seldom equalled, they had made themselves masters
-of all that related to the Portuguese policy, whether
-foreign or domestic, military, or civil, or judicial.
-They knew all the causes of mischief, they had
-faithfully represented them both to the Portuguese
-and British governments, and had moreover devised
-effectual remedies. But the former met them with
-the most vexatious opposition, and the latter, neglecting
-their advice, lent themselves to those foolish
-financial schemes which I have before touched upon
-as emanating from Mr. Villiers, Mr. Vansittart, and
-the count of Funchal. The first had been deficient
-as an ambassador and statesman, the second was
-universally derided as a financier, and the third,
-from his long residence in London, knew very little
-of the state of Portugal, had derived that little from<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_387"></a>[387]</span>
-the information of his brother, the restless Principal
-Souza, and in all his schemes had reference only to
-his own intrigues in the Brazils. Their plans were
-necessarily absurd. Funchal revived the old project
-of an English loan, and in concert with his coadjutors
-desired to establish a bank after the manner of the
-English institution; and they likewise advanced a
-number of minor details and propositions, most of
-which had been before suggested by Principal
-Souza and rejected by lord Wellington, and all of
-which went to evade, not to remedy the evils. Finally
-they devised, and the English cabinet actually entertained
-the plan, of selling the crown and church property
-of Portugal. This spoliation of the Catholic
-church was to be effected by commissioners, one of
-whom was to be Mr. Sydenham, an Englishman and
-a Protestant; and as it was judged that the pope
-would not readily yield his consent, they resolved
-to apply to his nuncio, who being in their power
-they expected to find more pliable.</p>
-
-<p>Having thus provided for the financial difficulties
-of Portugal, the ministers turned their attention to
-the supply of the British army, and in the same
-spirit concocted what they called a modified system
-of requisitions after the manner of the French
-armies! Their speeches, their manifestoes, their
-whole scheme of policy, which in the working had
-nearly crushed the liberties of England and had
-plunged the whole world into war; that policy
-whose aim and scope was, they said, to support
-established religion, the rights of monarchs, and the
-independence of nations, was now disregarded or
-forgotten. Yes, these men, to remove difficulties
-caused by their own incapacity and negligence,
-were ready to adopt all that they had before condemned<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_388"></a>[388]</span>
-and reviled in the French; they were eager
-to meddle, and in the most offensive manner, with
-the catholic religion, by getting from the nuncio,
-who was in their power, what they could not get
-from the pope voluntarily; they were ready to interfere
-with the rights of the Portuguese crown by
-selling its property, and finally they would have
-adopted that system of requisitions which they had
-so often denounced as rendering the very name of
-France abhorrent to the world.</p>
-
-<p>All these schemes were duly transmitted to lord
-Wellington and to Mr. Stuart, and the former had,
-in the field, to unravel the intricacies, to detect the
-fallacies, and to combat the wild speculations of
-men, who, in profound ignorance of facts, were
-giving a loose to their imaginations on such complicated
-questions of state. It was while preparing
-to fight Marmont that he had to expose the futility
-of relying upon a loan; it was on the heights of
-San Christoval, on the field of battle itself, that he
-demonstrated the absurdity of attempting to establish
-a Portuguese bank; it was in the trenches of
-Burgos that he dissected Funchal’s and Villiers’s
-schemes of finance, and exposed the folly of attempting
-the sale of church property; it was at the termination
-of the retreat that with a mixture of rebuke
-and reasoning he quelled the proposal to live
-by forced requisitions; and on each occasion he
-shewed himself as well acquainted with these subjects
-as he was with the mechanism of armies.</p>
-
-<p>Reform abuses, raise your actual taxes with
-vigour and impartiality, pay your present debt
-before you contract a new one, was his constant
-reply to the propositions for loans. And when the
-English ministers pressed the other plans, which,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_389"></a>[389]</span>
-besides the bank, included a recoinage of dollars
-into cruzados, in other words the depreciation of
-the silver standard, he with an unsparing hand laid
-their folly bare. The military and political state of
-Portugal he said was such that no man in his senses,
-whether native or foreigner, would place his capital
-where he could not withdraw it at a moment’s
-notice. When Massena invaded that country unreasonable
-despondency had prevailed amongst the
-ministers, and now they seemed to have a confidence
-as wild as their former fear; but he who
-knew the real state of affairs; he who knew the
-persons that were expected to advance money; he
-who knew the relative forces of the contending
-armies, the advantages and disadvantages attending
-each; he who knew the absolute weakness of the
-Portuguese frontier as a line of defence, could only
-laugh at the notion that the capitalists would take
-gold out of their own chests to lodge it in the chests
-of the bank and eventually in those of the Portuguese
-treasury, a treasury deservedly without credit.
-The French armies opposed to him in the field (he
-was then on San Christoval) were, he said, just
-double his own strength, and a serious accident to
-Ballesteros, a rash general with a bad army, would
-oblige the Anglo-Portuguese force to retire into
-Portugal and the prospects of the campaign would
-vanish; and this argument left out of the question
-any accident which might happen to himself or
-general Hill. Portugal would, he hoped, be saved
-but its security was not such as these visionaries
-would represent it.</p>
-
-<p>But they had proposed also a British security,
-in jewels, for the capital of their bank, and their
-reasonings on this head were equally fallacious.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_390"></a>[390]</span>
-This security was to be supported by collecting the
-duties on wines, exported from Portugal to England,
-and yet they had not even ascertained whether
-the existence of these duties was conformable
-to the treaty with England. Then came the former
-question. Would Great Britain guarantee the capital
-of the subscribers whether Portugal was lost or
-saved? If the country should be lost, the new
-possessors would understand the levying the duties
-upon wines as well as the old; would England
-make her drinkers of port pay two duties, the one
-for the benefit of the bank capitalists, the other for
-the benefit of the French conquerors? If all these
-difficulties could be got over, a bank would be the
-most efficacious mode in which England could use
-her credit for the benefit of Portugal; but all the
-other plans proposed were mere spendthrift schemes
-to defray the expenses of the war, and if the English
-government could descend to entertain them
-they would fail, because the real obstacle, scarcity
-of specie, would remain.</p>
-
-<p>A nation desirous of establishing public credit
-should begin, he said, by acquiring a revenue equal
-to its fixed expenditure, and must manifest an inclination
-to be honest by performing its engagements
-with respect to public debts. This maxim
-he had constantly enforced to the Portuguese government,
-and if they had minded it, instead of
-trusting to the fallacious hope of getting loans in
-England, the deficiency of their revenue would have
-been made up, without imposing new taxes, and
-even with the repeal of many which were oppressive
-and unjust. The fair and honest collection of
-taxes, which ought to exist, would have been sufficient.
-For after protracted and unsparing exertions,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_391"></a>[391]</span>
-and by refusing to accept their paper money on any
-other condition in his commissariat transactions, he
-had at last forced the Portuguese authorities to pay
-the interest of that paper and of their exchequer
-bills, called “<i lang="pt" xml:lang="pt">Apolocies grandes</i>,” and the effect had
-been to increase the resources of the government
-though the government had even in the execution
-evinced its corruption. Then showing in detail how
-this benefit had been produced he traced the mischief
-created by men whom he called the <em>sharks</em> of
-Lisbon and other great towns, meaning speculators,
-principally Englishmen, whose nefarious cupidity
-led them to cry down the credit of the
-army-bills, and then purchase them, to the injury
-of the public and of the poor people who furnished
-the supplies.</p>
-
-<p>A plan of recoining the Spanish dollars and so
-gaining eight in the hundred of pure silver which
-they contained above that of the Portuguese cruzado,
-he treated as a fraud, and a useless one. In
-Lisbon, where the cruzado was current, some gain
-might perhaps be made; but it was not even there
-certain, and foreigners, Englishmen and Americans,
-from whom the great supplies were purchased,
-would immediately add to their prices in proportion
-to the deterioration of the coin. Moreover the
-operations and expenditure of the army were not
-confined to Lisbon, nor even to Portugal, and the
-cruzado would not pass for its nominal value in
-Spain; thus instead of an advantage, the greatest inconvenience
-would result from a scheme at the best
-unworthy of the British government. In fine the
-reform of abuses, the discontinuance of useless expenses,
-economy and energy were the only remedies.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_392"></a>[392]</span></p>
-
-<p>Such was his reasoning but it had little effect on
-his persecutors; for when his best men were falling
-by hundreds, his brightest visions of glory fading
-on the smoky walls of Burgos, he was again
-forced to examine and refute anew, voluminous
-plans of Portuguese finance, concocted by Funchal
-and Villiers, with notes by Vansittart. All the old
-schemes of the Principal Souza, which had been so
-often before analyzed and rejected as impracticable,
-were revived with the addition of a mixed Anglo-Portuguese
-commission for the sale of the crown and
-church lands. And these projects were accompanied
-with complaints that frauds had been practised on
-the custom-house, and violence used towards the inhabitants
-by the British commissaries, and it was insinuated
-such misconduct had been the real cause of
-the financial distresses of Portugal. The patient
-industry of genius was never more severely taxed.</p>
-
-<p>Wellington began by repelling the charges of
-exactions and frauds, as applied to the army; he
-showed that to reform the custom-house so as to
-prevent frauds, had been his unceasing recommendation
-to the Portuguese government; that he had
-as repeatedly, and in detail, shewed the government,
-how to remedy the evils they complained of, how
-to increase their customs, how to levy their taxes,
-how in fine to arrange their whole financial system in
-a manner that would have rendered their revenues
-equal to their expenses, and without that oppression
-and injustice which they were in the habit of practising;
-for the extortions and violence complained
-of, were not perpetrated by the English but by the
-Portuguese commissariat, and yet the troops of that
-nation were starving. Having exposed Funchal’s
-ignorance of financial facts in detail, and challenged<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_393"></a>[393]</span>
-him to the proof of the charges against the British
-army, he entered deeply into the consideration of
-the great question of the sale of the crown and church
-lands, which it had been proposed to substitute for
-that economy and reform of abuses which he so
-long, so often, and so vainly had pressed upon the
-regency. The proposal was not quite new. “I have
-already,” he observed, “had before me a proposition
-for the sale or rather transfer, to the creditors of the
-‘<em>Junta de Viveres</em>’ of crown lands; but these were
-the uncultivated lands in Alemtejo, and I pointed
-out to the government the great improbability
-that any body would take such lands in payment,
-and the injury that would be done to the public
-credit by making the scheme public if not likely to
-be successful. My opinion is that there is nobody
-in Portugal possessed of capital who entertains, or
-who ought to entertain, such an opinion of the state
-of affairs in the Peninsula, as to lay out his money
-in the purchase of crown lands. The loss of a battle,
-not in the Peninsula even, but elsewhere, would
-expose his estate to confiscation, or at all events to
-ruin by a fresh incursion of the enemy. Even if
-any man could believe that Portugal is secure
-against the invasion of the enemy, and his estate
-and person against the ‘<em>violence, exactions, and
-frauds</em>’ (these were Funchal’s words respecting the
-allied army) of the enemy, he is not, during the
-existence of the war, according to the Conde de
-Funchal’s notion, exempt from those evils from his
-own countrymen and their allies. Try this experiment,
-offer the estates of the crown for sale, and it
-will be seen whether I have formed a correct judgment
-on this subject.” Then running with a rapid
-hand over many minor though intricate fallacies<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_394"></a>[394]</span>
-for raising the value of the Portuguese paper-money,
-he thus treated the great question of the
-church lands.</p>
-
-<p>First, as in the case of crown lands, there would
-be no purchasers, and as nothing could render the
-measure palatable to the clergy, the influence of
-the church would be exerted against the allies,
-instead of being, as hitherto, strongly exerted in
-their favour. It would be useless if the experiment
-of the crown lands succeeded, and if that failed the
-sale of church lands could not succeed; but the
-attempt would alienate the good wishes of a very
-powerful party in Spain, as well as in Portugal.
-Moreover if it should succeed, and be honestly
-carried into execution, it would entail a burthen on
-the finances of five in the hundred, on the purchase-money,
-for the support of the ecclesiastical owners
-of the estates. The best mode of obtaining for the
-state eventually the benefit of the church property,
-would be to prevent the monasteries and nunneries
-from receiving novices, and thus, in the course of
-time, the pope might be brought to consent to the sale
-of the estates, or the nation might assume possession
-when the ecclesiastical corporations thus became extinct.
-He however thought that it was no disadvantage
-to Spain or Portugal, that large portions
-of land should be held by the church. The bishops
-and monks were the only proprietors who lived on
-their estates, and spent the revenues amongst the
-labourers by whom those revenues had been produced;
-and until the habits of the new landed
-proprietors changed, the transfer of the property in
-land from the clergy to the laymen would be a
-misfortune.</p>
-
-<p>This memoir, sent from the trenches of Burgos,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_395"></a>[395]</span>
-quashed Funchal’s projects; but that intriguer’s
-object was not so much to remove financial difficulties,
-as to get rid of his brother’s opponents in
-the regency by exciting powerful interests against
-them; wherefore failing in this proposal, he ordered
-Redondo, now marquis of Borba, the minister of
-finance, to repair to the Brazils, intending to supply
-his place with one of his own faction. Wellington
-and Stuart were at this time doggedly opposed by
-Borba, but as the credit of the Portuguese treasury
-was supported by his character for probity, they
-forbade him to obey the order, and represented
-the matter so forcibly to the prince regent, that
-Funchal was severely reprimanded for his audacity.</p>
-
-<p>It was amidst these vexations that Wellington
-made his retreat, and in such destitution that he
-declared all former distress for money had been
-slight in comparison of his present misery. So
-low were the resources, that British naval stores
-had been trucked for corn in Egypt; and the English
-ministers, finding that Russia, intent upon pushing
-her successes, was gathering specie from all quarters,
-desired Mr. Stuart to prevent the English and
-American captains of merchant vessels from carrying
-coin away from Lisbon; a remedial measure,
-indicating their total ignorance of the nature of
-commerce. It was not attempted to be enforced.
-Then also they transmitted their plan of supplying
-the English army by requisitions on the country,
-a plan the particulars of which may be best gathered
-from the answers to it.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Stuart, firm in opposition, shortly observed
-that it was by avoiding and reprobating such a
-system, although pursued alike by the natives and
-by the enemy, that the British character, and credit,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_396"></a>[396]</span>
-had been established so firmly as to be of the
-greatest use in the operations of the war. Wellington
-entered more deeply into the subject.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing, he said, could be procured from the
-country in the mode proposed by the ministers’
-memoir, unless resort was also had to the French
-mode of enforcing their requisitions. The proceedings
-of the French armies were misunderstood.
-It was not true, as supposed in the memoir, that
-the French never paid for supplies. They levied
-contributions where money was to be had, and with
-this paid for provisions in other parts; and when
-requisitions for money or clothing were made,
-they were taken on account of the regular contributions
-due to the government. They were indeed
-heavier than even an usurping government was
-entitled to demand, still it was a regular government
-account, and it was obvious the British army
-could not have recourse to a similar plan without
-depriving its allies of their own legitimate
-resources.</p>
-
-<p>The requisitions were enforced by a system of
-terror. A magistrate was ordered to provide for
-the troops, and was told that the latter would, in
-case of failure, take the provisions and punish the
-village or district in a variety of ways. Now were
-it expedient to follow this mode of requisition there
-must be two armies, one to fight the enemy and
-one to enforce the requisitions, for the Spaniards
-would never submit to such proceedings without
-the use of force. The conscription gave the French
-armies a more moral description of soldiers, but
-even if this second army was provided, the British
-troops could not be trusted to inflict an exact
-measure of punishment on a disobedient village,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_397"></a>[397]</span>
-they would plunder it as well as the others readily
-enough, but their principal object would be to get
-at and drink as much liquor as they could, and then
-to destroy as much valuable property as should fall
-in their way; meanwhile the objects of their mission,
-the bringing of supplies to the army and the
-infliction of an exact measure of punishment on the
-magistrates or district would not be accomplished at
-all. Moreover the holders of supplies in Spain being
-unused to commercial habits, would regard payment
-for these requisitions by bills of any description,
-to be rather worse than the mode of contribution
-followed by the French, and would resist it as forcibly.
-And upon such a nice point did the war
-hang, that if they accepted the bills, and were once
-to discover the mode of procuring cash for them by
-discounting high, it would be the most fatal blow
-possible to the credit and resources of the British
-army in the Peninsula. The war would then soon
-cease.</p>
-
-<p>The memoir asserted that sir John Moore had
-been well furnished with money, and that nevertheless
-the Spaniards would not give him provisions;
-and this fact was urged as an argument for enforcing
-requisitions. But the assertion that Moore was
-furnished with money, which was itself the index to
-the ministers’ incapacity, Wellington told them was
-not true. “Moore,” he said, “had been even worse
-furnished than himself; that general had borrowed
-a little, a very little money at Salamanca, but he had
-no regular supply for the military chest until the
-army had nearly reached Coruña; and the Spaniards
-were not very wrong in their reluctance to meet his
-wants, for the debts of his army were still unpaid in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_398"></a>[398]</span>
-the latter end of 1812.” In fine there was no mode
-by which supplies could be procured from the
-country without payment on the spot, or soon after
-the transaction, except by prevailing on the Spanish
-government to give the English army a part of the
-government contributions, and a part of the revenues
-of the royal domains, to be received from the people
-in kind at a reasonable rate. This had been already
-done by himself in the province of Salamanca with
-success, and the same system might be extended to
-other provinces in proportion as the legitimate
-government was re-established. But this only met
-a part of the evil, it would indeed give some supplies,
-cheaper than they could otherwise be procured, yet
-they must afterwards be paid for at Cadiz in specie,
-and thus less money would come into <ins class="corr" id="tn-398" title="Transcriber’s Note—Original text: 'the militaay chest'">
-the military chest</ins>, which, as before noticed, was only supported
-by the mercantile speculations of the general.</p>
-
-<p>Such were the discussions forced upon Wellington
-when all his faculties were demanded on the
-field of battle, and such was the hardiness of his
-intellect to sustain the additional labour. Such also
-were the men calling themselves statesmen who then
-wielded the vast resources of Great Britain. The
-expenditure of that country for the year 1812, was
-above one hundred millions, the ministers who
-controuled it, were yet so ignorant of the elementary
-principles of finance, as to throw upon their general,
-even amidst the clangor and tumult of battle, the task
-of exposing such fallacies. And to reduce these persons
-from the magnitude of statesmen to their natural
-smallness of intriguing debaters is called political
-prejudice! But though power may enable men to
-trample upon reason for a time with impunity, they<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_399"></a>[399]</span>
-cannot escape her ultimate vengeance, she reassumes
-her sway and history delivers them to the justice of
-posterity.</p>
-
-<p>Perverse as <ins class="corr" id="tn-399" title="Transcriber’s Note—Original text: 'the preceedings of'">
-the proceedings of</ins> the English ministers
-were, those of the Portuguese and Spanish
-governments were not less vexatious; and at this time
-the temper of the Spanish rulers was of infinite importance
-because of the misfortunes which had
-befallen the French emperor. The opportunity
-given to strike a decisive blow at his power in the
-Peninsula demanded an early and vigorous campaign
-in Spain, and the experience of 1812 had
-taught Wellington, that no aid could be derived
-from the Spaniards unless a change was made in their
-military system. Hence the moment he was assured
-that the French armies had taken winter-quarters, he
-resolved before all other matters, in person to urge
-upon the Cortez the necessity of giving him the real as
-well as the nominal command of their troops, seeing
-that without an immediate reformation the Spanish
-armies could not take the field in due season.</p>
-
-<p>During the past campaign, and especially after
-the Conde de Abispal, indignant at the censure
-passed in the Cortez on his brother’s conduct at
-Castalla, had resigned, the weakness of the Spanish
-government had become daily more deplorable;
-nothing was done to ameliorate the military system;
-an extreme jealousy raged between the Cortez and
-the regency; and when the former offered lord
-Wellington the command of their armies, Mr.
-Wellesley advised him to accept it, not so much in
-the hope of effecting any beneficial change, as to
-offer a point upon which the Spaniards who were
-still true to the English alliance and to the aristocratic
-cause might rally in case of reverse. The<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_400"></a>[400]</span>
-disobedience of Ballesteros had been indeed promptly
-punished; but the vigour of the Cortez on that occasion,
-was more the result of offended pride than
-any consideration of sound policy, and the retreat of
-the allies into Portugal was the signal for a renewal
-of those dangerous intrigues, which the battle of
-Salamanca had arrested without crushing.</p>
-
-<p>Lord Wellington reached Cadiz on the 18th of
-December, he was received without enthusiasm, yet
-with due honour, and his presence seemed agreeable
-both to the Cortes and to the people; the passions
-which actuated the different parties in the state
-subsided for the moment, and the ascendency of his
-genius was so strongly felt, that he was heard with
-patience, even when in private he strongly urged the
-leading men to turn their attention entirely to the
-war, to place in abeyance their factious disputes
-and above all things not to put down the inquisition
-lest they should drive the powerful church party
-into the arms of the enemy. His exhortation upon
-this last point, had indeed no effect save to encourage
-the Serviles to look more to England, yet it
-did not prevent the Cortez yielding to him the
-entire controul of fifty thousand men which were to
-be paid from the English subsidy; they promised also
-that the commanders should not be removed, nor any
-change made in the organization or destination of
-such troops without his consent.</p>
-
-<p>A fresh organization of the Spanish forces now
-had place. They were divided into four armies
-and two reserves.</p>
-
-<p>The Catalans formed the first army.</p>
-
-<p>Elio’s troops including the divisions of Duran,
-Bassecour, and Villa Campa, received the name of
-the second army.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_401"></a>[401]</span></p>
-
-<p>The forces in the Morena, formerly under Ballesteros,
-were constituted the third army, under Del
-Parque.</p>
-
-<p>The troops of Estremadura, Leon, Gallicia, and
-the Asturias, including Morillo’s, Penne Villemur’s,
-Downie’s, and Carlos d’España’s separate divisions,
-were called the fourth army, and given to Castaños,
-whose appointment to Catalonia was cancelled, and
-his former dignity of captain-general in Estremadura
-and Gallicia restored. The Partidas of Longa,
-Mina, Porlier, and the other chiefs in the northern
-provinces were afterwards united to this army as
-separate divisions.</p>
-
-<p>The conde d’Abispal, made captain-general of
-Andalusia, commanded the first reserve, and Lacy
-recalled from Catalonia, where he was replaced by
-Copons, was ordered to form a second reserve in the
-neighbourhood of San Roque. Such were the new
-dispositions, but when Wellington had completed
-this important negociation with the Spanish government
-some inactivity was for the first time discovered
-in his own proceedings. His stay was a little prolonged
-without apparent reason, and it was whispered
-that if he resembled Cæsar, Cadiz could
-produce a Cleopatra; but whether true or not, he
-soon returned to the army, first however visiting
-Lisbon where he was greeted with extraordinary
-honours, and the most unbounded enthusiasm, especially
-by the people.</p>
-
-<p>His departure from Cadiz was the signal for all
-the political dissentions to break out with more violence
-than before; the dissentions of the liberals
-and serviles became more rancorous, and the executive
-was always on the side of the latter, the
-majority of the cortez on the side of the former;<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_402"></a>[402]</span>
-neither enjoyed the confidence of the people nor of
-the allies, and the intrigues of Carlotta, which never
-ceased, advanced towards their completion. A
-strong inclination to make her sole regent was
-manifested, and sir Henry Wellesley, tired of fruitless
-opposition remained neuter, with the approbation
-of his brother. One of the principal causes
-of this feeling for Carlotta, was the violence she
-had shewn against the insurgents of Buenos Ayres,
-and another was the disgust given to the merchants
-of Cadiz, by certain diplomatic measures which
-lord Strangford had held with that revolted state.
-The agents of the princess represented the policy
-of England towards the Spanish colonies as a
-smuggling policy, and not without truth, for the
-advice of lord Wellington upon that subject had
-been unheeded. Lord Castlereagh had indeed offerred
-a new mediation scheme, whereby the old
-commission was to proceed under the Spanish restriction
-of not touching at Mexico, to which
-country a new mission composed of Spaniards
-was to proceed, accompanied by an English agent
-without any ostensible character. This proposal
-however ended as the others had done, and the
-Spanish jealousy of England increased.</p>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote9">1813. March.</span>
-In the beginning of the year 1813, Carlotta’s
-cause ably and diligently served by Pedro Souza,
-had gained a number of adherents even amongst the
-liberals in the cortez. She was ready to sacrifice
-even the rights of her posterity, and as she promised
-to maintain all ancient abuses, the clergy
-and the serviles were in no manner averse to her
-success. Meanwhile the decree to abolish the inquisition
-which was become the great test of political
-party, passed on the 7th of March, and the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_403"></a>[403]</span>
-regency were ordered to have it read in the
-churches. The clergy of Cadiz resisted the order,
-and intimated their refusal through the medium
-of a public letter, and the regency encouraged
-them by removing the governor of Cadiz, admiral
-Valdez, a known liberal and opponent of the
-inquisition, appointing in his stead general Alos,
-a warm advocate for that horrid institution. But
-in the vindication of official power the Spaniards
-are generally prompt and decided. On the 8th Augustin
-Arguelles moved, and it was instantly carried,
-that the sessions of the extraordinary cortez should be
-declared permanent, with a view to measures worthy
-of the nation, and to prevent the evils with which
-the state was menaced by the opposition of the
-regency and the clergy to the cortes. A decree
-was then proposed for suppressing the actual regency,
-and replacing it with a provisional government
-to be composed of the three eldest councillors
-of state. This being conformable to the constitution,
-was carried by a majority of eighty-six to
-fifty-eight, while another proposition, that two members
-of the cortez, publicly elected, should be added
-to the regency, was rejected as an innovation, by
-seventy-two against sixty-six. The councillors
-Pedro Agar, Gabriel Ciscar, and the cardinal
-Bourbon, archbishop of Toledo, were immediately
-installed as regents.</p>
-
-<p>A committee which had been appointed to consider
-of the best means of improving a system of
-government felt by all parties to be imperfect, now
-recommended that the cardinal archbishop, who
-was of the blood royal, should be president of the
-regency, leaving Carlotta’s claims unnoticed, and as
-Ciscar and Agar had been formerly removed from<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_404"></a>[404]</span>
-the regency for incapacity, it was generally supposed
-that the intention was to make the archbishop
-in fact sole regent. Very soon however
-Carlotta’s influence was again felt, for a dispute
-having arisen in the cortez between what were
-called the Americans and the Liberals, about the
-annual Acapulco-ship, the former to the number of
-twenty joined the party of the princess, and it
-was resolved that Ruiez Pedron, a distinguished
-opponent of the inquisition, should propose her as
-the head of the regency. They were almost sure
-of a majority, when the scheme transpired, and
-the people, who liked her not, became so furious
-that her partizans were afraid to speak. Then the
-opposite side, fearing her power, proposed on the
-instant that the provisional regency should be made
-permanent which was carried. Thus, chance rather
-than choice ruling, an old prelate and two imbecile
-councillors were entrusted with the government,
-and the intrigues and rancour of the different
-parties exploded more frequently as the pressure
-from above became slight.</p>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote7">May.</span>
-More than all others the clergy were, as might
-be expected, violent and daring, yet the Cortez
-was not to be frightened. Four canons of the
-cathedrals were arrested in May, and orders were
-issued to arrest the archbishop of St. Jago and
-many bishops, because of a pastoral letter they had
-published against the abolition of the inquisition;
-for according to the habits of their craft of all
-sects, they deemed religion trampled under foot
-when the power of levying money and spilling
-blood was denied to ministers professing the faith
-of Christ. Nor amidst these broils did the English
-influence fail to suffer; the democratic spirit<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_405"></a>[405]</span>
-advanced hastily, the Cadiz press teemed with
-writings, intended to excite the people against the
-ultimate designs of the English cabinet, and every
-effort was made to raise a hatred of the British
-general and his troops. These efforts were not
-founded entirely on falsehoods, and were far from
-being unsuccessful, because the eager desire to
-preserve the inquisition displayed by lord Wellington
-and his brother, although arising from military
-considerations, was too much in accord with the
-known tendency of the English cabinet’s policy, not
-to excite the suspicions of the whole liberal party.</p>
-
-<p>The bishops of Logroño, Mondonedo, Astorga,
-Lugo, and Salamanca, and the archbishop of St.
-Jago were arrested, but several bishops escaped
-into Portugal, and were there protected as martyrs
-to the cause of legitimacy and despotism. The
-bishop of Orense and the ex-regent Lardizabal had
-before fled, the latter to Algarve, the former to the
-Tras os Montes, from whence he kept up an active
-intercourse with Gallicia, and the Cortez were far
-from popular there; indeed the flight of the bishops
-created great irritation in every part of Spain, for
-the liberal party of the Cortez was stronger in the
-Isla than in other parts, and by a curious anomaly
-the officers and soldiers all over Spain were generally
-their partizans while the people were generally
-the <ins class="corr" id="tn-405" title="Transcriber’s Note—Original text: 'partisans of the'">
-partizans of the</ins> clergy. Nevertheless the
-seeds of freedom, though carelessly sown by the
-French on one side, and by the Cortez on the other,
-took deep root, and have since sprung up into
-strong plants in due time to burgeon and bear
-fruit.</p>
-
-<p>When the bishops fled from Spain, Gravina, the
-pope’s Nuncio assumed such a tone of hostility,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_406"></a>[406]</span>
-that notwithstanding the good offices of sir Henry
-Wellesley, which were for some time successful in
-screening him from the vengeance of the Cortez,
-the latter, encouraged by the English newspapers,
-finally dismissed him and sequestered his benefices.
-He also took refuge in Portugal, and like the rest
-of the expelled clergy, sought by all means to
-render the proceedings of the Cortez odious in
-Spain. He formed a strict alliance with the Portuguese
-nuncio, Vicente Machiechi, and working
-together with great activity, they interfered, not
-with the concerns of Spain only, but with the
-Catholics in the British army, and even extended
-their intrigues to Ireland. Hence, as just and
-honest government had never formed any part of
-the English policy towards that country, alarm
-pervaded the cabinet, and the nuncio, protected
-when opposed to the Cortez, was now considered a
-very troublesome and indiscreet person.</p>
-
-<p>Such a state of feud could not last long without
-producing a crisis, and one of a most formidable
-and decisive nature was really at hand. Already
-many persons in the Cortez held secret intercourse
-with Joseph, in the view of acknowledging
-his dynasty, on condition that he would accede to the
-general policy of the Cortez in civil government;
-that monarch had as we have seen organized a
-large native force, and the coasts of Spain and
-Portugal swarmed with French privateers manned
-with Spanish seamen. The victory at Salamanca
-had withered these resources for the moment, but
-Wellington’s failure at Burgos and retreat into Portugal
-again revived them, and at the same time
-gave a heavy shock to public confidence in the
-power of England, a shock which nothing but the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_407"></a>[407]</span>
-misfortunes of Napoleon in Russia could have prevented
-from being fatal.</p>
-
-<p>The Emperor indeed with that wonderful intellectual
-activity and energy which made him the
-foremost man of the world, had raised a fresh army
-and prepared once more to march into the heart of
-Germany, yet to do this he was forced to withdraw
-such numbers of old soldiers from Spain that the
-French army could no longer hope permanently to
-act on the offensive. This stayed the Peninsula
-cause upon the very brink of a precipice, for in
-that very curious, useful, and authentic work, called
-“<em>Bourrienne and his errors</em>,” it appears that early
-in 1813, the ever factious Conde de Montijo, then
-a general in Elio’s army, had secretly made proposals
-to pass over, with the forces under his command,
-to the king; and soon afterwards the whole
-army of Del Parque, having advanced into La
-Mancha, made offers of the same nature.</p>
-
-<p>They were actually in negociation with Joseph,
-when the emperor’s orders obliged the French
-army to abandon Madrid, and take up the line of
-the Duero. Then the Spaniards advertised of the
-French weakness, feared to continue their negociations,
-Wellington soon afterwards advanced, and
-as this feeling in favour of the intrusive monarch
-was certainly not general, the resistance to the
-invaders revived with the successes of the British
-general. But if instead of diminishing his forces,
-Napoleon, victorious in Russia, had strengthened
-them, this defection would certainly have taken
-place, and would probably have been followed by
-others. The king at the head of a Spanish army
-would then have reconquered Andalusia, Wellington
-would have been confined to the defence of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_408"></a>[408]</span>
-Portugal, and it is scarcely to be supposed that
-England would have purchased the independence
-of that country with her own permanent ruin.</p>
-
-<p>This conspiracy is not related by me with entire
-confidence, because no trace of the transaction is to
-be found in the correspondence of the king taken
-at Vittoria. Nevertheless there are abundant proofs
-that the work called “<em>Bourrienne and his errors</em>,”
-inasmuch as it relates to Joseph’s transactions in
-Spain, is accurately compiled from that monarch’s
-correspondence. Many of his papers taken at Vittoria
-were lost or abstracted at the time, and as in
-a case involving so many persons’ lives, he would
-probably have destroyed the proofs of a conspiracy
-which had failed, there seems little reason to doubt
-that the general fact is correct. Napoleon also in
-his memoirs, speaks of secret negociations with the
-Cortez about this time, and his testimony is corroborated
-by the correspondence of the British embassy
-at Cadiz, and by the continued intrigues
-against the British influence. The next chapter
-will show that the policy of Spain was not the only
-source of uneasiness to Lord Wellington.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_409"></a>[409]</span><br /></p>
-
-<h3 id="CHAPTER_BXX_II">CHAPTER II.</h3>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="sidenote7">1813.</span>
-Nothing could be more complicated than the
-political state of Portugal with reference to the
-situation of the English general. His object, as I
-have repeatedly shown, was to bring the whole
-resources of the country to bear on the war, but to
-effect this he had to run counter to the habits and
-customs, both of the people and of the government;
-to detect the intrigues of the subordinate
-authorities as well as those of the higher powers; to
-oppose the violence of factious men in the local
-government, and what was still more difficult, to
-stimulate the sluggish apathy and to combat the
-often honest obstinacy of those who were not factious.
-These things he was to effect without the
-power of recompensing or chastising, and even
-while forced to support those who merited rebuke,
-against the still more formidable intriguers of the
-court of Brazil; for the best men of Portugal actually
-formed the local government, and he was not
-foiled so much by the men as by the sluggish system
-which was national, and although dull for good
-purposes, vivacious enough for mischief. The
-dread of ultimate personal consequences attached,
-not to neglect of the war but to any vigorous
-exertions in support of it.</p>
-
-<p>The proceedings of the court of Rio Janeiro were
-not less mischievous, for there the personal intrigues<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_410"></a>[410]</span>
-fostered by the peculiar disposition of the English
-envoy, by the weak yet dogged habits of the
-prince, and by the meddling nature and violent
-passions of the princess Carlotta, stifled all great
-national views. There also the power of the Souza’s,
-a family deficient neither in activity nor in
-talent, was predominant, and the object of all was
-to stimulate the government in Portugal against the
-English general’s military policy. To this he could,
-and had opposed, as we have seen, the power of
-the English government, with some effect at different
-times, but that resource was a dangerous one
-and only to be resorted to in extreme circumstances.
-Hence when to all these things is added a continual
-struggle with the knavery of merchants of all nations,
-his difficulties must be admitted, his indomitable
-vigour, his patience and his extraordinary
-mental resources admired, and the whole scene
-must be considered as one of the most curious and
-instructive lessons in the study of nations.</p>
-
-<p>Wellington was not simply a general who with
-greater or less means, was to plan his military operations
-leaving to others the care of settling the
-political difficulties which might arise. He had,
-coincident with his military duties, to regenerate a
-whole people, to force them against the current of
-their prejudices and usages on a dangerous and
-painful course; he had to teach at once the populace
-and the government, to infuse spirit and order
-without the aid of rewards or punishments, to
-excite enthusiasm through the medium of corrupt
-oppressive institutions, and far from making any
-revolutionary appeal to suppress all tendency towards
-that resource of great minds on the like
-occasions. Thus only could he maintain an army<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_411"></a>[411]</span>
-at all, and as it was beyond the power of man to
-continue such a struggle for any length of time
-he was more than ever anxious to gather strength
-for a decisive blow, which the enemy’s situation
-now rendered possible, that he might free himself
-from the critical and anomalous relation in
-which he stood towards Portugal.</p>
-
-<p>It may indeed be wondered that he so long
-bore up against the encreasing pressure of these
-distracting affairs, and certain it is that more than
-once he was like to yield, and would have yielded
-if fortune had not offered him certain happy military
-chances, and yet such as few but himself could
-have profited from. In 1810, on the ridge of
-Busaco, and in the lines, the military success was
-rather over the Portuguese government than the
-enemy. At Santarem in 1811 the glory of arms
-scarcely compensated for the destitution of the
-troops. At Fuentes Onoro and on the Caya, after
-the second unsuccessful siege of Badajos, the Portuguese
-army had nearly dissolved; and the astonishing
-sieges of Ciudad Rodrigo and Badajos in
-1812, were necessary to save the cause from dying
-of inanition and despair. Even then the early
-deliverance of Andalusia was frustrated, and time,
-more valuable than gold or life, in war, was lost,
-the enemy became the strongest in the field, and
-in despite of the victory of Salamanca, the bad
-effects of the English general’s political situation
-were felt in the repulse from Burgos, and in the
-double retreat from that place and from Madrid.
-Accumulated mischiefs were now to be encountered
-in Portugal.</p>
-
-<p>It has been shown how obstinately the regency
-opposed Wellington’s plans of financial reform, how<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_412"></a>[412]</span>
-they disputed and complained upon every circumstance,
-whether serious or trivial on which a complaint
-could be founded; for thinking Portugal no
-longer in danger they were tired of their British
-allies, and had no desire to aid nor indeed any wish
-to see Spain delivered from her difficulties. They
-designed therefore to harass the English general,
-hoping either to drive him away altogether, or to
-force him, and, through him, his government, to
-grant them loans or new subsidies. But Wellington
-knew that Portugal could, and he was resolved
-it should find resources within itself, wherefore,
-after the battle of Salamanca, when they demanded
-a fresh subsidy he would not listen to them; and
-when they adopted that scheme which I have
-already exposed, of feeding, or rather starving their
-troops, through the medium of a treaty with the
-Spanish government, he checked the shameful and
-absurd plan, by applying a part of the money in
-the chest of aids intended for the civil service to
-the relief of the Portuguese troops. Yet the regency
-did not entirely fail in their object inasmuch
-as many persons dependent upon the subsidy were
-thus deprived of their payments, and their complaints
-hurt the British credit, and reduced the
-British influence with the people whose faithful
-attachment to the alliance no intrigues had hitherto
-been able to shake.</p>
-
-<p>Into every branch of government, however minute,
-the regency now infused their own captious
-and discontented spirit. They complained falsely
-that general Campbell had insulted the nation by
-turning some Portuguese residents publicly out of
-Gibraltar in company with Jews and Moors; they
-refused the wheat which was delivered to them by<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_413"></a>[413]</span>
-lord Wellington in lieu of their subsidy, saying it
-was not fit for food notwithstanding that the English
-troops were then living upon parcels of the
-same grain, that their own troops were glad to get
-it, and that no other was to be had. When a
-wooden jetty was to be thrown in the Tagus for
-the convenience of landing stores, they supported
-one Caldas, a rich proprietor, in his refusal to permit
-the trees, wanted for the purpose, to be felled,
-alledging the rights of property, although he was to
-be paid largely, and although they had themselves
-then, and always, disregarded the rights of property,
-especially when poor men were concerned, seizing
-upon whatever was required either for the public
-service, or for the support of their own irregularities,
-without any payment at all and in shameful violation
-both of law and humanity.</p>
-
-<p>The commercial treaty, and the proceedings of the
-Oporto wine company, an oppressive corporation
-unfair in all its dealings, irresponsible, established
-in violation of that treaty, and supported without
-regard either to the interests of the prince regent
-or his British allies, furnished them with continual
-subjects for disputes, and nothing was too absurd
-or too gross for their interference. Under the management
-of Mr. Stuart who had vigorously enforced
-Wellington’s plans, their paper money had obtained
-a reasonable and encreasing circulation, and their
-custom-house resources had encreased, the expenses
-of their navy and of their arsenal had in some
-degree been reduced; and it was made evident that
-an extensive and vigorous application of the same
-principles would enable them to overcome all their
-financial difficulties; but there were too many personal
-interests, too much shameful profit made<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_414"></a>[414]</span>
-under the abuses to permit such a reform. The
-naval establishment instead of being entirely transferred,
-as Wellington desired, to the Brazils, was
-continued in the Tagus, and with it the arsenal as
-its natural appendage. The infamous Junta de
-Viveres had been suppressed by the prince regent,
-yet the government under the false pretext of paying
-its debts still disbursed above ten thousand
-pounds a month in salaries to men whose offices
-had been formally abolished.</p>
-
-<p>About this time also the opening of the Spanish
-ports in those provinces from whence the enemy had
-been driven, deprived Lisbon of a monopoly of trade
-enjoyed for the last three years, and the regency observing
-the consequent diminution of revenue, with
-inexpressible effrontery insisted that the grain, imported
-by Wellington, by which their army and
-their nation had been saved from famine, and by
-which their own subsidy had been provided, should
-enter the public warehouses under specific regulations
-and pay duty for so doing. So tenaciously
-did they hold to this point that Wellington was
-forced to menace a formal appeal to the English
-cabinet, for he knew that the subordinate officers
-of the government, knavish in the extreme, would
-have sold the secrets of the army magazines to the
-speculators; and the latter, in whose hands the furnishing
-of the army would under the new plan of
-the English ministers be placed, being thus accurately
-instructed of its resources would have regulated their
-supplies with great nicety so as to have famished
-the soldiers, and paralyzed the operations at the
-greatest possible expense.</p>
-
-<p>But the supply of the army under any system
-was now becoming extremely precarious, for besides<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_415"></a>[415]</span>
-the activity of the American privateers English
-ships of war used, at times, to capture the vessels
-secretly employed in bringing provision under
-licenses from Mr. Stuart and Mr. Forster. Nay
-the captain of a Scotch merchant vessel engaged
-in the same trade and having no letter of marque,
-had the piratical insolence to seize in the very
-mouth of the Tagus, and under the Portuguese
-batteries, an American vessel sailing under a license
-from Mr. Forster, and to carry her into Greenock,
-thus violating at once the license of the English
-minister, the independence of Portugal, and the
-general law of nations. Alarm immediately spread
-far and wide amongst the American traders, the
-indignation of the Portuguese government was
-strongly and justly excited, and the matter became
-extremely embarrassing, because no measure of
-punishment could be inflicted without exposing the
-secret of a system which had been the principal
-support of the army. However the Congress soon
-passed an act forbidding neutrals to ship flour in
-the American ports, and this blow, chiefly aimed
-at the Portuguese ships, following upon the non-importation
-act, and being combined with the illegal
-violence of the English vessels, nearly dried up
-this source of supply, and threw the army principally
-upon the Brazil trade, which by the negligence
-of the Admiralty was, as I have before
-noticed, exposed to the enterprize of the United
-States’ privateers.</p>
-
-<p>During Wellington’s absence in Spain the military
-administration of Portugal was necessarily in
-the hands of the regency and all the ancient abuses
-were fast reviving. The army in the field received
-no succours, the field-artillery had entirely disappeared,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_416"></a>[416]</span>
-the cavalry was in the worst condition, the
-infantry was reduced in numbers, the equipments
-of those who remained were scarcely fit for service,
-and the spirit of the men had waned from enthusiasm
-to despondency. There was no money in the
-military chest, no recruits in the dépôts, and the
-transport service was neglected altogether. Beresford’s
-severity had failed to check desertion, because
-want, the parent of crimes, had proved too strong
-for fear; the country swarmed with robbers, and
-as no fault civil or military was punished by the
-regency, every where knaves triumphed over the
-welfare of the nation.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile all persons whose indolence or timidity
-led them to fly from the active defence of
-their country to the Brazils, were there received
-and cherished as martyrs to their personal affections
-for the prince; they were lauded for their opposition
-to the regency, and were called victims to
-the injustice of Beresford, and to the encroachments
-of the English officers. This mischief was accompanied
-by another of greater moment, for the prince
-continually permitted officers possessing family interest
-to retire from active service retaining their
-pay and rank, thus offering a premium for bad
-men to enter the army with the intent of quitting it
-in this disgraceful manner. Multitudes did so, promotion
-became rapid, the nobility whose influence
-over the poor classes was very great, and might
-have been beneficially employed in keeping up the
-zeal of the men, disappeared rapidly from the regiments,
-and the foul stream of knaves and cowards
-thus continually pouring through the military ranks
-destroyed all cohesion and tainted every thing as it
-passed.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_417"></a>[417]</span></p>
-
-<p>Interests of the same nature, prevailing with the
-regency, polluted the civil administration. The rich
-and powerful inhabitants, especially those of the
-great cities, were suffered to evade the taxes and to
-disobey the regulations for drawing forth the resources
-of the country in the military service; and
-during Wellington’s absence in Spain, the English
-under-commissaries, and that retinue of villains
-which invariably gather on the rear of armies, being
-in some measure freed from the immediate dread
-of his vigilance and vigour, violated all the regulations
-in the most daring manner. The poor
-husbandmen were cruelly oppressed, their farming
-animals were constantly carried off to supply food
-for the army, and agriculture was thus stricken at
-the root; the breed of horned cattle and of horses
-had rapidly and alarmingly decreased, and butcher’s
-meat was scarcely to be procured even for
-the troops who remained in Portugal.</p>
-
-<p>These irregularities, joined to the gross misconduct
-of the military detachments and convoys of
-sick men, on all the lines of communication, not
-only produced great irritation in the country but
-offered the means for malevolent and factious persons
-to assail the character and intentions of the
-English general; every where writings and stories
-were circulated against the troops, the real outrages
-were exaggerated, others were invented and
-the drift of all was to render Wellington, and the
-English, odious to the nation at large. Nor was
-this scheme confined to Portugal alone, agents were
-also busy to the same purpose in London, and when
-the enthusiasm, which Wellington’s presence at
-Lisbon had created amongst the people, was known
-at Cadiz, the press there teemed with abuse. Divers<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_418"></a>[418]</span>
-agents of the democratic party in Spain came
-to Lisbon to aid the Portuguese malcontents, writings
-were circulated accusing Wellington of an
-intention to subjugate the Peninsula for his own
-ambitious views, and, as consistency is never regarded
-on such occasions, it was diligently insinuated
-that he encouraged the excesses of his troops
-out of personal hatred to the Portuguese people;
-the old baseness of sending virulent anonymous
-letters to <ins class="corr" id="tn-418" title="Transcriber’s Note—Original text: 'the Englsh general'">
-the English general</ins> was also revived. In
-fine the republican spirit was extending beyond the
-bounds of Spain, and the Portuguese regency, terrified
-at its approach, appealed to Mr. Stuart for the
-assistance of England to check its formidable progress.
-Neither were they wanting to themselves.
-They forbade the Portuguese newspapers to admit
-any observations on the political events in Spain, they
-checked the introduction of Spanish democratic
-publications, they ordered their diplomatists at
-Cadiz to encourage writings of an opposite tendency,
-and to support the election of deputies who
-were known for their love of despotism. This last
-measure was however baffled by the motion of Arguelles,
-already mentioned, which rendered the
-old Cortez permanent; and Mr. Stuart, judging the
-time unfavourable, advised the Portuguese government
-to reserve the exertion of its power against
-the democrats, until the military success which the
-state of the continent, and the weakness of the
-French troops in Spain, promised, should enable
-the victors to put down such doctrines with effect;
-advice which was not unmeaning as I shall have
-occasion hereafter to show.</p>
-
-<p>All these malignant efforts Wellington viewed
-with indifference. “Every leading man,” he said,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_419"></a>[419]</span>
-“was sure to be accused of criminal personal ambition,
-and, if he was conscious of the charge being
-false, the accusation did no harm.” Nevertheless
-his position was thereby rendered more difficult, and
-these intrigues were accompanied by other mischiefs
-of long standing and springing from a different
-source, but even of a more serious character, for
-the spirit of captious discontent had reached the inferior
-magistracy, who endeavoured to excite the
-people against the military generally. Complaints
-came in from all quarters of outrages on the part of
-the troops, some too true, but many of them false,
-or frivolous; and when the English general ordered
-<ins class="corr" id="tn-419" title="Transcriber’s Note—Original text: 'court-martials for'">
-courts-martial for</ins> the trial of the accused, the magistrates
-refused to attend as witnesses, because
-Portuguese custom rendered such an attendance
-degrading, and by Portuguese law a magistrate’s
-written testimony was efficient in courts-martial.
-Wellington in vain assured them that English law
-would not suffer him to punish men upon such testimony;
-in vain he pointed out the mischief which
-must infallibly overwhelm the country if the soldiers
-discovered they might thus do evil with impunity.
-He offered to send in each case, lists of
-Portuguese witnesses required that they might be
-summoned by the native authorities, but nothing
-could overcome the obstinacy of the magistrates;
-they answered that his method was insolent; and
-with a sullen malignity they continued to accumulate
-charges against the troops, to refuse attendance in
-the courts, and to call the soldiers, their own as
-well as the British, “licensed spoliators of the
-community.”</p>
-
-<p>For a time the generous nature of the poor people,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_420"></a>[420]</span>
-resisted all these combining causes of discontent;
-neither real injuries nor the exaggerations, nor
-the falsehoods of those who attempted to stir up
-wrath, produced any visible effect upon the great
-bulk of the population; yet by degrees affection
-for the British cooled, and Wellington expressed
-his fears that a civil war would commence between
-the Portuguese people on the one hand, and the
-troops of both nations on the other. Wherefore
-his activity was redoubled to draw, while he could
-still controul affairs, all the military strength to a
-head, and to make such an irruption into Spain as
-would establish a new base of operations beyond
-the power of such fatal dissensions.</p>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote7">March.</span>
-These matters were sufficiently vexatious and
-alarming, but what made him tremble, was, the
-course, which the misconduct of the Portuguese
-government, and the incapacity of the English
-cabinet, had forced upon the native furnishers of
-the supplies. Those persons, coming in the winter
-to Lisbon to have their bills on the military chest
-paid, could get no money, and in their distress had
-sold the bills to speculators, the Portuguese holders,
-at a discount of fifteen, the Spanish holders
-at a discount of forty in the hundred. The credit
-of the chest immediately fell, prices rose in proportion,
-and as no military enterprize could carry
-the army beyond the flight of this harpy, and no
-revenues could satisfy its craving, the contest must
-have ceased, if Mr. Stuart had not found a momentary
-and partial remedy, by publicly guaranteeing
-the payment of the bills and granting interest until
-they could be taken up. The expense was thus augmented,
-but the increase fell far short of the enhanced<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_421"></a>[421]</span>
-cost of the supplies which had already
-resulted even from this restricted practice of the
-bill-holders, and of two evils the least was chosen.
-It may seem strange that such transactions should
-belong to the history of the military operations in
-the Peninsula, that it should be the general’s instead
-of the minister’s task, to encounter such
-evils, and to find the remedy. Such however was
-the nature of the war, and no adequate notion of
-lord Wellington’s vigorous capacity and Herculean
-labours can be formed, without an intimate knowledge
-of the financial and political difficulties which
-oppressed him, and of which this work has necessarily
-only given an outline.</p>
-
-<p>The disorders of the Portuguese military system
-had brought Beresford back to Lisbon while the
-siege of Burgos was still in progress, and now,
-under Wellington’s direction, he strained every
-nerve to restore the army to its former efficient state.
-To recruit the regiments of the line he disbanded
-all the militia men fit for service, replacing them
-with fathers of families; to restore the field-artillery,
-he embodied all the garrison artillery-men,
-calling out the ordenança gunners to man the fortresses
-and coast-batteries; the worst cavalry regiments
-he reduced to render the best more efficient,
-but several circumstances prevented this arm from
-attaining any excellence in Portugal. Meanwhile
-Lord Wellington and Mr. Stuart strenuously grappled
-with the disorders of the civil administration and
-their efforts produced an immediate and considerable
-increase of revenue. But though the regency
-could not deny this beneficial effect, though they
-could not deny the existence of the evils which
-they were urged to remedy, though they admitted<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_422"></a>[422]</span>
-that the reform of their custom-house system was
-still incomplete, that their useless navy consumed
-large sums which were wanted for the army, and
-that the taxes especially the “<em>Decima</em>,” were partially
-collected, and unproductive, because the rich
-people in the great towns, who had benefited
-largely by the war, escaped the imposts which the
-poor people in the country, who had suffered most
-from the war, paid; though they acknowledged that
-while the soldiers’ hire was in arrears, the transport
-service neglected, and all persons, having just
-claims upon the government, suffering severe privations,
-the tax-gatherers were allowed to keep a
-month’s tribute in their hands even in the districts
-close to the enemy; though all these things were
-admitted, the regency would not alter their system,
-and Borba, the minister of finance, combatted Wellington’s
-plans in detail with such unusual obstinacy,
-that it became evident nothing could be obtained
-save by external pressure. Wherefore as the
-season for military operations approached, Mr.
-Stuart called upon lord Castlereagh to bring the
-power of England to bear at once upon the court
-of Rio Janeiro; and Wellington, driven to extremity,
-sent the Portuguese prince-regent one of those
-clear, powerful, and nervous statements, which left
-those to whom they were addressed, no alternative
-but submission, or an acknowledgement that sense
-and justice were to be disregarded.</p>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote7">April.</span>
-“I call your highness’s attention,” he said, “to
-the state of your troops and of all your establishments;
-the army of operations has been unpaid
-since September, the garrisons since June, the
-militia since February 1812. The transport service
-has never been regularly paid, and has received<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_423"></a>[423]</span>
-nothing since June. To these evils I have in vain
-called the attention of the local government, and I
-am now going to open a new campaign, with troops
-to whom greater arrears of pay are due than when
-the last campaign terminated, although the subsidy
-from Great Britain, granted especially for the maintenance
-of those troops, has been regularly and
-exactly furnished; and although it has been proved
-that the revenue for the last three months has
-exceeded, by a third, any former quarter. The
-honour of your highness’s arms, the cause of your
-allies, is thus seriously affected, and the uniform
-refusal of the governors of the kingdom to attend
-to any one of the measures which I have
-recommended, either for permanent or temporal
-relief, has at last obliged me to go as a complainant
-into your royal highness’s presence, for
-here I cannot prevail against the influence of the
-chief of the treasury.</p>
-
-<p>“I have recommended the entire reform of the customs
-system, but it has only been partially carried
-into effect. I have advised a method of actually and
-really collecting the taxes, and of making the rich
-merchants, and capitalists, pay the tenth of their annual
-profits as an extraordinary contribution for the
-war. I declare that no person knows better than I
-do, the sacrifices and the sufferings of your people,
-for there is no one for the last four years has lived
-so much amongst those people; but it is a fact, sir,
-that the great cities, and even some of the smallest
-places, have gained by the war and the mercantile
-class has enriched itself; there are divers persons
-in Lisbon and Oporto who have amassed immense
-sums. Now your government is, both from remote
-and recent circumstances, unable to draw resources<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_424"></a>[424]</span>
-from the capitalists by loans; it can only draw
-upon them by taxes. It is not denied that the
-regular tributes nor the extraordinary imposts on
-the mercantile profits are evaded; it is not denied
-that the measures I have proposed, vigorously
-carried into execution, would furnish the government
-with pecuniary resources, and it remains for
-that government to inform your highness, why they
-have neither enforced my plans, nor any others
-which the necessity of the times calls for. They
-fear to become unpopular, but such is the knowledge
-I have of the people’s good sense and loyalty,
-such my zeal for the cause, that I have offered to
-become responsible for the happy issue, and to take
-upon myself all the odium of enforcing my own
-measures. I have offered in vain!</p>
-
-<p>“Never was a sovereign in the world so ill served
-as your highness has been by the ‘<em>Junta de Viveres</em>,’
-and I zealously forwarded your interests when I
-obtained its abolition; and yet, under a false pretext
-of debt, the government still disburse fifty
-millions of reis monthly on account of that board.
-It has left a debt undoubtedly, and it is of importance
-to pay it, although not at this moment; but
-let the government state in detail how these fifty
-millions, granted monthly, have been applied; let
-them say if all the accounts have been called in
-and liquidated? who has enforced the operation? to
-what does the debt amount? has it been classified?
-how much is really still due to those who have
-received instalments? finally, have these millions
-been applied to the payment of salaries instead of
-debt? But were it convenient now to pay the debt,
-it cannot be denied that to pay the army which is
-to defend the country, to protect it from the sweeping<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_425"></a>[425]</span>
-destructive hand of the enemy, is of more
-pressing importance; the troops will be neither
-able nor willing to fight if they are not paid.”</p>
-
-<p>Then touching upon the abuse of permitting the
-tax-gatherers to hold a month’s taxes in their hands,
-and upon the opposition he met with from the
-regency, he continued,</p>
-
-<p>“I assure your royal highness that I give my
-advice to the governor of the kingdom actuated
-solely by an earnest zeal for your service without any
-personal interest. I can have none relative to Portugal,
-and none with regard to individuals, for I
-have no private relation with, and scarcely am acquainted
-with those who direct, or would wish to
-direct your affairs. Those reforms recommended
-by me, and which have at last been partially
-effected in the custom-house, in the arsenal, in the
-navy, in the payment of the interest of the national
-debt, in the formation of a military chest, have succeeded,
-and I may therefore say that the other
-measures I propose would have similar results. I
-am ready to allow that I may deceive myself on
-this point, but certainly they are suggested by a
-desire for the good of your service; hence in the
-most earnest and decided manner, I express my
-ardent wish, and it is common to all your faithful
-servants, that you will return to the kingdom, and
-take charge yourself of the government.”</p>
-
-<p>These vigorous measures to bring the regency to
-terms succeeded only partially. In May they promulgated
-a new system for the collection of taxes
-which relieved the financial pressure on the army
-for the moment, but which did not at all content
-Wellington, because it was made to square with
-old habits and prejudices, and thus left the roots of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_426"></a>[426]</span>
-all the evils alive and vigorous. Every moment
-furnished new proofs of the hopelessness of regenerating
-a nation through the medium of a corrupted
-government; and a variety of circumstances,
-more or less serious, continued to embarrass the
-march of public affairs.</p>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote7">May.</span>
-In the Madeiras the authorities vexatiously prevented
-the English money agents from exporting
-specie, and their conduct was approved of at Rio
-Janeiro. At Bisao, in Africa, the troops had mutinied
-for want of pay, and in the Cape de Verde
-Islands disturbances arose from the over-exaction
-of taxes; for when the people were weak, the
-regency were vigorous; pliant only to the powerful.
-These commotions were trifling and soon
-ended of themselves, yet expeditions were sent
-against the offenders in both places, and the troops
-thus employed immediately committed far worse
-excesses, and did more mischief than that which
-they were sent to suppress. At the same time
-several French frigates finding the coast of Africa
-unguarded, cruized successfully against the Brazil
-trade, and aided the American privateers to contract
-the already too straitened resources of the army.</p>
-
-<p>Amidst all these difficulties however the extraordinary
-exertions of the British officers had restored
-the numbers, discipline, and spirit of the Portuguese
-army. Twenty-seven thousand excellent soldiers
-were again under arms and ready to commence the
-campaign, although the national discontent was
-daily increasing; and indeed the very feeling of
-security created by the appearance of such an army
-rendered the citizens at large less willing to bear
-the inconveniences of the war. Distant danger
-never affects <ins class="corr" id="tn-426" title="Transcriber’s Note—Original text: 'the multidude, and'">
-the multitude, and</ins> the billetting of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_427"></a>[427]</span>
-troops, who, from long habits of war, little regarded
-the rights of the citizens in comparison with their
-own necessities, being combined with requisitions,
-and with a recruiting system becoming every year
-more irksome, formed an aggregate of inconveniences
-intolerable to men who desired ease and no
-longer dreaded to find an enemy on their hearth-stones.
-The powerful classes were naturally more
-affected than the poorer classes, because of their
-indolent habits; but their impatience was aggravated
-because they had generally been debarred of
-the highest situations, or supplanted, by the British
-interference in the affairs of the country, and,
-unlike those of Spain, the nobles of Portugal had
-lost little or none of their hereditary influence.
-Discontent was thus extended widely, and moreover
-the old dread of French power was entirely gone;
-unlimited confidence in the strength and resources
-of England had succeeded; and this confidence, to
-use the words of Mr. Stuart, “being opposed to the
-irregularities which have been practised by individuals,
-and to the difference of manners, and of
-religion, placed the British in the singular position
-of a class whose exertions were necessary for the
-country, but who, for the above reasons, were in
-every other respect as distinct from the natives as
-persons with whom, from some criminal cause, it
-was necessary to suspend communication.”—Hence
-he judged that the return of the prince-regent
-would be a proper epoch for the British to retire
-from all situations in Portugal not strictly military,
-for if any thing should delay that event, the time
-was approaching when the success of the army and
-the tranquillity of the country would render it necessary
-to yield to the first manifestations of national<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_428"></a>[428]</span>
-feeling. In fine, notwithstanding the great benefits
-conferred upon the Portuguese by the British, the
-latter were, and it will always be so on the like occasions,
-regarded by the upper classes as a captain
-regards galley-slaves, their strength was required to
-speed the vessel, but they were feared and hated.</p>
-
-<p>The prince-regent did not return to Portugal
-according to Wellington’s advice, but Carlotta immediately
-prepared to come alone; orders were
-given to furnish her apartments in the different
-palaces, and her valuable effects had actually
-arrived. Ill health was the pretext for the voyage,
-but the real object was to be near Spain to forward
-her views upon the government there; for intent upon
-mischief, indefatigable and of a violence approaching
-insanity, she had sold even her plate and jewels
-to raise money wherewith to corrupt the leading
-members of the cortez, and was resolved, if that
-should not promise success, to distribute the money
-amongst the Spanish partidas, and so create a
-powerful military support for her schemes. Fortunately
-the prince dreading the intriguing advisers
-of his wife would not suffer her to quit Rio Janeiro
-until the wish of the British cabinet upon the
-subject was known, and that was so decidedly adverse,
-that it was thought better to do without the
-prince himself than to have him accompanied by
-Carlotta; so they both remained in the Brazils, and
-this formidable cloud passed away, yet left no sunshine
-on the land.</p>
-
-<p>It was at this period that the offer of a Russian
-auxiliary force, before alluded to, being made to
-Wellington by admiral Grieg, was accepted by him
-to the amount of fifteen thousand men, and yet was
-not fulfilled because the Russian ambassador in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_429"></a>[429]</span>
-London declared that the emperor knew nothing
-of it! Alexander however proposed to mediate in
-the dispute between Great Britain and America,
-but the English ministers, while lauding him as a
-paragon of magnanimity and justice, in regard to
-the war against Napoleon, remembered the armed
-neutrality and quadruple alliance, and wisely declined
-trusting England’s maritime pretensions to
-his faithless grasping policy. Neither would they
-listen to Austria, who at this time, whether with
-good faith or merely as a cloak I know not, desired
-to mediate a general peace. However, amidst this
-political confusion the progress of the military
-preparations was visible; and contemporary with
-the Portuguese, the Spanish troops under Wellington’s
-influence and providence acquired more consistence
-than they had ever before possessed; a
-mighty power was in arms; but the flood of war
-with which the English general finally poured
-into Spain, and the channels by which he directed
-the overwhelming torrent, must be reserved for
-another place. It is now time to treat of the
-political situation of king Joseph, and to resume the
-narrative of that secondary warfare which occupied
-the French armies while Wellington was uninterruptedly
-as far as the enemy were concerned, reorganizing
-his power.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_430"></a>[430]</span><br /></p>
-
-<h3 id="CHAPTER_BXX_III">CHAPTER III.</h3>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="sidenote7">1813.</span>
-In war it is not so much the positive strength, as
-the relative situations of the hostile parties, which
-gives the victory. Joseph’s position, thus judged,
-was one of great weakness, principally because he
-was incapable of combining the materials at his
-disposal, or of wielding them when combined by
-others. France had been suddenly thrown by her
-failure in Russia, into a new and embarrassing attitude,
-more embarrassing even than it appeared to
-her enemies, or than her robust warlike proportions,
-nourished by twelve years of victory, indicated.
-Napoleon, the most indefatigable and active
-of mankind, turned his enemy’s ignorance on this
-head to profit; for scarcely was it known that he
-had reached Paris by that wise, that rapid journey,
-from Smorghoni, which, baffling all his enemies’
-hopes, left them only the power of foolish abuse;
-scarcely I say, was his arrival at Paris known to the
-world, than a new and enormous army, the constituent
-parts of which he had with his usual foresight
-created while yet in the midst of victory, was
-in march from all parts to unite in the heart of
-Germany.</p>
-
-<p>On this magical rapidity he rested his hopes to
-support the tottering fabric of his empire; but well
-aware of the critical state of his affairs, his design
-was, while presenting a menacing front on every<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_431"></a>[431]</span>
-side, so to conduct his operations that if he failed
-in his first stroke, he might still contract his system
-gradually and without any violent concussion. And
-good reason for hope he had. His military power
-was rather broken and divided than lessened, for it
-is certain that the number of men employed in
-1813 was infinitely greater than in 1812; in the
-latter four hundred thousand, but in the former
-more than seven hundred thousand men, and twelve
-hundred field-pieces were engaged on different
-points, exclusive of the armies in Spain. Then on
-the Vistula, on the Oder, on the Elbe, he had
-powerful fortresses, and numerous garrisons, or
-rather armies, of strength and goodness to re-establish
-his ascendancy in Europe, if he could reunite
-them in one system by placing a new host victoriously
-in the centre of Germany. And thus also
-he could renew the adhesive qualities of those
-allies, who still clung to him though evidently
-feeling the attraction of his enemies’ success.</p>
-
-<p>But this was a gigantic contest, for his enemies,
-by deceiving their subjects with false promises of
-liberty, had brought whole nations against him.
-More than eight hundred thousand men were in
-arms in Germany alone; secret societies were in
-full activity all over the continent; and in France a
-conspiracy was commenced by men who desired
-rather to see their country a prey to foreigners and
-degraded with a Bourbon king, than have it independent
-and glorious under Napoleon. Wherefore
-that great monarch had now to make application,
-on an immense scale, of the maxim which
-prescribes a skilful offensive as the best defence,
-and he had to sustain two systems of operation not
-always compatible; the one depending upon moral<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_432"></a>[432]</span>
-force to hold the vast fabric of his former policy
-together, the other to meet the actual exigencies of
-the war. The first was infinitely more important
-than the last, and as Germany and France were
-the proper theatres for its display, the Spanish
-contest sunk at once from a principal into an accessary
-war. Yet this delicate conjuncture of
-affairs made it of vital importance, that Napoleon
-should have constant and rapid intelligence from
-Spain, because the ascendancy, which he yet maintained
-over the world by his astounding genius,
-might have been broken down in a moment if
-Wellington, overstepping the ordinary rules of
-military art, had suddenly abandoned the Peninsula,
-and thrown his army, or a part of it into France.
-For then would have been deranged all the emperor’s
-calculations; then would the defection of all
-his allies have ensued; then would he have been
-obliged to concentrate both his new forces and his
-Spanish troops for the defence of his own country,
-abandoning all his fortresses and his still vast
-though scattered veteran armies in Germany and
-Poland, to the unrestrained efforts of his enemies
-beyond the Rhine. Nothing could have been more
-destructive to Napoleon’s moral power, than to
-have an insult offered and commotions raised on
-his own threshold at the moment when he was
-assuming the front of a conqueror in Germany.</p>
-
-<p>To obviate this danger or to meet it, alike required
-that the armies in the Peninsula should
-adopt a new and vigorous system, under which,
-relinquishing all real permanent offensive movements,
-they should yet appear to be daring and
-enterprising, even while they prepared to abandon
-their former conquests. But the emperor wanted old<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_433"></a>[433]</span>
-officers and non-commissioned officers, and experienced
-soldiers, to give consistency to the young
-levies with which he was preparing to take the
-field, and he could only supply this want by drawing
-from the veterans of the Peninsula; wherefore
-he resolved to recal the division of the young
-guard, and with it many thousand men and officers
-of the line most remarkable for courage and conduct.
-In lieu he sent the reserve at Bayonne into
-Spain, replacing it with another, which was again
-to be replaced in May by further levies; and besides
-this succour, twenty thousand conscripts were
-appropriated for the Peninsula.</p>
-
-<p>The armies thus weakened in numbers, and considerably
-so during the transit of the troops, were
-also in quality greatly deteriorated, and at a very
-critical time, for not only was Wellington being
-powerfully reinforced, but the audacity, the spirit,
-the organization, the discipline, and the numbers of
-the Partidas, were greatly increased by English
-supplies, liberally, and now usefully dealt out. And
-the guerilla operations in the northern parts, being
-combined with the British naval squadrons, had,
-during the absence of the French armies, employed
-to drive the allies back to Portugal, aroused anew
-the spirit of insurrection in Navarre and Biscay; a
-spirit exacerbated by some recent gross abuses of
-military authority perpetrated by some of the French
-local commanders.</p>
-
-<p>The position of the invading armies was indeed
-become more complicated than ever. They had
-only been relieved from the crushing pressure of
-lord Wellington’s grand operations to struggle in
-the meshes of the Guerilla and insurrectional warfare
-of the Spaniards. Nor was the importance of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_434"></a>[434]</span>
-these now to be measured by former efforts. The
-Partida chiefs had become more experienced and
-more docile to the suggestions of the British chief;
-they had free communication with, and were constantly
-supplied with arms, ammunition, and money
-from the squadrons on the coast; they possessed
-several fortified posts and harbours, their bands<span class="sidenote">Duke of Feltre’s official correspondence, MSS.</span>
-were swelling to the size of armies, and their military
-knowledge of the country and of the French
-system of invasion was more matured; their own
-dépôts were better hidden, and they could, and at
-times did, bear the shock of battle on nearly equal
-terms. Finally, new and large bands of another
-and far more respectable and influential nature,
-were formed or forming both in Navarre and Biscay,
-where insurrectional juntas were organized, and
-where men of the best families had enrolled numerous
-volunteers from the villages and towns.</p>
-
-<p>These volunteers were well and willingly supplied
-by the country, and of course not obnoxious, like
-the Partidas, from their rapine and violence. In
-Biscay alone several battalions of this description,
-each mustering a thousand men, were in the field,
-and the communication with France was so completely
-interrupted, that the French minister of war
-only heard that Joseph had received his dispatches
-of the 4th of January, on the 18th of March, and
-then through the medium of Suchet! The contributions
-could no longer be collected, the magazines
-could not be filled, the fortresses were endangered,
-the armies had no base of operations, the insurrection
-was spreading to Aragon, and the bands
-of the interior were also increasing in numbers
-and activity. The French armies, sorely pressed
-for provisions, were widely disseminated, and every<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_435"></a>[435]</span>
-where occupied, and each general was averse either
-to concentrate his own forces or to aid his neighbour.
-In fine the problem of the operations was
-become extremely complicated, and Napoleon only
-seems to have seized the true solution.</p>
-
-<p>When informed by Caffarelli of the state of
-affairs in the north, he thus wrote to the king,
-“Hold Madrid only as a point of observation; fix
-your quarters not as monarch, but as general of the
-French forces at Valladolid; concentrate the armies
-of the south, of the centre, and of Portugal around
-you; the allies will not and indeed cannot make
-any serious offensive movement for several months;
-wherefore it is your business to profit from their
-forced inactivity, to put down the insurrection in
-the northern provinces, to free the communication
-with France, and to re-establish a good base of
-operations before the commencement of another
-campaign, that the French army may be in condition
-to fight the allies if the latter advance towards
-France.” Very important indeed did Napoleon
-deem this object, and so earnest was he to
-have constant and rapid intelligence from his
-armies in the Peninsula, that the couriers and
-their escorts were directed to be dispatched twice
-a week, travelling day and night at the rate of a
-league an hour. He commanded also that the
-army of the north should be reinforced even by
-the whole army of Portugal, if it was necessary
-to effect the immediate pacification of Biscay and
-Navarre; and while this pacification was in progress,
-Joseph was to hold the rest of his forces
-in a position offensive towards Portugal, making
-Wellington feel that his whole power was required
-on the frontier, and that neither his main body nor<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_436"></a>[436]</span>
-even any considerable detachment could safely embark
-to disturb France. In short that he must
-cover Lisbon strongly, and on the frontier, or expect
-to see the French army menacing that capital.
-These instructions well understood, and vigorously
-executed, would certainly have put down
-the insurrection in the rear of the king’s position,
-and the spring would have seen that monarch at
-the head of ninety thousand men, having their retreat
-upon France clear of all impediments, and consequently
-free to fight the allies on the Tormes, the
-Duero, the Pisuerga, and the Ebro; and with several
-supporting fortresses in a good state.</p>
-
-<p>Joseph was quite unable to view the matter in this
-common-sense point of view. He could not make his
-kingly notions subservient to military science, nor his
-military movements subservient to an enlarged policy.
-Neither did he perceive that his beneficent notions
-of government were misplaced amidst the din of
-arms. Napoleon’s orders were imperative, but the
-principle of them, Joseph could not previously
-conceive himself nor execute the details after his
-brother’s conception. He was not even acquainted
-with the true state of the northern provinces, nor<span class="sidenote">King’s correspondence, MSS.</span>
-would he at first credit it when told to him. Hence
-while his thoughts were intent upon his Spanish
-political projects, and the secret negociations with
-Del Parque’s army, the northern partidas and insurgents
-became masters of all his lines of communication
-in the north; the Emperor’s orders
-dispatched early in January, and reiterated week
-after week, only reached the king in the end of
-February; their execution did not take place until
-the end of March, and then imperfectly. The time
-thus lost was irreparable; and yet as the emperor<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_437"></a>[437]</span>
-reproachfully observed, the bulletin which revealed
-the extent of his disasters in Russia might alone
-have taught the king what to do.</p>
-
-<p>Joseph was nearly as immoveable in his resolutions
-as his brother, the firmness of the one being
-however founded upon extraordinary sagacity, and
-of the other upon the want of that quality. Regarding
-opposition to his views as the result of a
-disloyal malevolence, he judged the refractory generals
-to be enemies to the emperor, as well as to
-himself. Reille, Caffarelli, Suchet, alike incurred
-his displeasure, and the duke of Feltre French
-minister of war also, because of a letter in which,
-evidently by the orders of the emperor, he rebuked
-the king for having removed Souham from the
-command of the army of Portugal.</p>
-
-<p>Feltre’s style, addressed to a monarch was very
-offensive, and Joseph attributed it to the influence
-of Soult, for his hatred of the latter was violent
-and implacable even to absurdity. “The duke of<span class="sidenote">King’s correspondence, MSS.</span>
-Dalmatia or himself,” he wrote to the Emperor,
-“must quit Spain. At Valencia he had forgotten
-his own injuries, he had suppressed his just indignation,
-and instead of sending marshal Soult to
-France had given him the direction of the operations
-against the allies, but it was in the hope that
-shame for the past combined with his avidity for
-glory, would urge him to extraordinary exertions;
-nothing of the kind had happened; Soult was a
-man not to be trusted. Restless, intriguing, ambitious,
-he would sacrifice every thing to his own
-advancement, and possessed just that sort of talent
-which would lead him to mount a scaffold when he
-thought he was ascending the steps of a throne,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_438"></a>[438]</span>
-because he would want the courage to strike when
-the crisis arrived.” He acquitted him, he said,
-with a coarse sarcasm, “of treachery at the passage
-of the Tormes, because there fear alone operated
-to prevent him from bringing the allies to a decisive
-action, but he was nevertheless treacherous to the
-emperor, and his proceedings in Spain were probably
-connected with the conspiracy of Malet at Paris.”</p>
-
-<p>Such was the language with which Joseph in his
-anger assailed one of the greatest commanders and
-most faithful servants of his brother; and such the
-greetings which awaited Napoleon on his arrival at
-Paris after the disasters of Russia. In the most
-calm and prosperous state of affairs, coming from
-this source, the charges might well have excited
-the jealous wrath of the strongest mind; but in the
-actual crisis, when the emperor had just lost his
-great army, and found the smoking embers of a
-suppressed conspiracy at his very palace-gates,
-when his friends were failing, and his enemies accumulating,
-it seemed scarcely possible that these
-accusations should not have proved the ruin of
-Soult. Yet they did not even ruffle the temper of
-Napoleon. Magnanimous as he was sagacious,
-he smiled at the weakness of Joseph, and though
-he removed Soult from Spain, because the feud
-between him and the king would not permit them
-to serve beneficially together, it was only to make
-him the commander of the imperial guard; and
-that no mark of his confidence might be wanting,
-he afterwards chose him, from amongst all his generals,
-to retrieve the affairs of the Peninsula when
-Joseph was driven from that country, an event the
-immediate causes of which were now being laid.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_439"></a>[439]</span></p>
-
-<p>It has been already shown, that when Wellington
-took his winter-quarters, the French armies occupied
-a line stretching from the sea-coast at Valencia to
-the foot of the Gallician mountains. In these positions
-Suchet on the extreme left was opposed by
-the allies at Alicant. Soult, commanding the centre,
-had his head-quarters at Toledo, with one detachment
-at the foot of the Sierra Morena to watch
-the army of Del Parque, and two others in the valley
-of the Tagus. Of these last one was at Talavera
-and one on the Tietar. The first observed
-Morillo and Penne Villemur, who from Estremadura
-were constantly advancing towards the
-bridges on the Tagus, and menacing the rear of the
-French detachment which was on the Tietar in observation
-of general Hill then at Coria. Soult’s
-advanced post in the valley of the Tagus communicated
-by the Gredos mountains with Avila, where
-Foy’s division of the army of Portugal was posted
-partly for the sake of food, partly to watch Bejar
-and the Upper Tormes, because the allies, possessing
-the pass of Bejar, might have suddenly united
-north of the mountains, and breaking the French
-line have fallen on Madrid.</p>
-
-<p>On the right of Foy, the remainder of the army
-of Portugal occupied Salamanca, Ledesma, and Alba
-on the Lower Tormes; Valladolid, Toro, and Tordesillas
-on the Duero; Benevente, Leon, and other
-points on the Esla, Astorga being, as I have before
-observed, dismantled by the Spaniards. Behind
-the right of this great line, the army of the north
-had retaken its old positions, and the army of the
-centre was fixed as before in and around Madrid,
-its operations being bounded on the right bank of
-the Tagus by the mountains which invest that capital,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_440"></a>[440]</span>
-and on the left bank of the Tagus by the districts
-of Aranjuez, Tarancon, and Cuenca.</p>
-
-<p>Joseph while disposing his troops in this manner,
-issued a royal regulation marking the extent of
-country which each army was to forage, requiring
-at the same time a certain and considerable
-revenue to be collected by his Spanish civil authorities
-for the support of his court. The subsistence
-of the French armies was thus made secondary to
-the revenue of the crown, and he would have had
-the soldiers in a time of war, of insurrectional
-war, yield to the authority of the Spanish civilians;
-an absurdity heightened by the peculiarly
-active, vigorous, and prompt military method of the
-French, as contrasted with the dilatory improvident
-promise-breaking and visionary system of the Spaniards.
-Hence scarcely was the royal regulation<span class="sidenote">King’s correspondence, MSS.</span>
-issued when the generals broke through it in a
-variety of ways, and the king was, as usual, involved
-in the most acrimonious disputes with all
-the emperor’s lieutenants. If he ordered one commander
-to detach troops to the assistance of another
-commander, he was told that he should rather send
-additional troops to the first. If he reprimanded
-a general for raising contributions contrary to the
-regulations, he was answered that the soldiers were
-starving and must be fed. At all times also the
-authority of the prefects and intendants was disregarded
-by all the generals; and this was in pursuance
-of Napoleon’s order; for that monarch continually
-reminded his brother, that as the war was
-carried on by the French armies their interests were
-paramount; that the king of Spain could have no
-authority over them, and must never use his military
-authority as lieutenant of the empire, in aid<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_441"></a>[441]</span>
-of his kingly views, for with those the French soldiers
-could have nothing to do; their welfare could
-not be confided to Spanish ministers whose capacity
-was by no means apparent and of whose fidelity the
-emperor had no security.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing could be clearer or wiser than these
-instructions, but Joseph would not see this distinction
-between his military and his monarchical
-duties, and continually defended his conduct by
-reference to what he owed his subjects as king of
-Spain. His sentiments, explained with great force
-of feeling, and great beneficence of design, were
-worthy of all praise if viewed abstractedly, but
-totally inapplicable to the real state of affairs,
-because the Spaniards were not his faithful and
-attached subjects, they were his inveterate enemies;
-and it was quite impossible to unite the vigour of a
-war of conquest with the soft and benevolent government
-of a paternal monarch. Thus one constant
-error vitiated all the king’s political proceedings, an
-error apparently arising from an inability to view his
-situation as a whole instead of by parts, for his military
-operations were vitiated in the same manner.</p>
-
-<p>As a man of state and of war he seems to have
-been acute, courageous, and industrious, with respect
-to any single feature presented for his consideration,
-but always unable to look steadily on
-the whole and consequently always working in the
-dark. Men of his character being conscious of the
-merit of labour and good intentions, are commonly
-obstinate; and those qualities, which render them
-so useful under the direction of an able chief, lead
-only to mischief when they become chiefs themselves.
-For in matters of great moment, and in
-war especially, it is not the actual importance but<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_442"></a>[442]</span>
-the comparative importance of the operations which
-should determine the choice of measures; and when
-all are very important this choice demands judgment
-of the highest kind, judgment which no man
-ever possessed more largely than Napoleon, and
-which Joseph did not possess at all.</p>
-
-<p>He was never able to comprehend the instructions
-of his brother, and never would accept the
-advice of those commanders whose capacity approached
-in some degree to that of the emperor.
-When he found that every general complained of
-insufficient means, instead of combining their forces
-so as to press with the principal mass against the
-most important point, he disputed with each, and
-turned to demand from the emperor additional succours
-for all; at the same time unwisely repeating
-and urging his own schemes upon a man so infinitely
-his superior in intellect. The insurrection
-in the northern provinces he treated not as a military
-but a political question, attributing it to the
-anger of the people at seeing the ancient supreme
-council of Navarre unceremoniously dismissed and
-some of the members imprisoned by a French
-general, a cause very inadequate to the effect.
-Neither was his judgment truer with respect to the
-fitness of time. He proposed, if a continuation
-of the Russian war should prevent the emperor
-from sending more men to Spain, to make Burgos
-the royal residence, to transport there the archives,
-and all that constituted a capital; then to have all
-the provinces behind the Ebro, Catalonia excepted,
-governed by himself through the medium of his
-Spanish ministers and as a country at peace, while
-those beyond the Ebro should be given up to the
-generals as a country at war.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_443"></a>[443]</span></p>
-
-<p>In this state his civil administration would he
-said remedy the evils inflicted by the armies, would
-conciliate the people by keeping all the Spanish
-families and authorities in safety and comfort,
-would draw all those who favoured his cause from
-all parts of Spain, and would encourage the display
-of that attachment to his person which he believed
-so many Spaniards to entertain. And while he declared
-the violence and injustice of the French
-armies to be the sole cause of the protracted resistance
-of the Spaniards, a declaration false in
-fact, that violence being only one of many causes,
-he was continually urging the propriety of beating
-the English first and then pacifying the people by
-just and benevolent measures. As if it were possible,
-off-hand, to beat Wellington and his veterans,
-embedded as they were in the strong country of
-Portugal, and having British fleets with troops and
-succours of all kinds, hovering on the flanks of the
-French, and feeding and sustaining the insurrection
-of the Spaniards in their rear.</p>
-
-<p>Napoleon was quite as willing and anxious as
-Joseph could be to drive the English from the Peninsula,
-and to tranquillize the people by a regular
-government; but with a more profound knowledge
-of war, of politics and of human nature, he judged
-that the first could only be done by a methodical
-combination, in unison with that rule of art which
-prescribes the establishment and security of the
-base of operations, security which could not be
-obtained if the benevolent but weak and visionary
-schemes of the king, were to supersede military
-vigour in the field. The emperor laughed in scorn
-when his brother assured him that the Peninsulars
-with all their fiery passions, their fanaticism and their<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_444"></a>[444]</span>
-ignorance, would receive an equable government
-as a benefit from the hands of an intrusive monarch
-before they had lost all hope of resistance by arms.</p>
-
-<p>Yet it is not to be concluded that Joseph was totally
-devoid of grounds for his opinions; he was
-surrounded by difficulties and deeply affected by
-the misery which he witnessed, his Spanish ministers
-were earnest and importunate, and many of the
-French generals gave him but too much reason to
-complain of their violence. The length and mutations
-of the war had certainly created a large party
-willing enough to obtain tranquillity at the price
-of submission, while others were, as we have seen,
-not indisposed, if he would hold the crown on their
-terms, to accept his dynasty, as one essentially
-springing from democracy, in preference to the
-despotic, base, and superstitious family which the
-nation was called upon to uphold. It was not unnatural
-therefore for Joseph to desire to retain his
-capital while the negociations with Del Parque’s
-army were still in existence, it was not strange that
-he should be displeased with Soult after reading
-that marshal’s honest but offensive letter, and certainly
-it was highly creditable to his character as a
-man and as a king that he would not silently suffer
-his subjects to be oppressed by the generals.</p>
-
-<p>“I am in distress for money,” he often exclaimed
-to Napoleon, “such distress as no king ever endured
-before, my plate is sold, and on state occasions the
-appearance of magnificence is supported by false
-metal. My ministers and household are actually
-starving, misery is on every face, and men, otherwise
-willing, are thus deterred from joining a king so
-little able to support them. My revenue is seized
-by the generals for the supply of their troops, and I<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_445"></a>[445]</span>
-cannot as a king of Spain without dishonour partake
-of the resources thus torn by rapine from my
-subjects whom I have sworn to protect; I cannot
-in fine be at once king of Spain and general of the
-French; let me resign both and live peaceably in
-France. Your majesty does not know what scenes
-are enacted, you will shudder to hear that men
-formerly rich and devoted to our cause have been
-driven out of Zaragoza and denied even a ration of
-food. The marquis Cavallero, a councillor of state,
-minister of justice, and known personally to your
-majesty, has been thus used. He has been seen actually
-begging for a piece of bread!”</p>
-
-<p>If this Caballero was the old minister to Charles
-the IVth, no misery was too great a punishment
-for his tyrannical rule under that monarch, yet it
-was not from the hands of the French it should
-have come; and Joseph’s distress for money must
-certainly have been great, since that brave and
-honest man Jourdan, a marshal of France, major-general
-of the armies, and a personal favourite of
-the king’s, complained that the non-payment of his<span class="sidenote">Jourdan’s Official correspondence, MSS.</span>
-appointments had reduced him to absolute penury,
-and after borrowing until his credit was exhausted
-he could with difficulty procure subsistence. It is
-now time to describe the secondary operations of
-the war, but as these were spread over two-thirds of
-Spain, and were simultaneous, to avoid complexity
-it will be necessary to class them under two great
-heads, namely those which took place north and
-those which took place south of the Tagus.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_446"></a>[446]</span><br /></p>
-
-<h3 id="CHAPTER_BXX_IV">CHAPTER IV.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<h4>OPERATIONS SOUTH OF THE TAGUS.</h4>
-
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="sidenote9">1813. February.</span>
-In December 1812 general Copons had been appointed
-captain-general of Catalonia instead of
-Eroles, but his arrival was delayed and the province
-was not relieved from Lacy’s mischievous sway until
-February 1813, when Eroles, taking the temporary
-command, re-established the head-quarters at Vich.
-The French, being then unmolested, save by the English
-ships, passed an enormous convoy to France,
-but Eroles was not long idle. Through the medium
-of a double spy, he sent a forged letter to the governor
-of Taragona, desiring him to detach men to
-Villa Nueva de Sitjes, with carts to transport some
-stores; at the same time he gave out that he was
-himself going to the Cerdaña, which brought the
-French moveable column to that quarter, and then,
-Eroles, Manso, and Villamil, making forced marches
-from different points, reached Torre dem barra
-where they met the British squadron. The intention
-was to cut off the French detachment on its
-march to Villa Nueva and then to attack Taragona,
-but fortune rules in war; the governor received a
-letter from Maurice Mathieu of a different tenor
-from the forged letter, and with all haste regaining
-his fortress balked this well-contrived plan.</p>
-
-<p>Sarzfield, at enmity with Eroles, was now combining
-his operations with Villa Campa, and they
-menaced Alcanitz in Aragon; but general Pannetier<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_447"></a>[447]</span>
-who had remained at Teruel to watch Villa
-Campa, and to protect Suchet’s communications,
-immediately marched to Daroca, Severoli came
-from Zaragoza to the same point, and the Spaniards,
-alarmed by their junction, dispersed. Sarzfield returned
-to Catalonia, Bassecour and the Empecinado
-remained near Cuenca, and Villa Campa as usual
-hung upon the southern skirts of the Albaracyn
-mountain, ready to pounce down on the Ebro or on
-the Guadalquivir side as advantage might offer.
-Meanwhile Suchet was by no means at ease. The
-successes in Catalonia did not enable him to draw
-reinforcements from thence, because Napoleon, true
-to his principle of securing the base of operations,
-forbad him to weaken the army there, and Montmarie’s
-brigade was detached from Valencia to preserve
-the communication between Saguntum and Tortoza.
-But Aragon which was Suchet’s place of arms
-and principal magazine, being infested by Mina,
-Duran, Villa Campa, the Empecinado, and Sarzfield,
-was becoming daily more unquiet, wherefore Pannetier’s
-brigade remained between Segorbé and
-Daroca to aid Severoli. Thus although the two
-armies of Aragon and Catalonia mustered more
-than seventy thousand men, that of Aragon alone
-having forty thousand, with fifty field-pieces, Suchet
-could not fight with more than sixteen thousand
-infantry, two thousand cavalry and perhaps
-thirty guns beyond the Xucar. His right flank
-was always liable to be turned by Requeña, his left
-by the sea which was entirely at his adversary’s
-command, and his front was menaced by fifty thousand
-men, of which three thousand might be cavalry
-with fifty pieces of artillery.</p>
-
-<p>The component parts of the allied force were<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_448"></a>[448]</span>
-the Anglo-Sicilians which, including Whittingham’s
-and Roche’s divisions, furnished eighteen
-thousand soldiers. Elio’s army furnishing twelve
-thousand exclusive of the divisions of Bassecour,
-Villa Campa, and the Empecinado, which, though
-detached, belonged to him. Del Parque’s army
-reinforced by new levies from Andalusia, and on
-paper twenty thousand. Numerically this was a
-formidable power if it had been directed in mass
-against Suchet; but on his right the duke of
-Dalmatia, whose head-quarters were at Toledo,
-sent forward detachments which occupied the army
-of Del Parque; moreover the secret negociations
-for the defection of the latter were now in full activity,
-and from the army of the centre a column
-was sent towards Cuenca to draw Bassecour and the
-Empecinado from Suchet’s right flank; but those
-chiefs had five thousand men, and in return continually
-harassed the army of the centre.</p>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote7">1813.</span>
-On the side of the Morena and Murcia, Soult’s
-operations were confined to skirmishes and foraging
-parties. Early in January his brother, seeking to
-open a communication with Suchet by Albacete,
-defeated some of Elio’s cavalry with the loss of fifty
-men, and pursued them until they rallied on their
-main body, under Freyre; the latter offered battle
-with nine hundred horsemen in front of the defile
-leading to Albacete; but Soult, disliking his appearance
-turned off to the right, and passing through
-Villa Nueva de los Infantes joined a French post
-established in Valdepeña at the foot of the Morena,
-where some skirmishes had also taken place with
-Del Parque’s cavalry. The elder Soult thus learned,
-that Freyre, with two thousand five hundred horsemen,
-covered all the roads leading from La Mancha,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_449"></a>[449]</span>
-to Valencia and Murcia; that Elio’s infantry was at
-Tobara and Hellin, Del Parque’s head-quarters at
-Jaen; that the passes of the Morena were guarded,
-and magazines formed at Andujar, Linares, and
-Cordoba, while on the other side of La Mancha,
-the Empecinado had come to Hinojoso with fifteen
-hundred horsemen, and the column sent from the
-army of the centre was afraid to encounter him.</p>
-
-<p>These dispositions, and the strength of the Spaniards,
-not only prevented the younger Soult from
-penetrating into Murcia, but delayed the march of a
-column, under general Daricau, destined to communicate
-with Suchet, and bring up the detachments
-baggage and stores, which the armies of the
-south and centre had left at Valencia. The scouting
-parties of both sides now met at different
-points, and on the 27th of January, a sharp cavalry
-fight happened at El Corral, in which the French
-commander was killed, and the Spaniards, though
-far the most numerous, defeated. Meanwhile Daricau,
-whose column had been reinforced, reached
-Utiel, opened the communication with Suchet by
-Requeña, cut off some small parties of the enemy,
-and then continuing his march received a great
-convoy, consisting of two thousand fighting men,
-six hundred travellers, and the stores and baggage
-belonging to Soult’s and the king’s armies. This
-convoy had marched for Madrid by the way of
-Zaragoza, but was recalled when Daricau arrived,
-and under his escort, aided by a detachment of
-Suchet’s army placed at Yniesta, it reached Todelo
-in the latter end of February safely, though Villa
-Campa came down to the Cabriel River, to trouble
-the march.</p>
-
-<p>During these different operations numerous absurd<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_450"></a>[450]</span>
-and contradictory reports, principally originating
-in the Spanish and English newspapers, obtained
-credit in the French armies, such as, that sir Henry
-Wellesley and Infantado had seized the government
-at Cadiz; that Clinton, by an intrigue, had
-got possession of Alicant; that Ballesteros had
-shewn Wellington secret orders from the cortez not
-to acknowledge him as generalissimo, or even as a
-grandee; that the cortez had removed the regency
-because the latter permitted Wellington to appoint
-intendants and other officers to the Spanish provinces;
-that Hill had devastated the frontier and
-retired to Lisbon though forcibly opposed by Morillo;
-that a nephew of Ballesteros had raised the
-standard of revolt; that Wellington was advancing,
-and that troops had been embarked at Lisbon for a
-maritime expedition, with other stories of a like
-nature, which seem to have disturbed all the French
-generals save Soult, whose information as to the
-real state of affairs continued to be sure and accurate.
-He also at this time detected four or five
-of Wellington’s emissaries, amongst them, was a
-Portuguese officer on his own staff; a man called
-Piloti, who served and betrayed both sides; and an
-amazon called Francisca de la Fuerte, who, though
-only twenty-two years old, had already commanded
-a partida of sixty men with some success, and was
-now a spy. But in the latter end of February the
-duke of Dalmatia was recalled, and the command of
-his army fell to Gazan, whose movements belong
-rather to the operations north of the Tagus.
-Wherefore turning to Suchet, I shall proceed to
-give an exact notion of his resources and of the
-nature of the country where his operations were
-conducted.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_451"></a>[451]</span></p>
-
-<p>The city of Valencia, though nominally the seat of
-his power, was not so. He had razed all the defences
-constructed by the Spaniards, confining his hold to
-the old walls and to a small fortified post within the
-town sufficient to resist a sudden attack, and capable
-of keeping the population in awe; his real place
-of arms was Saguntum, and between that and
-Tortoza he had two fortresses, namely, Oropesa
-and Peniscola; he had also another line of communication,
-but for infantry only, through Morella,
-a fortified post, to Mequinenza. Besides these
-lines there were roads both from Valencia and
-Saguntum, leading through Segorbé to Teruel a
-fortified post, and from thence to Zaragoza by Daroca<span class="sidenote9">See <a href="#i_b_581fp_6">Plan 6.</a></span>
-another fortified post. These roads were eastward
-of the Guadalaviar, and westward of that river
-Suchet had a line of retreat from Valencia to Madrid
-by Requeña, which was also a fortified post. Now if
-the whole of the French general’s command be looked
-to, his forces were very numerous, but that command
-was wide, and in the field his army was, as I have
-before shewn, not very numerous. Valencia was
-in fact a point made on hostile ground which, now
-that the French were generally on the defensive,
-was only maintained with a view of imposing upon
-the allies and drawing forth the resources of the
-country as long as circumstances would permit.
-The proper line for covering Valencia and the rich
-country immediately around it was on the Xucar, or
-rather beyond it, at San Felippe de Xativa and
-Moxente, where a double range of mountains afforded
-strong defensive positions, barring the principal
-roads leading to Valencia. On this position
-Suchet had formed his entrenched camp, much<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_452"></a>[452]</span>
-talked of at the time, but slighter than fame represented
-it; the real strength was in the natural formation
-of the ground.</p>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote7">February.</span>
-Beyond his left flank the coast road was blocked
-by the castle of Denia, but his right could be turned<span class="sidenote9">See <a href="#i_b_581fp_7">Plan 7.</a></span>
-from Yecla and Almanza, through Cofrentes and
-Requeña, and he was forced to keep strict watch
-and strong detachments always towards the defile of
-Almanza, lest Elio’s army and Del Parque’s should
-march that way. This entrenched camp was Suchet’s
-permanent position of defence, but there were reasons
-why he should endeavour to keep his troops
-generally more advanced; the country in his front
-was full of fertile plains, or rather coves, within the
-hills, which run in nearly parallel ranges, and are
-remarkably rocky and precipitous, enclosing the
-plains like walls, and it was of great importance
-who should command their resources. Hence as
-the principal point in Suchet’s front was the large
-and flourishing town of Alcoy, he occupied it, and
-from thence threw off smaller bodies to Biar, Castalla,
-Ibi, and Onil, which were on the same strong ridge
-as the position covering the cove of Alcoy. On his
-right there was another plain in which Fuente La
-Higuera, Villena, and Yecla were delineated at opposite
-points of a triangle, and as this plain and the
-smaller valleys ministered to Suchet’s wants because
-of his superior cavalry, the subsistence of the French
-troops was eased, while the cantonments and foraging
-districts of the Sicilian army were contracted: the
-outposts of the allied army were in fact confined
-to a fourth and fifth parallel range of mountains
-covering the towns of Elda, Tibi, Xixona, and Villa
-Joyosa which was on the sea-coast.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_453"></a>[453]</span></p>
-
-<p>Suchet thus assumed an insulting superiority over
-an army more numerous than his own, but outward
-appearances are deceitful in war; the French
-general was really the strongest, because want,
-ignorance, dissention, and even treachery, were in
-his adversary’s camps. Del Parque’s army remained
-behind the Morena, Elio’s was at Tobarra
-and Hellin, and of the Anglo-Sicilian army, the
-British only were available in the hour of danger,
-and they were few. When general Campbell quarrelled
-with Elio the latter retired for a time towards
-Murcia, but after Wellington’s journey to Cadiz
-he again came forward, and his cavalry entering La
-Mancha skirmished with general Soult’s and communicating
-with Bassecour and the Empecinado
-delayed the progress of Daricau towards Valencia.
-Meanwhile general Campbell remained quiet, in expectation
-that lord William Bentinck would come
-with more troops to Alicant, but in February fresh
-troubles broke out in Sicily, and in the latter end of
-that month sir John Murray arriving, assumed the
-command. Thus in a few months, five chiefs with
-different views and prejudices successively came to
-the command, and the army was still unorganized
-and unequipped for vigorous service. The Sicilians,
-Calabrese, and French belonging to it were eager
-to desert, one Italian regiment had been broken for
-misconduct by general Maitland, the British and
-Germans were humiliated in spirit by the part they<span class="sidenote"><a href="#NO_XVI">Appendix, No. 16</a>, <a href="#NO_XVII">17.</a></span>
-were made to enact, and the Spaniards under Whittingham
-and Roche were starving; for Wellington
-knowing by experience how the Spanish government,
-though receiving a subsidy, would, if permitted,
-throw the feeding of their troops entirely<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_454"></a>[454]</span>
-upon the British, forbade their being supplied from
-the British stores, and the Spanish intendants neglected
-them.</p>
-
-<p>Murray’s first care was to improve the equipment
-of his troops, and with the aid of Elio he soon put
-them in a better condition. The two armies together
-furnished thirty thousand effective men, of
-which about three thousand were cavalry, and they
-had thirty-seven guns, yet very inadequately horsed,
-and Whittingham’s and Elio’s cavalry were from
-want of forage nearly unfit for duty. The transport
-mules were hired at an enormous price, the expense
-being at the rate of one hundred and thirty thousand
-pounds annually, and yet the supply was bad, for<span class="sidenote">General Donkin’s papers.</span>
-here as in all other parts of Spain, corruption and
-misuse of authority prevailed. The rich sent their
-fine animals to Alicant for sanctuary and bribed the
-Alcaldes, the mules of the poor alone were pressed,
-the army was ill provided, and yet the country was
-harassed. In this state it was necessary to do something,
-and as the distress of Whittingham and
-Roche’s troops could not be removed, save by enlarging
-their cantonments, Murray after some hesitation
-resolved to drive the French from the mountains in
-his front, and he designed, as the first step, to surprise
-fifteen hundred men which they had placed in Alcoy.
-Now five roads led towards the French positions.
-1º. On the left the great road from Alicant passing
-through Monforte, Elda, Sax, Villena, and Fuente
-de la Higuera, where it joins the great road from
-Valencia to Madrid, which runs through Almanza.
-This way turned both the ridges occupied by the
-armies. 2º. A good road leading by Tibi to Castalla,
-from whence it sent off two branches, on the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_455"></a>[455]</span>
-left hand, one leading to Sax, the other through the
-pass of Biar to Villena; two other branches on the
-right hand went, the one through Ibi to Alcoy, the
-other through Onil to the same place. 3º. The road
-from Alicant to Xixona, a bad road, leading over the
-very steep rugged ridge of that name to Alcoy. At
-Xixona also there was a narrow way on the right
-hand, through the mountains to Alcoy, which was
-followed by Roche when he attacked that place in
-the first battle of Castalla. 4º. A carriage-road
-running along the sea-coast as far as Villa Joyosa,
-from whence a narrow mountain-way leads to the
-village of Consentayna, situated in the cove of
-Alcoy and behind that town.</p>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote7">March.</span>
-On the 6th of March the allied troops moved in
-four columns, one on the left by Elda, to watch the
-great Madrid road; one on the right composed of
-Spanish troops under colonel Campbell, from Villa
-Joyosa, to get to Consentayna behind Alcoy; a
-third, under lord Frederick Bentinck, issuing by
-Ibi, was to turn the French right; the fourth
-was to march from Xixona straight against Alcoy,
-and to pursue the remainder of Habert’s division,
-which was behind that town. Lord Frederick
-Bentinck attacked in due time, but as colonel
-Campbell did not appear the surprise failed, and
-when the French saw the main body winding down
-the Sierra in front of Alcoy, they retired, pursued by
-general Donkin with the second battalion of the
-twenty-seventh regiment. The head of lord Frederick
-Bentinck’s column was already engaged, but
-the rear had not arrived, and the whole of Habert’s
-division was soon concentrated a mile beyond Alcoy,
-and there offered battle; yet sir John Murray, instead
-of pushing briskly forward, halted, and it was not<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_456"></a>[456]</span>
-until several demands for support had reached him,
-that he detached the fifty-eighth to the assistance
-of the troops engaged, who had lost about forty men,
-chiefly of the twenty-seventh. Habert, fearing
-to be cut off by Consentayna, and seeing the fifty-eighth
-coming on, retreated, and the allies occupied
-Alcoy, which greatly relieved their quarters; but
-the want of vigour displayed by sir John Murray
-when he had gained Alcoy did not escape the
-notice of the troops.</p>
-
-<p>After this affair the armies remained quiet until
-the 15th, when Whittingham forced the French
-posts with some loss from Albayda, and general
-Donkin, taking two battalions and some dragoons
-from Ibi, drove back their outposts from Rocayrente
-and Alsafara, villages situated beyond the range<span class="sidenote7">Plan 7.</span>
-bounding the plain of Alcoy. He repassed the hills
-higher up with the dragoons and a company of the
-grenadiers of twenty-seventh, under captain Waldron,
-and returned by the main road to Alcoy, having in
-his course met a French battalion, through which the
-gallant Waldron broke with his grenadiers. Meanwhile
-sir John Murray, after much vacillation, at one
-time resolving to advance, at another to retreat, thinking
-it impossible first to force Suchet’s entrenched
-camp, and then his second line behind the Xucar, a
-difficult river with muddy banks, believing also that
-the French general had his principal magazines at
-Valencia, conceived the idea of seizing the latter by
-a maritime expedition. He judged that the garrison
-which he estimated at eight hundred infantry,
-and one thousand cavalry, would be unable to resist,
-and that the town once taken the inhabitants would
-rise; Suchet could not then detach men enough to
-quell them without exposing himself to defeat on the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_457"></a>[457]</span>
-Xucar, and if he moved with all his force he could
-be closely followed by the allies and driven upon
-Requeña. In this view he made fresh dispositions.</p>
-
-<p>On the 18th Roche’s division reinforced by some
-troops from Elio’s army and by a British grenadier
-battalion, was selected for the maritime attack, and
-the rest of the army was concentrated on the left at
-Castalla with the exception of Whittingham’s troops
-which remained at Alcoy, for Suchet was said to be
-advancing, and Murray resolved to fight him. But
-to form a plan and to execute it vigorously, were
-with sir John Murray very different things. Although
-far from an incapable officer in the cabinet,
-he shewed none of the qualities of a commander in
-the field. His indecision was remarkable. On the
-morning of the 18th he resolved to fight in front
-of Castalla, and in the evening he assumed a weaker
-position behind that town, abandoning the command
-of a road, running from Ibi in rear of Alcoy, by
-which Whittingham might have been cut off. And
-when the strong remonstrances of his quarter-master
-general induced him to relinquish this ground, he
-adopted a third position, neither so strong as the
-first nor so defective as the last.</p>
-
-<p>In this manner affairs wore on until the 26th,
-when Roche’s division and the grenadier battalion
-marched to Alicant to embark, with orders, if they
-failed at Valencia, to seize and fortify Cullera at
-the mouth of the Xucar; and if this also failed to
-besiege Denia. But now the foolish ministerial
-arrangements about the Sicilian army worked out
-their natural result. Lord Wellington, though he
-was permitted to retain the Anglo-Sicilian army in
-Spain beyond the period lord William Bentinck
-had assigned for its stay, had not the full command<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_458"></a>[458]</span>
-given to him; he was clogged with reference
-to the state of Sicily, until the middle of March,
-and this new arrangement was still unknown to lord
-William Bentinck and to sir John Murray. Thus
-there were at this time, in fact, three commanding
-officers; Wellington for the general operations,
-Murray for the particular operations, and lord William
-Bentinck still empowered to increase or diminish
-the troops, and even upon emergency to
-withdraw the whole. And now in consequence of
-the continued dissentions in Sicily, the king of that
-country having suddenly resumed the government,
-lord William did recal two thousand of Murray’s
-best troops, and amongst them the grenadier battalion
-intended to attack Valencia. That enterprize
-instantly fell to the ground.</p>
-
-<p>Upon this event sir John Murray, or some person
-writing under his authority, makes the following
-observations. “The most careful combination could<span class="sidenote">Appendix to Phillipart’s Military Calendar.</span>
-not have selected a moment when the danger of
-such authority was more clearly demonstrated, more
-severely felt. Had these orders been received a
-very short time before, the allied army would not
-have been committed in active operations; had they
-reached sir John Murray a week later, there is
-every reason to believe that the whole country from
-Alicant to Valencia would have passed under the
-authority of the allied army, and that marshal
-Suchet cut off from his magazines in that province,
-and in Aragon, would have been compelled to retire
-through a mountainous and barren country on
-Madrid. But the order of lord William Bentinck
-was peremptory, and the allied army which even
-before was scarcely balanced, was now so inferior
-to the enemy that it became an indispensible<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_459"></a>[459]</span>
-necessity to adopt a system strongly defensive, and
-all hope of a brilliant commencement of the campaign
-vanished.”</p>
-
-<p>Upon this curious passage it is necessary to remark,
-1º. that Suchet’s great magazines were not
-at Valencia but at Saguntum; 2º. that from the
-castle of Denia the fleet would have been descried,
-and the strong garrison of Saguntum could have reinforced
-the troops in Valencia; Montmarie’s brigade
-also would soon have come up from Oropesa.
-These were doubtless contingencies not much to be
-regarded in bar of such an enterprize, but Suchet
-would by no means have been forced to retire by
-Requeña upon Madrid, he would have retired to
-Liria, the road to which steered more than five miles
-clear of Valencia. He could have kept that city in
-check while passing, in despite of sir John Murray,
-and at Liria he would have been again in his natural
-position, that is to say, in full command of his
-principal lines of communication. Moreover, however
-disagreeable to Suchet personally it might have
-been to be forced back upon Madrid, that event
-would have been extremely detrimental to the general
-cause, as tending to reinforce the king against
-Wellington. But the singular part of the passage
-quoted, is the assertion that the delay of a week in
-lord William Bentinck’s order would have ensured
-such a noble stroke against the French army. Now
-lord William Bentinck only required the troops to
-proceed in the first instance to Mahon; what a
-dull flagging spirit then was his, who dared not
-delay obedience to such an order even for a week!</p>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote7">April.</span>
-The recalled troops embarked for Sicily on the
-5th of April, and Suchet alarmed at the offensive<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_460"></a>[460]</span>
-position of the allies, which he attributed to the
-general state of affairs, because the king’s march to
-Castile permitted all the Spanish armies of Andalusia
-to reinforce Elio, resolved to strike first, and
-with the greater avidity because Elio had pushed
-general Mijares with an advanced guard of three
-or four thousand men to Yecla where they were
-quite unsupported. This movement had been concerted
-in March, with Murray who was to occupy
-Villena, and be prepared to fall upon the French
-left, if the Spaniards were attacked at Yecla; and
-in return the Spaniards were to fall on the French
-right if Murray was attacked. Elio however neglected
-to strengthen his division at Yecla with<span class="sidenote">General Donkin’s Papers, MSS.</span>
-cavalry, which he had promised to do, nor did
-Murray occupy Villena in force; nevertheless Mijares
-remained at Yecla, Elio with the main body
-occupied Hellin, and the cavalry were posted on
-the side of Albacete, until the departure of the
-troops for Sicily. Roche then joined the army at
-Castalla, and Elio’s main body occupied Elda and
-Sax to cover the main road from Madrid to Alicant.</p>
-
-<p>On the night of the 11th Suchet having by a
-forced march assembled sixteen battalions of infantry,
-ten squadrons of cavalry, and twelve pieces
-of artillery at Fuente la Higuera, marched straight
-upon Caudete, while Harispe’s division by a cross
-road endeavoured to surprise the Spaniards at Yecla.
-The latter retired fighting towards Jumilla by
-the hills, but the French artillery and skirmishers
-followed close, and at last the Spaniards being
-pierced in the centre, one part broke and fled, and
-the other part after some farther resistance surrendered.
-Two hundred were killed, and fifteen hundred<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_461"></a>[461]</span>
-prisoners, including wounded, fell into the
-hands of the victors, who lost about eighty men
-and officers.</p>
-
-<p>Suchet’s movement on Fuente la Higuera was
-known in the night of the 10th at Castalla, where
-all the Anglo-Sicilian army was in position, because
-Whittingham had come from Alcoy, leaving only a
-detachment on that side. Hence while Harispe
-was defeating Mijares at Yecla, Suchet in person
-remained at Caudete with two divisions and the
-heavy cavalry in order of battle, lest Murray
-should advance by Biar and Villena. The latter
-town, possessing an old wall and a castle, was occupied
-by the regiment of Velez-Malaga, a thousand
-strong, and in the course of the day Murray also
-came up with the allied cavalry and a brigade of
-infantry. Here he was joined by Elio, without
-troops, and when towards evening Harispe’s fight
-being over and the prisoners secured, Suchet advanced,
-Murray retired with the cavalry through
-the pass of Biar leaving his infantry, under colonel
-Adam, in front of that defile. He wished also to draw
-the Spanish garrison from Villena but Elio would
-not suffer it, and yet during the night, repenting of
-his obstinacy, came to Castalla entreating Murray to
-carry off that battalion. It was too late, Suchet had
-broken the gates of the town the evening before, and
-the castle with the best equipped and finest regiment
-in the Spanish army had already surrendered.</p>
-
-<p>Murray’s final position was about three miles from
-the pass of Biar. His left, composed of Whittingham’s
-Spaniards, was entrenched on a rugged sierra
-ending abruptly above Castalla, which, with its<span class="sidenote9">See <a href="#i_b_581fp_7">Plan 7.</a></span>
-old castle crowning an isolated sugar-loaf hill,
-closed the right of that wing and was occupied in
-strength by Mackenzie’s division.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_462"></a>[462]</span></p>
-
-<p>A space between Whittingham’s troops and the
-town was left on the sierra for the advanced guard,
-then in the pass of Biar; Castalla itself, covered
-by the castle, was prepared for defence, and the
-principal approaches were commanded by strong
-batteries, for Murray had concentrated nearly all
-his guns at this point. The cavalry was partly
-behind partly in front of the town on an extensive
-plain which was interspersed with olive
-plantations.</p>
-
-<p>The right wing, composed of Clinton’s division
-and Roche’s Spaniards, was on comparatively low
-ground, and extended to the rear at right angles
-with the centre, but well covered by a “<i lang="es" xml:lang="es">barranco</i>” or
-bed of a torrent, the precipitous sides of which
-were, in some places, one hundred feet deep.</p>
-
-<p>Suchet could approach this position, either
-through the pass of Biar, or turning that defile,
-by the way of Sax; but the last road was supposed
-to be occupied by Elio’s army, and as troops
-coming by it must make a flank march along the
-front of the position, it was not a favourable line of
-attack; moreover the allies, being in possession of
-the defiles of Biar, and of Alcoy, might have
-gained the Xucar, either by Fuentes de la Higuera
-or by Alcoy, seeing that Alicant, which was their
-base, was safe, and the remnants of Elio’s army
-could easily have got away. Murray’s army was
-however scarcely active enough for such an operation,
-and Suchet advanced very cautiously, as it
-behoved him to do, for the ground between Castalla
-and Biar was just such as a prompt opponent
-would desire for a decisive blow.</p>
-
-<p>The advanced guard, in the pass of Biar, about
-two thousand five hundred men was composed of
-two Italian regiments and a battalion of the twenty-seventh<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_463"></a>[463]</span>
-British; two companies of German riflemen,
-a troop of foreign hussars and six guns, four
-of which were mountain-pieces. The ground was
-very strong and difficult but at two o’clock in the
-afternoon the French, having concentrated in front
-of the pass, their skirmishers swarmed up the steep
-rocks on either flank, with a surprising vigour and
-agility, and when they had gained the summit, the
-supporting columns advanced. Then the allies who
-had fought with resolution for about two hours
-abandoned the pass with the loss of two guns and
-about thirty prisoners, retreating however in good
-order to the main position, for they were not followed
-beyond the mouth of the defile. The next day,
-that is the 13th about one o’clock, the French cavalry,
-issuing cautiously from the pass, extended
-to the left in the plain as far as Onil, and they
-were followed by the infantry who immediately
-occupied a low ridge about a mile in front of the
-allies’ left; the cavalry then gained ground to the
-front, and closing towards the right of the allies
-menaced the road to Ibi and Alcoy.</p>
-
-<p>Murray had only occupied his ground the night
-before, but he had studied it and entrenched it in
-parts. His right wing was quite refused, and so
-well covered by the barranco that nearly all the
-troops could have been employed as a reserve to
-the left wing, which was also very strongly posted
-and presented a front about two miles in extent.
-But notwithstanding the impregnable strength of
-the ground the English general shrunk from the
-contest, and while the head of the French column
-was advancing from the defile of Biar, thrice he
-gave his quarter-master general orders to put the
-army in retreat, and the last time so peremptorily,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_464"></a>[464]</span>
-that obedience must have ensued if at that moment
-the firing between the picquets and the French
-light troops had not begun.</p>
-
-
-<h4>BATTLE OF CASTALLA.</h4>
-
-<p>Suchet’s dispositions were made slowly and as if
-he also had not made up his mind to fight, but a
-crooked jut of the sierra, springing from about the
-middle of the ridge, hid from him all the British
-troops, and two-thirds of the whole army, hence
-his first movement was to send a column towards
-Castalla, to turn this jut of the sierra and discover
-the conditions of the position. Meanwhile he
-formed two strong columns immediately opposite
-the left wing, and his cavalry, displaying a formidable
-line in the plain closed gradually towards the
-barranco. The French general however soon discovered
-that the right of the allies was unattackable.
-Wherefore retaining his reserve on the low
-ridge in front of the left wing, and still holding the
-exploring column of infantry near Castalla, to protect
-his flank against any sally from that point, he
-opened his artillery against the centre and right
-wing of the allies, and forming several columns of
-attack commenced the action against the allies’ left
-on both sides of the jut before spoken of.</p>
-
-<p>The ascent in front of Whittingham’s post, being
-very rugged and steep, and the upper parts entrenched,
-the battle there resolved itself at once
-into a fight of light troops, in which the Spaniards
-maintained their ground with resolution; but on
-the other side of the jut, the French mounted the
-heights, slowly indeed and with many skirmishers,
-yet so firmly, that it was evident nothing but good
-fighting would send them down again. Their light<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_465"></a>[465]</span>
-troops spread over the whole face of the Sierra,
-and here and there attaining the summit were partially
-driven down again by the Anglo-Italian
-troops; but where the main body came upon the
-second battalion of the twenty-seventh there was a
-terrible crash. For the ground having an abrupt declination
-near the top enabled the French to form a
-line under cover, close to the British, who were lying
-down waiting for orders to charge; and while the
-former were unfolding their masses a grenadier
-officer, advancing alone, challenged the captain
-of the twenty-seventh grenadiers to single combat.
-Waldron an agile vigorous Irishman and of boiling
-courage instantly sprung forward, the hostile lines
-looked on without firing a shot, the swords of
-the champions glittered in the sun, the Frenchman’s
-head was cleft in twain, and the next instant the
-twenty-seventh jumping up with a deafening shout,
-fired a deadly volley, at half pistol-shot distance,
-and then charged with such a shock that, maugre
-their bravery and numbers, the enemy’s soldiers
-were overthrown and the side of the Sierra was
-covered with the killed and wounded. In Murray’s
-despatch this exploit was erroneously attributed to
-colonel Adam, but it was ordered and conducted
-by colonel Reeves alone.</p>
-
-<p>The French general seeing his principal column
-thus overthrown, and at every other point having
-the worst of the fight, made two secondary attacks
-to cover the rallying of the defeated columns, but
-these also failing, his army was separated in three
-parts, namely the beaten troops which were in
-great confusion, the reserve on the minor heights
-from whence the attacking columns had advanced,
-and the cavalry, which being far on the left in the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_466"></a>[466]</span>
-plain, was also separated from the point of action
-by the bed of the torrent, a bridge over which was
-commanded by the allies. A vigorous sally from
-Castalla and a general advance would have obliged
-the French reserves to fall back upon Biar in confusion
-before the cavalry could come to their assistance,
-and the victory might have been thus
-completed; but Murray, who had remained during
-the whole action behind Castalla, gave the French
-full time to rally all their forces and retire in order
-towards the pass of Biar. Then gradually passing
-out by the right of the town, with a tedious pedantic
-movement, he changed his front, forming two
-lines across the valley, keeping his left at the foot of
-the heights, and extending his right, covered by the
-cavalry, towards the Sierra of Onil. Meanwhile
-Mackenzie moving out by the left of Castalla with
-three British, and one German battalion, and eight
-guns followed the enemy more rapidly.</p>
-
-<p>Suchet had by this time plunged into the pass
-with his infantry cavalry and tumbrils in one mass,
-leaving a rear-guard of three battalions with eight
-guns to cover the passage; but these being pressed
-by Mackenzie, and heavily cannonaded, were soon
-forced to form lines and offer battle, answering gun
-for gun. The French soldiers were heavily crushed
-by the English shot, the clatter of musketry was
-beginning, and one well-directed vigorous charge,
-would have overturned and driven the French
-in a confused mass upon the other troops then
-wedged in the narrow defile; but Mackenzie’s
-movement had been made by the order of the
-quarter-master-general Donkin, without Murray’s
-knowledge, and the latter instead of supporting it
-strongly, sent repeated orders to withdraw the troops<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_467"></a>[467]</span>
-already engaged, and in despite of all remonstrance
-caused them to fall back on the main body, when
-victory was in their grasp. Suchet thus relieved at
-a most critical moment immediately occupied a
-position across the defile with his flanks on the
-heights, and though Murray finally sent some light
-companies to attack his left the effort was feeble
-and produced no result; he retained his position
-and in the night retired to Fuente de la Higuera.</p>
-
-<p>On the 14th Murray marched to Alcoy where a
-small part of Whittingham’s forces had remained
-in observation of a French detachment left to hold
-the pass of Albayda, and through this pass he proposed
-to intercept the retreat of Suchet, but his
-movements were slow, his arrangements bad, and
-the army became so disordered, that he halted the
-15th at Alcoy. A feeble demonstration on the
-following days towards Albayda terminated his
-operations.</p>
-
-<p>In this battle of Castalla, the allies had, including
-Roche’s division, about seventeen thousand of
-all arms, and the French about fifteen thousand.<span class="sidenote">Suchet’s official despatch to the king, MSS.</span>
-Suchet says that the action was brought on, against
-his wish, by the impetuosity of his light troops, and
-that he lost only eight hundred men; his statement<span class="sidenote">Suchet’s Memoirs.</span>
-is confirmed by Vacani the Italian historian.
-Sir John Murray affirms that it was a pitched battle<span class="sidenote">Murray’s despatch.</span>
-and that the French lost above three thousand men.
-The reader may choose between these accounts. In
-favour of Suchet’s version it may be remarked that
-neither the place, nor the time, nor the mode of
-attack, was such as might be expected from his
-talents and experience in war, if he had really
-intended a pitched battle; and though the action
-was strongly contested on the principal point, it is<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_468"></a>[468]</span>
-scarcely possible that so many as three thousand
-men could have been killed and wounded. And
-yet eight hundred seems too few, because the
-loss of the victorious troops with all advantages
-of ground, was more than six hundred. One
-thing is however certain that if Suchet lost three
-thousand men, which would have been at least a
-fourth of his infantry, he must have been so disabled,
-so crippled, that what with the narrow
-defile of Biar in the rear, and the distance of his
-cavalry in the plain, to have escaped at all was
-extremely discreditable to Murray’s generalship.
-An able commander having a superior force, and
-the allies were certainly the most numerous, would
-never have suffered the pass of Biar to be forced
-on the 12th, or if it were forced, he would have
-had his army well in hand behind it, ready to fall
-upon the head of the French column as it issued
-into the low ground.</p>
-
-<p>Suchet violated several of the most important
-maxims of art. For without an adequate object, he
-fought a battle, having a defile in his rear, and on
-ground where his cavalry, in which he was superior,
-could not act. Neither the general state of the
-French affairs, nor the particular circumstances,
-invited a decisive offensive movement at the time,
-wherefore the French general should have been contented
-with his first successes against the Spaniards,
-and against Colonel Adam, unless some palpable
-advantage had been offered to him by Murray. But
-the latter’s position was very strong indeed, and
-the French army was in imminent danger, cooped
-up between the pass of Biar and the allied
-troops; and this danger would have been increased
-if Elio had executed a movement which Murray<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_469"></a>[469]</span>
-had proposed to him in the night of the 12th,
-namely, to push troops into the mountains from
-Sax, which would have strengthened Whittingham’s
-left and menaced the right flank of the enemy.
-Elio disregarded this request, and during the
-whole of the operations the two armies were unconnected,
-and acting without concert, although
-only a few miles distant from each other. This
-might have been avoided if they had previously
-put the castle and town of Villena in a good
-state of defence, and occupied the pass of Biar
-in force behind it. The two armies would then
-have been secure of a junction in advance, and the
-plain of Villena would have been commanded. To
-the courage of the troops belongs all the merit of
-the success obtained, there was no generalship, and
-hence though much blood was spilt no profit was
-derived from victory.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_470"></a>[470]</span><br /></p>
-
-<h3 id="CHAPTER_BXX_V">CHAPTER V.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<h4>OPERATIONS NORTH OF THE TAGUS.</h4>
-
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="sidenote7">1813. April.</span>
-On this side as in the south, one part of the French
-fronted lord Wellington’s forces, while the rest
-warred with the Partidas, watched the English
-fleets on the coast, and endeavoured to maintain a
-free intercourse with France; but the extent of
-country was greater, the lines of communication
-longer, the war altogether more difficult, and the
-various operations more dissevered.</p>
-
-<p>Four distinct bodies acted north of the Tagus.</p>
-
-<p>1º. The army of Portugal, composed of six
-divisions under Reille, observing the allies from
-behind the Tormes; the Gallicians from behind the
-Esla.</p>
-
-<p>2º. That part of the army of the south which,
-posted in the valley of the Tagus, observed Hill
-from behind the Tietar, and the Spaniards of Estremadura
-from behind the Tagus.</p>
-
-<p>3º. The army of the north, under Caffarelli,
-whose business was to watch the English squadrons
-in the Bay of Biscay, to scour the great line of
-communication with France, and to protect the
-fortresses of Navarre and Biscay.</p>
-
-<p>4º. The army of the centre, under count D’Erlon
-whose task was to fight the Partidas in the central<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_471"></a>[471]</span>
-part of Spain, to cover Madrid and to connect the
-other armies by means of moveable columns radiating
-from that capital. Now if the reader will
-follow the operations of these armies in the order
-of their importance and will mark their bearing on
-the main action of the campaign, he will be led
-gradually to understand how it was, that in 1813,
-the French, although apparently in their full
-strength, were suddenly, irremediably and as it
-were by a whirlwind, swept from the Peninsula.</p>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote7">1813.</span>
-The army of the centre was composed of Darmagnac’s
-and Barrois’ French divisions, of Palombini’s
-Italians, Casa Palacio’s Spaniards, Trielhard’s
-cavalry, and the king’s French guards. It has been
-already shewn how, marching from the Tormes, it
-drove the Empecinado and Bassecour from the
-capital; but in passing the Guadarama one hundred<span class="sidenote">Vacani.</span>
-and fifty men were frozen to death, a catastrophe
-produced by the rash use of ardent spirits. Palombini
-immediately occupied Alcala, and, having
-foraged the country towards Guadalaxara, brought
-in a large convoy of provisions to the capital. He
-would then have gone to Zaragoza to receive the
-recruits and stores which had arrived from Italy for
-his division, but Caffarelli was at this time so
-pressed that the Italian division finally marched to
-his succour, not by the direct road, such was the
-state of the northern provinces, but by the circuitous
-route of Valladolid and Burgos. The king’s
-guards then replaced the Italians at Alcala, and
-excursions were commenced on every side against
-the Partidas, which being now recruited and taught
-by French deserters were become exceedingly wary
-and fought obstinately.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_472"></a>[472]</span></p>
-
-<p>On the 8th of January, Espert, governor of
-Segovia, beat Saornil not far from Cuellar.</p>
-
-<p>On the 3d of February, general Vichery, marching
-upon Medina Celi, routed a regiment of horse
-called the volunteers of Madrid, and took six hundred
-prisoners. The Empecinado with two thousand
-infantry and a thousand cavalry intercepted
-him on his return, but Vichery beat him with considerable
-slaughter, and made the retreat good
-with a loss of only seventy men. However the
-Guerilla chief being reinforced by Saornil and
-Abril, still kept the hills about Guadalaxara, and
-when D’Erlon sent fresh troops against him, he
-attacked a detachment under colonel Prieur, killed
-twenty men, took the baggage and recovered a
-heavy contribution.</p>
-
-<p>During these operations the troops in the valley of
-the Tagus were continually harassed, especially by a
-chief called Cuesta who was sometimes in the Guadalupe
-mountains, sometimes on the Tietar, sometimes
-in the Vera de Placentia, and he was supported
-at times on the side of the Guadalupe by Morillo and
-Penne Villemur. The French were however most
-troubled by Hill’s vicinity, for that general’s successful
-enterprises had made a profound impression,
-and the slightest change of his quarters, or
-even the appearance of an English uniform beyond
-the line of cantonments caused a concentration of
-French troops as expecting one of his sudden
-blows.</p>
-
-<p>Nor was the army of Portugal tranquil. The
-Gallicians menaced it from Puebla Senabria and
-the gorges of the Bierzo; Silveira from the Tras
-os Montes; the mountains separating Leon from the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_473"></a>[473]</span>
-Asturias were full of bands; Wellington was on the
-Agueda; and Hill, moving from Coria by the pass
-of Bejar might make a sudden incursion towards
-Avila. Finally the communication with the army
-of the north was to be kept up, and on every side
-the Partidas were enterprising, especially the horsemen
-in the plains of Leon. Reille however did
-not fail to war down these last.</p>
-
-<p>Early in January Foy, returning from Astorga
-to relieve general Leval, then at Avila, killed some
-of Marquinez’ cavalry in San Pedro, and more of
-them at Mota la Toro; and on the 15th of that
-month the French captain Mathis killed or took
-four hundred of the same Partida at Valderas.
-A convoy of Guerilla stores coming from the Asturias
-was intercepted by general Boyer’s detachments,
-and one Florian, a celebrated Spanish Partizan
-in the French service, destroyed the band of
-Garido, in the Avila district. The same Florian
-on the 1st of February defeated the Medico and
-another inferior chief, and soon after, passing the
-Tormes, captured some Spanish dragoons who had
-come out of Ciudad Rodrigo. On the 1st of
-March he crushed the band of Tonto and at the same
-time captain Mathis, acting on the side of the Carrion
-river, again surprised Marquinez’ band at Melgar
-Abaxo, and that Partida, reduced to two hundred
-men under two inferior chiefs called Tobar
-and Marcos, ceased to be formidable.</p>
-
-<p>Previous to this some Gallician troops having
-advanced to Castro Gonzalo on the Esla, were attacked
-by Boyer who beat them through Benevente
-with the loss of one hundred and fifty men, and
-then driving the Spanish garrison from Puebla
-Senabria, raised contributions with a rigour and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_474"></a>[474]</span>
-ferocity said to be habitual to him. His detachments
-afterwards penetrating into the Asturias,
-menaced Oviedo, and vexed the country in despite
-of Porlier and Barceña who were in that province.
-General Foy also having fixed his quarters at Avila,
-feeling uneasy as to Hill’s intentions, had endeavoured
-on the 20th of February to surprise Bejar
-with the view of ascertaining if any large body was
-collected behind it, but he was vigorously repulsed
-by the fiftieth regiment and sixth caçadores under the
-command of colonel Harrison. However this attack
-and the movements of Florian beyond the Tormes,
-induced Lord Wellington to bring up another
-division to the Agueda, which, by a reaction, caused
-the French to believe the allies were ready to
-advance.</p>
-
-<p>During these events Caffarelli vainly urged
-Reille to send him reinforcements, the insurrection
-in the north gained strength, and the communications
-were entirely intercepted until Palombini,
-driving away Mendizabal and Longa from Burgos,
-enabled the great convoy and all Napoleon’s despatches,
-which had been long accumulating there,
-to reach Madrid in the latter end of February.
-Joseph then reluctantly prepared to abandon his
-capital and concentrate the armies in Castile, but
-he neglected those essential ingredients of the
-emperor’s plan, rapidity and boldness. By the
-first Napoleon proposed to gain time for the suppression
-of the insurrection in the northern provinces.
-By the second to impose upon Lord
-Wellington and keep him on the defensive. Joseph
-did neither, he was slow and assumed the defensive
-himself, and he and the other French generals expected
-to be attacked, for they had not fathomed<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_475"></a>[475]</span>
-the English general’s political difficulties; and
-French writers since, misconceiving the character
-of his warfare, have attributed to slowness in the
-man what was really the long-reaching policy of a
-great commander. The allied army was not so lithe
-as the French army; the latter carried on occasion
-ten days’ provisions on the soldiers’ backs, or it
-lived upon the country, and was in respect of its
-organization and customs a superior military machine;
-the former never carried more than three
-days’ provisions, never lived upon the country,
-avoided the principle of making the war support
-the war, payed or promised to pay for every thing,
-and often carried in its marches even the corn for
-its cavalry. The difference of this organization
-resulting from the difference of policy between the
-two nations, was a complete bar to any great and
-sudden excursion on the part of the British general
-and must always be considered in judging his
-operations.</p>
-
-<p>It is true that if Wellington had then passed
-the Upper Tormes with a considerable force,
-drawing Hill to him through Bejar, and moving
-rapidly by Avila, he might have broken in upon
-the defensive system of the king and beat his
-armies in detail, and much the French feared such
-a blow, which would have been quite in the manner
-of Napoleon. But Wellington’s views were directed
-by other than mere military principles.
-Thus striking, he was not certain that his blow
-would be decisive, his Portuguese forces would
-have been ruined, his British soldiers seriously
-injured by the attempt, and the resources of France
-would have repaired the loss of the enemy, sooner
-than he could have recovered the weakness which<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_476"></a>[476]</span>
-must necessarily have followed such an unseasonable
-exertion. His plan was to bring a great and
-enduring power early into the field, for like Phocion
-he desired to have an army fitted for a long
-race and would not start on the short course.</p>
-
-<p>Joseph though he conceived the probability and
-dreaded the effect of such a sudden attack, could
-by no means conceive the spirit of his brother’s
-plans. It was in vain that Napoleon, while admitting
-the bad moral effect of abandoning the capital,
-pointed out the difference between flying from it
-and making a forward movement at the head of an
-army; the king even maintained that Madrid was a
-better military centre of operations than Valladolid,
-because it had lines of communication by Segovia,
-Aranda de Duero, and Zaragoza; nothing could
-be more unmilitary, unless he was prepared to
-march direct upon Lisbon if the allies marched
-upon the Duero. His extreme reluctance to quit
-Madrid induced slowness, but the actual position
-of his troops at the moment likewise presented
-obstacles to the immediate execution of the emperor’s
-orders; for as Daricau’s division had not
-returned from Valencia, the French outposts towards
-the Morena could not be withdrawn, nor
-could the army of the centre march upon Valladolid
-until the army of the south relieved it at Madrid.
-Moreover Soult’s counsels had troubled the king’s
-judgment; for that marshal agreeing that to abandon
-Madrid at that time was to abandon Spain,
-offered a project for reconciling the possession of
-the capital with the emperor’s views. This was to
-place the army of Portugal, and the army of the
-south, in position along the slopes of the Avila
-mountains, and on the Upper Tormes menacing<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_477"></a>[477]</span>
-Ciudad Rodrigo, while the king with the army of
-the centre remained at Madrid in reserve. In this
-situation he said they would be an over-match for
-any force the allies could bring into the field, and
-the latter could not move either by the valley of
-the Tagus or upon the Duero without exposing
-themselves to a flank attack.</p>
-
-<p>The king objected that such a force could only
-be fed in that country by the utter ruin of the
-people, which he would not consent to; but he
-was deceived by his ministers; the comfortable
-state of the houses, the immense plains of standing
-corn seen by the allies in their march from the
-Esla to the Carrion proved that the people were
-not much impoverished. Soult, well acquainted
-with the resources of the country and a better and
-more practised master of such operations, looked to
-the military question rather than to the king’s conciliatory
-policy, and positively affirmed that the
-armies could be subsisted; yet it does not appear
-that he had taken into his consideration how the
-insurrection in the northern provinces was to be
-suppressed, which was the principal object of
-Napoleon’s plan. He no doubt expected that the
-emperor would, from France send troops for that
-purpose, but Napoleon knowing the true state of
-his affairs foresaw that all the resources of France
-would be required in another quarter.</p>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote7">March.</span>
-Hatred and suspicion would have made Joseph
-reject any plan suggested by Soult, and the more
-so that the latter now declared the armies could
-exist without assistance in money from France; yet
-his mind was evidently unsettled by that marshal’s
-proposal, and by the coincidence of his ideas as
-to holding Madrid, for even when the armies were<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_478"></a>[478]</span>
-in movement towards the northern parts, he vacillated
-in his resolutions, at one time thinking to<span class="sidenote">Marshal Jourdan’s Official correspondence, MSS.</span>
-stay at Madrid, at another to march with the army
-of the centre to Burgos, instead of Valladolid.
-However upon the 18th of March he quitted the
-capital leaving the Spanish ministers Angulo and
-Almenara to govern there in conjunction with
-Gazan. The army of the south then moved in two
-columns, one under Couroux across the Gredos
-mountains to Avila, the other under Gazan upon
-Madrid to relieve the army of the centre, which
-immediately marched to Aranda de Duero and
-Lerma, with orders to settle at Burgos. Meanwhile
-Villatte’s division and all the outposts withdrawn
-from La Mancha remained on the Alberche, and
-the army of the south was thus concentrated between
-that river, Madrid, and Avila.</p>
-
-<p>North of the Tagus the troops were unmolested,
-save by the bands during these movements, which
-were not completed before April, but in La Mancha
-the retiring French posts had been followed by Del
-Parque’s advanced guard under Cruz Murgeon, as
-far as Yebenes, and at the bridge of Algobar the
-French cavalry checked the Spanish horsemen so
-roughly, that Cruz Murgeon retired again towards
-the Morena. At the same time on the Cuenca side,
-the Empecinado having attempted to cut off a party
-of French cavalry, escorting the marquis of Salices
-to collect his rents previous to quitting Madrid, was
-defeated with the loss of seventy troopers. Meanwhile
-the great dépôt at Madrid being partly removed,
-general Villatte marched upon Salamanca
-and Gazan fixed his head-quarters at Arevalo. The
-army of the south was thus cantoned between the
-Tormes, the Duero, and the Adaja, with exception<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_479"></a>[479]</span>
-of six chosen regiments of infantry and four
-of cavalry, in all about ten thousand men; these
-remained at Madrid under Leval, who was ordered
-to push advanced guards to Toledo, and the
-Alberche, lest the allies should suddenly march
-that way and turn the left of the French army.
-But beyond the Alberche there were roads leading
-from the valley of the Tagus over the Gredos mountains
-into the rear of the advanced positions which
-the French had on the Upper Tormes, wherefore
-these last were now withdrawn from Pedrahita and
-Puente Congosto.</p>
-
-<p>In proportion as the troops arrived in Castile
-Reille sent men to the army of the north, and contracting
-his cantonments, concentrated his remaining
-forces about Medina de Rio Seco with his cavalry
-on the Esla. But the men recalled by the emperor
-were now in full march, the French were in a
-state of great confusion, the people urged by Wellington’s
-emissaries and expecting great events
-every where showed their dislike by withholding
-provisions, and the Partida warfare became as
-lively in the interior as on the coast, yet with
-worse fortune. Captain Giordano, a Spaniard of
-Joseph’s guard killed one hundred and fifty of
-Saornil’s people near Arevalo, and the indefatigable
-Florian defeated Morales’ band, seized a dépôt in
-the valley of the Tietar, beat the Medico there,
-and then crossing the Gredos mountains, destroyed
-near Segovia on the 28th the band of Purchas;
-the king’s Spanish guards also crushed some
-smaller Partidas, and Renovales with his whole staff
-was captured at Carvajales and carried to Valladolid.
-Meanwhile the Empecinado gained the
-hills above Sepulveda and joining with Merino<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_480"></a>[480]</span>
-obliged the people of the Segovia district, to abandon
-their houses and refuse the supplies demanded
-by the army of the centre. When D’Armagnac
-and Cassagne marched against them, Merino returned
-to his northern haunts, the Empecinado to
-the Tagus, and D’Erlon then removed his head-quarters
-to Cuellar.</p>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote7">April.</span>
-During April Leval was very much disturbed,
-and gave false alarms, which extending to Valladolid
-caused an unseasonable concentration of the
-troops and D’Erlon abandoned Cuellar and Sepulveda.
-Del Parque and the Empecinado were said<span class="sidenote">French Papers captured at Vittoria, MSS.</span>
-to have established the bridge of Aranjuez, Elio
-to be advancing in La Mancha, Hill to be in the
-valley of the Tagus and moving by Mombeltran
-with the intention of seizing the passes of the
-Guadarama. All of this was false. It was the
-Empecinado and Abuelo who were at Aranjuez,
-the Partidas of Firmin, Cuesta, Rivero, and El
-Medico who were collecting at Arzobispo, to mask
-the march of the Spanish divisions from Estremadura,
-and of the reserve from Andalusia; it was
-the prince of Anglona who was advancing in La
-Mancha to cover the movement of Del Parque
-upon Murcia. When disabused of his error, Leval
-easily drove away the Empecinado who had advanced
-to Alcala; afterwards chasing Firmin from
-Valdemoro into the valley of the Tagus, he re-established
-his advanced posts in Toledo and on the
-Alberche, and scoured the whole country around.
-But Joseph himself was anxious to abandon Madrid
-altogether, and was only restrained by the emperor’s
-orders and by the hope of still gathering some
-contributions there to support his court at Valladolid.
-With reluctance also he had obeyed his<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_481"></a>[481]</span>
-brother’s reiterated orders to bring the army of the
-centre over the Duero to replace the detached divisions
-of the army of Portugal. He wished D’Erlon
-rather than Reille, to reinforce the north, and nothing
-could more clearly show how entirely the
-subtle spirit of Napoleon’s instructions had escaped
-his perception. It was necessary that Madrid should
-be held, to watch the valley of the Tagus and if
-necessary to enable the French armies to fall back
-on Zaragoza, but principally to give force to the
-moral effect of the offensive movement towards
-Portugal. It was equally important and for the
-same reason, that the army of Portugal instead of
-the army of the centre should furnish reinforcements
-for the north.</p>
-
-<p>In the contracted positions which the armies
-now occupied, the difficulty of subsisting was
-increased, and each general was dissatisfied with
-his district, disputes multiplied, and the court
-clashed with the army at every turn. Leval also
-inveighed against the conduct of the Spanish
-ministers and minor authorities left at Madrid, as
-being hurtful to both troops and people, and no
-doubt justly, since it appears to have been precisely
-like that of the Portuguese and Spanish authorities
-on the other side towards the allies. Joseph’s
-letters to his brother became daily more bitter.
-Napoleon’s regulations for the support of the troops
-were at variance with his, and when the king’s
-budget shewed a deficit of many millions, the
-emperor so little regarded it that he reduced the
-French subsidy to two millions per month, and
-strictly forbad the application of the money to any
-other purpose than the pay of the soldiers. When
-Joseph asked, how he was to find resources? his<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_482"></a>[482]</span>
-brother with a just sarcasm on his political and
-military blindness, desired him to seek what was
-necessary in those provinces of the north which
-were rich enough to nourish the Partidas and the
-insurrectional juntas. The king thus pushed to the
-wall prevailed upon Gazan secretly to lend him fifty
-thousand francs, for the support of his court, from
-the chest of the army of the south; but with the
-other generals he could by no means agree, and
-instead of the vigour and vigilance necessary to
-meet the coming campaign there was weakness,
-disunion, and ill blood.</p>
-
-<p>All the movements and arrangements for concentrating
-the French forces, as made by Joseph,
-displeased Napoleon. The manner in which the
-army of the centre stole away from Madrid by the
-road of Lerma was, he said, only calculated to
-expose his real views and draw the allies upon the
-French before the communication with France was
-restored. But more than all his indignation was
-aroused by the conduct of the king after the concentration.
-The French armies were held on the
-defensive and the allies might without fear for Portugal
-embark troops to invade France, whereas a
-bold and confident offensive movement sustained
-by the formation of a battering train at Burgos, as
-if to besiege Ciudad Rodrigo, would have imposed
-upon the English general, secured France from the
-danger of such an insult, and would at the same
-time have masked the necessary measures for suppressing
-the insurrection in the northern provinces.
-To quell that insurrection was of vital importance,
-but from the various circumstances already noticed
-it had now existed for seven months, five of which,
-the king, although at the head of ninety thousand<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_483"></a>[483]</span>
-men, and uninterrupted by Wellington, had wasted
-unprofitably, having done no more than chase a few
-inferior bands of the interior while this formidable
-warfare was consolidating in his rear; and while
-his great adversary was organizing the most powerful
-army which had yet taken the field in his front.
-It is thus kingdoms are lost. I shall now trace the
-progress of the northern insurrection so unaccountably
-neglected by the king, and to the last misunderstood
-by him; for when Wellington was actually
-in movement; when the dispersed French corps
-were rushing and crowding to the rear to avoid the
-ponderous mass which the English general was
-pushing forward; even then, the king, who had
-done every thing possible to render defeat certain,
-was urging upon Napoleon the propriety of first
-beating the allies and afterwards reducing the insurrection
-by the establishment of a Spanish civil
-government beyond the Ebro!</p>
-
-
-<h4>NORTHERN INSURRECTION.</h4>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote7">1813.</span>
-It has been already shewn how the old Partidas
-had been strengthened and new corps organized on
-a better footing in Biscay and Navarre; how in
-the latter end of 1812 Caffarelli marched to succour
-Santona, and how Longa taking advantage of his
-absence captured a convoy near Burgos while other
-bands menaced Logroño. All the littoral posts, with
-the exception of Santona and Gueteria were then
-in the possession of the Spaniards, and Mendizabel
-made an attempt on Bilbao the 6th of January.
-Repulsed by general Rouget he rejoined Longa and
-together they captured the little fort of Salinas de
-Anara, near the Ebro, and that of Cuba in the
-Bureba, while the bands of Logroño invested Domingo<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_484"></a>[484]</span>
-Calçada in the Rioja. On the 26th of
-January, Caffarelli, having returned from Santona,
-detached Vandermaesen and Dubreton to drive the
-Spaniards from Santander, and they seized many
-stores there, but neglected to make any movement
-to aid Santona which was again blockaded by the
-Partidas; meanwhile the convoy with all the emperor’s
-despatches was stopped at Burgos. Palombini
-re-opened the communications and enabled
-the convoy to reach Madrid, but his division did
-not muster more than three thousand men, and
-various detachments belonging to the other armies
-were now in march to the interior of Spain. The
-regiments recalled to France from all parts were
-also in full movement, together with many convoys
-and escorts for the marshals and generals quitting
-the Peninsula; thus the army of the north was
-reduced, as its duties increased, and the young
-French soldiers died fast of a peculiar malady which
-especially attacked them in small garrisons. Meanwhile
-the Spaniards’ forces increased. In February
-Mendizabel and Longa were again in the Bureba
-intercepting the communication between Burgos and
-Bilbao, and they menaced Pancorbo and Briviesca.
-This brought Caffarelli from Vittoria and Palombini
-from Burgos. The latter surprised by Longa, lost
-many men near Poza de Sal, and only saved himself
-by his courage and firmness yet he finally drove
-the Spaniards away. But now Mina returning
-from Aragon after his unsuccessful action near
-Huesca surprized and burned the castle of Fuenterrabia
-in a most daring manner on the 11th of March,
-after which, having assembled five thousand men in
-Guipuscoa, he obtained guns from the English fleet
-at Motrico, invested Villa Real within a few leagues<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_485"></a>[485]</span>
-of Vittoria, and repulsed six hundred men who
-came to relieve the fort. This brought Caffarelli
-back from Pancorbo. Mina then raised the siege,
-and Palombini marching into the Rioja, succoured
-the garrison of San Domingo Calçada and drove the
-Partidas towards Soria. The communication with
-Logroño was thus re-opened, and the Italians passing
-the Ebro marched by Vittoria towards Bilbao
-where they arrived the 21st of February; but the
-gens-d’armes and imperial guards immediately
-moved from Bilbao to France, Caffarelli went with
-them, and the Spanish chiefs remained masters of
-Navarre and Biscay. The people now refused war
-contributions both in money and kind, the harvest
-was not ripe, and the distress of the French increased
-in an alarming manner because the weather enabled
-the English fleets to keep upon the coast and intercept
-all supplies from France by sea. The communications
-were all broken; in front by Longa who
-was again at the defile of Pancorbo; in the rear
-by Mina who was in the hills of Arlaban; on the
-left by a collection of bands at Caroncal in Navarre.
-Abbé, governor of Pampeluna severely checked
-these last, but Mina soon restored affairs; for leaving
-the volunteers of Guipuscoa to watch the defiles of
-Arlaban, he assembled all the bands in Navarre,
-destroyed the bridges leading to Taffalla from Pampeluna
-and from Puente la Reyna, and though
-Abbé twice attacked him, he got stronger, and
-bringing up two English guns from the coast
-besieged Taffalla.</p>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote9">February.</span>Napoleon, discontented with Caffarelli’s mode of
-conducting the war, now gave Clauzel the command
-in the north, with discretionary power to draw as
-many troops from the army of Portugal as he<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_486"></a>[486]</span>
-judged necessary. He was to correspond directly
-with the emperor to avoid loss of time, but was
-to obey the king in all things not clashing with
-Napoleon’s orders, which contained a complete
-review of what had passed and what was necessary
-to be done. “The Partidas,” the emperor
-said, “were strong, organized, exercised, and seconded
-by the exaltation of spirit which the battle
-of Salamanca had produced. The insurrectional
-juntas had been revived, the posts on the coast
-abandoned by the French and seized by the Spaniards
-gave free intercourse with the English; the bands
-enjoyed all the resources of the country, and the
-system of warfare hitherto followed had favoured
-their progress. Instead of forestalling their enterprises
-the French had waited for their attacks, and
-contrived to be always behind the event; they
-obeyed the enemy’s impulsion and the troops were
-fatigued without gaining their object. Clauzel was
-to adopt a contrary system, he was to attack suddenly,
-pursue rapidly, and combine his movements
-with reference to the features of the country. A few
-good strokes against the Spaniards’ magazines, hospitals,
-or dépôts of arms would inevitably trouble
-their operations, and after one or two military successes
-some political measures would suffice to
-disperse the authorities, disorganise the insurrection,
-and bring the young men who had been
-enrolled by force back to their homes. All the
-generals recommended, and the emperor approved
-of the construction of block-houses on well-chosen
-points, especially where many roads met; the
-forests would furnish the materials cheaply, and
-these posts should support each other and form
-chains of communication. With respect to the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_487"></a>[487]</span>
-greater fortresses, Pampeluna and Santona were
-the most important, and the enemy knew it, for
-Mina was intent to famish the first and the English
-squadron to get hold of the second. To supply
-Pampeluna it was only necessary to clear the communications,
-the country around being rich and
-fertile. Santona required combinations. The emperor
-wished to supply it by sea from Bayonne
-and St. Sebastian, but the French marine officers
-would never attempt the passage, even with favourable
-winds and when the English squadron were
-away, unless all the intermediate ports were occupied
-by the land forces.</p>
-
-<p>“Six months before, these ports had been in the
-hands of the French, but Caffarelli had lightly
-abandoned them, leaving the field open to the
-insurgents in his rear while he marched with
-Souham against Wellington. Since that period
-the English and Spaniards held them. For four
-months the emperor had unceasingly ordered the
-retaking of Bermeo and Castro, but whether from
-the difficulty of the operations or the necessity of
-answering more pressing calls, no effort had been
-made to obey, and the fine season now permitted
-the English ships to aid in the defence. Castro
-was said to be strongly fortified by the English,
-no wonder, Caffarelli had given them sufficient
-time, and they knew its value. In one month
-every post on the coast from the mouth of the
-Bidassoa to St. Ander should be again re-occupied
-by the French, and St. Ander itself should be
-garrisoned strongly. And simultaneous with the
-coast operations should be Clauzel’s attack on Mina
-in Navarre and the chasing of the Partidas in the
-interior of Biscay. The administration of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_488"></a>[488]</span>
-country also demanded reform, and still more
-the organization and discipline of the army of the
-north should be attended to. It was the pith and
-marrow of the French power in Spain, all would
-fail if that failed, whereas if the north was strong,
-its administration sound, its fortresses well provided
-and its state tranquil, no irreparable misfortune
-could happen in any other part.”</p>
-
-<p>Clauzel assumed the command on the 22d of
-February, Abbé was then confined to Pampeluna,
-Mina, master of Navarre, was besieging Taffalla;
-Pastor, Longa, Campillo, Merino and others ranged
-through Biscay and Castile unmolested; and the
-spirit of the country was so changed that fathers
-now sent their sons to join Partidas which had
-hitherto been composed of robbers and deserters.
-Clauzel demanded a reinforcement of twenty thousand
-men from the army of Portugal, but Joseph
-was still in Madrid and proposed to send D’Erlon
-with the army of the centre instead, an arrangement
-to which Clauzel would not accede. Twenty
-thousand troops were, he said, wanted beyond
-the Ebro. Two independent chiefs, himself and
-D’Erlon, could not act together; and if the latter
-was only to remain quiet at Burgos his army would
-devour the resources without aiding the operations
-of the army of the north. The king might choose
-another commander, but the troops required must
-be sent. Joseph changed his plan, yet it was the
-end of March before Reille’s divisions moved, three
-upon Navarre, and one upon Burgos. Meanwhile
-Clauzel repaired with some troops to Bilbao, where
-general Rouget had eight hundred men in garrison
-besides Palombini’s Italians.</p>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote7">March.</span>
-This place was in a manner blockaded by the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_489"></a>[489]</span>
-Partidas. The Pastor with three thousand men
-was on the right of the Durango river, in the hills
-of Guernica, and Navarnis, between Bilbao and the
-fort of Bermeo. Mendizabal with from eight to
-ten thousand men was on the left of the Durango
-in the mountains, menacing at once Santoña and
-Bilbao and protecting Castro. However the French
-had a strong garrison in the town of Durango, the
-construction of new works round Bilbao was in
-progress, and on the 22d of March Clauzel moved
-with the Italians and a French regiment to assault
-Castro. Campillo and Mendizabel immediately
-appeared from different sides and the garrison made
-a sally; the Spaniards after some sharp fighting
-regained the high valleys in disorder, and the
-design of escalading Castro was resumed, but
-again interrupted by the return of Mendizabel to
-Trucios, only seven miles from the French camp,
-and by intelligence that the Pastor with the volunteers
-of Biscay and Guipuscoa was menacing
-Bilbao. Clauzel immediately marched with the
-French regiments to the latter place, leaving
-Palombini to oppose Mendizabel. Finding all safe
-at Bilbao, he sent Rouget with two French battalions
-to reinforce the Italians, who then drove
-Mendizabel from Trucios into the hills about Valmaceda.
-It being now necessary to attack Castro
-in form, Palombini occupied the heights of Ojeba
-and Ramales, from whence he communicated with
-the garrison of Santona, introduced a convoy of
-money and fresh provisions there, received ammunition
-in return, and directed the governor Lameth
-to prepare a battering train of six pieces for the
-siege. This done, the Italians who had lost many<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_490"></a>[490]</span>
-men returned hastily to Bilbao, for the Pastor was
-again menacing that city.</p>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote7">April.</span>
-On the evening of the 31st Palombini marched
-against this new enemy and finding him too strong
-retreated, but being promised a reinforcement of
-two regiments from Durango he returned; Pastor
-was then with three thousand men in position at
-Navarnis, Palombini gave him battle on the 3d and
-was defeated with the loss of eighty men, but on
-the 5th being joined by the French regiments from
-Durango he beat the Spaniards. They dispersed
-and while some collected in the same positions
-behind him, and others under Pastor gained the
-interior, one column retired by the coast towards
-the Deba on the side of St. Sebastian. Palombini
-eagerly pursued these last, because he expected
-troops from that fortress to line the Deba, and
-hoped thus to surround the Spaniards, but the
-English squadron was at Lequitio and carried them
-off. Pastor meanwhile descending the Deba drove
-the French from that river to the very walls of
-St. Sebastian, and Palombini was forced to make
-for Bergara on the road to Vittoria.</p>
-
-<p>At Bergara he left his wounded men with a
-garrison to protect them, and returning on the
-9th of April attacked the volunteers of Guipuscoa
-at Ascoytia; repulsed in this attempt he retired
-again towards Bergara, and soon after took charge
-of a convoy of artillery going from St. Sebastian
-for the siege of Castro. Meanwhile Bilbao was
-in great danger, for the volunteers of Biscay coming
-from the Arlaban, made on the 10th a false attack
-at a bridge two miles above the entrenched camp,
-while Tapia, Dos Pelos, and Campillo fell on<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_491"></a>[491]</span>
-seriously from the side of Valmaceda. Mendizabel,
-who commanded, did not combine his movements
-well and was repulsed by Rouget although with
-difficulty; the noise of the action reached Palombini
-who hastened his march, and having deposited
-his convoy, followed the volunteers of Biscay to
-Guernica and drove them upon Bermeo where
-they got on board the English vessels.</p>
-
-<p>During these events Clauzel was at Vittoria
-arranging the general plan of operations. Mina
-had on the 1st of April defeated one of his columns
-near Lerin with the loss of five or six hundred
-men. The four divisions sent from the army of
-Portugal, together with some unattached regiments
-furnished, according to Reille, the twenty thousand
-men demanded, yet only seventeen thousand reached
-Clauzel; and as the unattached regiments merely
-replaced a like number belonging to the other
-armies, and now recalled from the north, the
-French general found his expected reinforcements
-dwindled to thirteen thousand. Hence notwithstanding
-Palombini’s activity, the insurrection was
-in the beginning of April more formidable than
-ever; the line of correspondence from Torquemada
-to Burgos was quite unprotected for want of
-troops, neither was the line from Burgos to Irun
-so well guarded that couriers could pass without
-powerful escorts, nor always then. The fortifications
-of the castle of Burgos were to have been
-improved, but there was no money to pay for the
-works, the French, in default of transport, could
-not collect provisions for the magazines ordered
-to be formed there by the king, and two generals,
-La Martiniere and Rey, were disputing for the
-command. Nearly forty thousand irregular Spanish<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_492"></a>[492]</span>
-troops were in the field. The garrison of Taffalla,
-five hundred strong, had yielded to Mina, and that
-chief, in concert with Duran, Amor, Tabueca, the
-militia men of Logroña, and some minor guerillas
-occupied both sides of the Ebro, between Calahora,
-Logroño, Santa Cruz de Campero, and Guardia.
-They could in one day unite eighteen thousand
-infantry and a thousand horsemen. Mendizabel,
-Longa, Campillo, Herrera, El Pastor, and the
-volunteers of Biscay, Guipuscoa, and Alava, in
-all about sixteen thousand, were on the coast
-acting in conjunction with the English squadrons,
-Santander, Castro, and Bermeo were still in their
-hands, and maritime expeditions were preparing at
-Coruña and in the Asturias.</p>
-
-<p>This Partizan war thus presented three distinct
-branches, that of Navarre, that of the coast, and
-that on the lines of communication. The last
-alone required above fifteen thousand men; namely
-ten thousand from Irun to Burgos, and the line
-between Tolosa and Pampeluna, which was destroyed,
-required fifteen hundred to restore it,
-while four thousand were necessary between Mondragon
-and Bilbao, comprising the garrison of the
-latter place; even then no post would be safe
-from a sudden attack. Nearly all the army of the
-north was appropriated to the garrisons and lines
-of communication, but the divisions of Abbé and
-Vandermaesen could be used on the side of Pampeluna,
-and there were besides, disposable, Palombini’s
-Italians and the divisions sent by Reille.
-But one of these, Sarrut’s, was still in march, and
-all the sick of the armies in Castile were now
-pouring into Navarre, when, from the loss of the
-contributions, there was no money to provide assistance<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_493"></a>[493]</span>
-for them. Clauzel had however ameliorated
-both the civil and the military administrations,
-improved the works of Gueteria, commenced the
-construction of block-houses between Irun and
-Vittoria, and as we have seen had shaken the
-bands about Bilbao. Now dividing his forces he
-destined Palombini to besiege Castro, ordering
-Foy and Sarrut’s divisions when the latter should
-arrive, to cover the operation and to oppose any
-disembarkation.</p>
-
-<p>The field force thus appropriated, together with
-the troops in Bilbao under Rouget, was about
-ten thousand men, and in the middle of April,
-Clauzel, beating Mina from Taffalla and Estella,
-assembled the remainder of the active army, composed
-of Taupin and Barbout’s divisions of the
-army of Portugal, Vandermaesen’s and Abbé’s divisions
-of the army of the north, in all about thirteen
-thousand men, at Puenta La Reyna in Navarre. He
-urged general L’Huillier, who commanded the reserve
-at Bayonne, to reinforce St. Sebastian and Gueteria
-and to push forward his troops of observation into
-the valley of Bastan, and he also gave the commandant
-of Zaragoza notice of his arrival, that
-he might watch Mina on that side. From Puente
-la Reyna he made some excursions but he lost men
-uselessly, for the Spaniards would only fight at
-advantage, and to hunt Mina without first barring
-all his passages of flight was to destroy the French
-soldiers by fatigue. And here the king’s delay was
-most seriously felt because the winter season, when,
-the tops of the mountains being covered with snow,
-the Partidas could only move along the ordinary
-roads, was most favourable for the French operations,
-and it had passed away. Clauzel despairing<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_494"></a>[494]</span>
-to effect any thing with so few troops was even
-going to separate his forces and march to the coast,
-when in May Mina, who had taken post in the
-valley of Ronçal, furnished an occasion which
-did not escape the French general.</p>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote7">May.</span>
-On the 13th Abbé’s and Vandermaesen’s divisions
-and the cavalry entered that valley at once by the
-upper and lower parts, and suddenly closing upon
-the Guerilla chief killed and wounded a thousand
-of his men and dispersed the rest; one part fled
-by the mountains to Navarquez, on the side of
-Sanguessa, with the wounded whom they dropped
-at different places in care of the country people.
-Chaplangarra, Cruchaga, and Carena, Mina’s
-lieutenants, went off, each with a column, in the
-opposite direction and by different routes to the
-valley of the Aragon, they passed that river at
-St. Gilla, and made their way towards the sacred
-mountain of La Pena near Jaeca. The French cavalry
-following them by Villa Real, entered that
-town the 14th on one side, while Mina with twelve
-men entered it on the other, but he escaped to
-Martes where another ineffectual attempt was made
-to surprise him. Abbé’s columns then descended
-the smaller valleys leading towards the upper valley
-of the Aragon, while Vandermaesen’s infantry and the
-cavalry entered the lower part of the same valley,
-and the former approaching Jacca sent his wounded
-men there and got fresh ammunition.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile Mina and the insurgent junta making
-a push to regain Navarre by the left of the Aragon
-river were like to have been taken, but again
-escaped towards the valley of the Gallego, whither
-also the greater part of their troops now sought
-refuge. Clauzel was careful not to force them over<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_495"></a>[495]</span>
-that river, lest they should remain there and intercept
-the communication from Zaragoza by Jacca,
-which was the only free line the French now possessed
-and too far removed from Clauzel’s true
-theatre of operations to be watched. Abbé therefore
-returned to Roncal in search of the Spanish
-dépôts, and Vandermaesen entered Sos at one end
-just as Mina, who had now one hundred and fifty
-horsemen and was always intent upon regaining
-Navarre, passed out at the other; the light cavalry
-pursuing overtook him at Sos Fuentes and he fled
-to Carcastillo, but there unexpectedly meeting some
-of his own squadrons which had wandered over
-the mountains after the action at Roncal, he gave
-battle, was defeated with the loss of fifty men and
-fled once more to Aragon, whereupon the insurrectional
-junta dispersed, and dissentions arose
-between Mina and the minor chiefs under his command.
-Clauzel anxious to increase this discord sent
-troops into all the valleys to seek out the Spanish
-dépôts and to attack their scattered men, and he was
-well served by the Aragonese, for Suchet’s wise administration
-was still proof against the insurrectional
-juntas.</p>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote7">1813.</span>
-During these events four battalions left by Mina
-at Santa Cruz de Campero in the Amescoas, were
-chased by Taupin, who had remained at Estella
-when the other divisions marched up the valley of
-Roncal. Mina, however, reassembled at Barbastro
-in Aragon a strong column, crowds of deserters
-from the other Spanish armies were daily increasing
-his power, and so completely had he
-organized Navarre that the presence of a single
-soldier of his in a village sufficed to have any
-courier without a strong escort stopped. Many<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_496"></a>[496]</span>
-bands also were still in the Rioja, and two French
-regiments rashly foraging towards Lerim were
-nearly all destroyed. In fine the losses were well
-balanced, and Clauzel demanded more troops,
-especially cavalry, to scour the Rioja. Nevertheless
-the dispersion of Mina’s troops lowered the
-reputation of that chief, and the French general
-taking up his quarters in Pampeluna so improved
-this advantage by address, that many townships
-withdrew from the insurrection, and recalling their
-young men from the bands commenced the formation
-of eight free Spanish companies to serve
-on the French side. Corps of this sort were raised
-with so much facility in every part of Spain, that
-it would seem nations, as well as individuals,
-have an idiosyncrasy, and in these changeable
-warriors we again see the Mandonius and Indibilis
-of ancient days.</p>
-
-<p>Joseph, urged by Clauzel, now sent Maucune’s
-division and some light cavalry of the army of
-Portugal, to occupy Pampleiga, Burgos, and
-Briviesca, and to protect the great communication,
-which the diverging direction of Clauzel’s
-double operations had again exposed to the partidas.
-Meanwhile the French troops had not
-been less successful in Biscay than in Navarre.
-Foy reached Bilbao the 24th of April, and finding
-all things there ready for the siege of Castro
-marched to Santona to hasten the preparations at
-that place, and he attempted also to surprise the
-chiefs Campillo and Herrera in the hills above
-Santona, but was worsted in the combat. The two
-battering trains then endeavoured to proceed from
-Bilbao and Santona by sea to Castro, but the English
-vessels, coming to the mouth of the Durango,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_497"></a>[497]</span>
-stopped those at Bilbao, and obliged them to proceed
-by land, but thus gave an opportunity for those
-at Santona to make the sea-run in safety.</p>
-
-
-<h4>SIEGE OF CASTRO.</h4>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote7">May.</span>
-This place situated on a promontory was garrisoned
-by twelve hundred men, under the command
-of Don Pedro Alvarez, three English
-sloops of war commanded by the captains Bloye,
-Bremen, and Tayler, were at hand, some gun-boats
-were in the harbour, and twenty-seven guns
-were mounted on the works. An outward wall
-with towers, extended from sea to sea on the low
-neck which connected the promontory with the
-main land; this line of defence was strengthened by
-some fortified convents, behind it came the town,
-and behind the town at the extremity of the promontory
-stood the castle.</p>
-
-<p>On the 4th of May, Foy, Sarrut, and Palombini,
-took post at different points to cover the siege;
-the Italian general St. Paul invested the place;
-the engineer Vacani conducted the works, having
-twelve guns at his disposal. The defence was
-lively and vigorous, and captain Tayler with
-great labour landed a heavy ship-gun on a rocky
-island to the right of the town, looking from the sea,
-which he worked with effect against the French
-counter-batteries. On the 11th a second gun was
-mounted on this island, but that day the breaching
-batteries opened, and in a few hours broke the
-wall while the counter-batteries set fire to some
-houses with shells, wherefore the English guns were
-removed from the island. The assault was then
-ordered but delayed by a sudden accident, for a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_498"></a>[498]</span>
-foraging party having been sent into the hills, came
-flying back, pursued by a column of Spaniards
-which had passed unperceived through the positions
-of the French; and the besiegers were for some
-time in confusion as thinking the covering army
-had been beaten; however they soon recovered,
-and the assault and escalade took place in the
-night.</p>
-
-<p>The attack was rapid and fierce, the walls were
-carried, and the garrison driven through the town
-to the castle which was maintained by two companies,
-while the flying troops got on board the
-English vessels; finally the Italians stormed the
-castle, but every gun had been destroyed, and the
-two companies safely rejoined their countrymen on
-board the ships. The English had ten seamen
-wounded, the Spaniards lost about a hundred and
-eighty, and the remainder were immediately conveyed
-to Bermeo from whence they marched inland
-to join Longa. The besiegers lost only fifty men
-killed and wounded, and the Italian soldiers committed
-great excesses, setting fire to the town in
-many places. Foy and Sarrut, separating after the
-siege, marched, the former through the district of
-Incartaciones to Bilbao defeating a battalion of
-Biscay volunteers on his route; the latter to Orduña
-with the design of destroying Longa; but that
-chief crossed the Ebro at Puente Lara, and finding
-the additional troops sent by Joseph were beginning
-to arrive in the vicinity of Burgos, recrossed
-the river, and after a long chase escaped in the
-mountains of Espinosa. Sarrut having captured a
-few gun-carriages and one of Longa’s forest dépôts
-of ammunition, returned towards Bilbao, and
-Foy immediately marched from that place against<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_499"></a>[499]</span>
-the two remaining battalions of Biscay volunteers,
-which under the chiefs Mugartegui and Artola
-were now at Villaro and Guernica.</p>
-
-<p>These battalions, each a thousand strong, raised
-by conscription, and officered from the best families,
-were the champions of Biscay; but though brave and
-well-equipped, the difficulty of crushing them and
-the volunteers of Guipuscoa, was not great, because
-neither would leave their own peculiar provinces.
-The third battalion had been already dispersed
-in the district of Incartaciones, and Foy
-having in the night of the 29th combined the march
-of several columns to surround Villaro, fell at day-break
-upon Mugartegui’s battalion and dispersed it
-with the loss of all its baggage. Two hundred of
-the volunteers immediately returned to their homes,
-and the French general marched rapidly, through
-Durango, against Artola, who was at Guernica. The
-Italians who were still at <ins class="corr" id="tn-499" title="Transcriber’s Note—Original text: 'Bilbao, immedately'">
-Bilbao, immediately</ins> turned Guernica on the west by Mungia, while a French
-column turned it eastward by Marquinez; then
-Artola fled to Lequitio, but the column from Marquinez,
-coming over the mountain, fell upon his
-right flank just as he was defiling by a narrow
-way along the sea-coast. Artola himself escaped,
-but two hundred Biscayens were killed or drowned,
-more than three hundred with twenty-seven officers
-were taken, and two companies which formed his
-rear-guard dispersed in the mountains, and some
-men finding a few boats rowed to an English vessel.
-The perfect success of this action, which did not
-cost the French a man killed or wounded, was
-attributed to the talents and vigour of captain
-Guinget, the daring officer who won the passage<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_500"></a>[500]</span>
-of the Douro at Tordesillas in Wellington’s retreat
-from Burgos.</p>
-
-<p>When the three battalions of Biscay were thus
-disposed of, all their magazines, hospitals, and
-dépôts fell into Foy’s hands, the junta dispersed,
-the privateers quitted the coast for Santander,
-Pastor abandoned Guipuscoa, and the Italians
-recovered Bermeo from which the garrison fled to
-the English ships. They also destroyed the works
-of the little island of Isaro, which being situated
-three thousand yards from the shore, and
-having no access to the summit, save by a staircase
-cut in the rock, was deemed impregnable,
-and used as a dépôt for the English stores; but
-this was the last memorable exploit of Palombini’s
-division in the north. That general himself had
-already gone to Italy to join Napoleon’s reserves,
-and his troops being ordered to march by Aragon
-to join Suchet, were in movement, when new events
-caused them to remain in Guipuscoa, with the reputation
-of being brave and active but ferocious soldiers,
-barbarous and devastating, differing little from
-their Roman ancestors.</p>
-
-<p>It has been already observed that, during these
-double operations of the French on the coast and
-in Navarre, the partidas had fallen upon the line of
-communication with France, thus working out the
-third branch of the insurrectional warfare. Their
-success went nigh to balance all their losses on
-each flank. For Mendizabel settled with Longa’s
-partida upon the line between Burgos and Miranda
-de Ebro; the volunteers of Alava and Biscay, and
-part of Pastor’s bands concentrated on the mountains
-of Arlaban above the defiles of Salinas and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_501"></a>[501]</span>
-Descarga; Merino and Salazar came up from the
-country between the Ebro and the Duero; and the
-three battalions left by Mina in the Amescoa, after
-escaping from Taupin, reassembled close to Vittoria.
-Every convoy and every courier’s escort was attacked
-at one or other of these points without
-hindering Mendizabel from making sudden descents
-towards the coast when occasion offered.
-Thus, on the 11th of April, as we have seen, he
-attacked Bilbao. On the 25th of April Longa,
-who had four thousand men and several guns, was
-repulsed at Armiñion, between Miranda and Trevino,
-by some of the drafted men going to France; but
-on the 3d of May at the same place Longa met and
-obliged a large convoy, coming from Castile with
-an escort of eight hundred men, to return to Miranda,
-and even cannonaded that place on the 5th.
-Thouvenot the commandant of the government,
-immediately detached twelve hundred men and
-three guns from Vittoria to relieve the convoy; but
-then Mina’s battalions endeavoured to escalade
-Salvatierra, and they were repulsed with difficulty.
-Meanwhile the volunteers of Alava gathered above
-the pass of Salinas to intercept the rescued convoy,
-and finding that the latter would not stir from Vittoria,
-they went on the 10th to aid in a fresh attack on
-Salvatierra; being again repulsed they returned to
-the Arlaban, where they captured a courier with a
-strong escort in the pass of Descarga near Villa
-Real. A French regiment sent to succour Salvatierra
-finally drove these volunteers towards Bilbao
-where, as we have seen, Foy routed them, but
-Longa continued to infest the post of Armiñion
-until Sarrut arriving from the siege of Castro
-chased him also.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_502"></a>[502]</span></p>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote7">June.</span>
-Notwithstanding these successes Clauzel, whose
-troops were worn out with fatigue, declared that
-it would require fifty thousand men and three
-months’ time to quell the insurrection entirely.
-And Napoleon more discontented than ever with
-the king, complained that the happy enterprizes of
-Clauzel, Foy, Sarrut, and Palombini, had brought
-no safety to his couriers and convoys; that his
-orders about the posts and the infantry escorts had
-been neglected; that the reinforcements sent to the
-north from Castile had gone slowly and in succession
-instead of at once; finally that the cautious
-movement of concentration by the other armies
-was inexcusable, since the inaction of the allies,
-their distance, their want of transport, their ordinary
-and even timid circumspection in any operation
-out of the ordinary course, enabled the
-French to act in the most convenient manner.
-The growing dissentions between the English and
-the Spaniards, the journey of Wellington to Cadiz,
-and the changes in his army, were, he said, all
-favourable circumstances for the French, but the
-king had taken no advantage of them; the insurrection
-continued, and the object of interest was
-now changed. Joseph defended himself with more
-vehemence than reason against these charges, but
-Wellington soon vindicated Napoleon’s judgement,
-and the voice of controversy was smothered by
-the din of battle, for the English general was again
-abroad in his strength, and the clang of his arms
-resounded through the Peninsula.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_503"></a>[503]</span><br /></p>
-
-<h3 id="CHAPTER_BXX_VI">CHAPTER VI.</h3>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="sidenote7">1813.</span>
-While the French power in Spain was being disorganized
-by the various circumstances related in
-the former chapter, Lord Wellington’s diligence
-and energy had reorganized the allied army with
-greater strength than before. Large reinforcements,
-especially of cavalry, had come out from
-England. The efficiency and the spirit of the
-Portuguese had been restored in a surprizing manner,
-and discipline had been vindicated, in both
-services, with a rough but salutary hand; rank
-had not screened offenders; some had been arrested,
-some tried, some dismissed for breach of
-duty; the negligent were terrified, the zealous encouraged;
-in short every department was reformed with
-vigour, and it was full time. Confidential officers
-commissioned to detect abuses in the general hospitals
-and dépôts, those asylums for malingerers,
-discovered and drove so many skulkers to their
-duty, that the second division alone recovered six
-hundred bayonets in one month; and this salutary
-scouring was rendered more efficient by the establishment
-of both permanent, and ambulent regimental
-hospitals, a wise measure, and founded on
-a principle which cannot be too widely extended;
-for it is certain that as the character of a battalion
-depends on its fitness for service, a moral force
-will always be brought to bear upon the execution<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_504"></a>[504]</span>
-of orders under regimental controul which it is in
-vain to look for elsewhere.</p>
-
-<p>The Douro had been rendered navigable as high
-up as Castillo de Alva above the confluence of the
-Agueda; a pontoon train of thirty-five pieces
-had been formed; carts of a peculiar construction
-had been built to repair the great loss of mules
-during the retreat from Burgos, and a recruit of
-these animals was also obtained by emissaries
-who purchased them with English merchandize,
-even at Madrid, under the beards of the enemy, and
-at the very time when Clauzel was unable for want
-of transport to fill the magazines of Burgos. The
-ponderous iron camp-kettles of the soldiers had
-been laid aside for lighter vessels carried by men,
-the mules being destined to carry tents instead;
-it is, however, doubtful if these tents were really
-useful on a march in wet weather, because when
-soaked they became too heavy for the animal, and
-seldom arrived in time for use at the end of a
-march. Their greatest advantage was found when
-the soldiers halted for a few days. Beside these
-amendments many other changes and improvements
-had taken place, and the Anglo-Portuguese troops
-conscious of a superior organization, were more
-proudly confident than ever, while the French were
-again depressed by intelligence of the defection
-of the Prussians following on the disasters in Russia.
-Nor had the English general failed to amend
-the condition of those Spanish troops which the
-Cortez had placed at his disposal. By a strict and
-jealous watch over the application of the subsidy
-he had kept them clothed and fed during the
-winter, and now reaped the benefit by having
-several powerful bodies fit to act in conjunction<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_505"></a>[505]</span>
-with his own forces. Wherefore being thus prepared
-he was anxious to strike, anxious to forestall the
-effects of his Portuguese political difficulties as well
-as to keep pace with Napoleon’s efforts in Germany,
-and his army was ready to take the field in April,
-but he could not concentrate before the green
-forage was fit for use, and deferred the execution of
-his plan until May. What that plan was and what
-the means for executing it shall now be shewn.</p>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote7">May.</span>
-The relative strength of the contending armies
-in the Peninsula was no longer in favour of the
-French. Their force which at the termination of
-Wellington’s retreat into Portugal was above two
-hundred and sixty thousand men and thirty-two
-thousand horses, two hundred and sixteen thousand<span class="sidenote"><a href="#NO_XVIII">Appendix, No. 18.</a></span>
-being present with the eagles, was by
-the loss in subsequent operations, and by drafts
-for the army in Germany reduced in March, 1813,
-to two hundred and thirty-one thousand men and
-twenty-nine thousand horses. Thirty thousand of
-these were in hospital, and only one hundred and
-ninety-seven thousand men, including the reserve
-at Bayonne, were present with the eagles. Of
-this number sixty-eight thousand including sick,
-were in Aragon, Catalonia, and Valencia. The
-remainder with the exception of the ten thousand
-left at Madrid, were distributed on the northern
-line of communication, from the Tormes to Bayonne,
-and it has been already shewn how scattered and
-how occupied.</p>
-
-<p>But Wellington had so well used the five months’
-cessation of active operations that nearly two hundred
-thousand allied troops were ready to take the
-field, and on each flank there was a British fleet,
-now a more effective aid than before, because the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_506"></a>[506]</span>
-French lines of retreat run parallel to, and near the
-sea-coast on each side of Spain, and every part
-opened by the advance of the allies would furnish
-a fresh dépôt for the subsistence of their armies.
-This mass of troops was composed in the following
-manner.</p>
-
-<p>The first army under Copons nominally ten
-thousand, really about six thousand strong, was
-in Catalonia.</p>
-
-<p>The second army under Elio was in Murcia
-about twenty thousand, including the divisions of
-Villa Campa, Bassecour, Duran, and Empecinado.</p>
-
-<p>The Anglo-Sicilian army under Murray, near
-Alicant, about sixteen thousand.</p>
-
-<p>The third army under Del Parque, in the Morena
-about twelve thousand.</p>
-
-<p>The first army of reserve under the Conde d’Abispal,
-in Andalusia, about fifteen thousand.</p>
-
-<p>The fourth army, under Castaños, which included
-the Spanish divisions in Estremadura, Julian Sanchez’
-Partida and the Gallicians under Giron, the
-Asturians under Porlier and Barceña, together with
-the Partidas of Longa and Mina, likewise belonged
-to this army and were mustered amongst its divisions.
-This army was computed at forty thousand
-men, to which may be added the minor bands and
-volunteers in various parts.</p>
-
-<p>Lastly there was the noble Anglo-Portuguese
-army which now furnished more than seventy thousand
-fighting men, with ninety pieces of artillery;
-and the real difference between the French and
-the allies was greater than the apparent difference.
-The French returns included officers,
-sergeants, drummers, artillery-men, engineers, and
-waggoners, whereas the allies’ numbers were all<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_507"></a>[507]</span>
-sabres and bayonets. Moreover this statement of
-the French number was on the 15th of March, and
-as there were drafts made by Napoleon after that
-period, and as Clauzel and Foy’s losses, and the
-reserves at Bayonne must be deducted, it would be
-probably more correct to assume that the whole
-number of sabres and bayonets in June, was not
-more than one hundred and sixty thousand, of
-which one hundred and ten thousand were on the
-northern line of invasion.</p>
-
-<p>The campaign of 1812 had taught the English
-general the strength of the French lines of defence,
-especially on the Duero, which they had since entrenched
-in different parts, and most of the bridges
-over it, he had himself destroyed in his retreat.
-But for many reasons it was not advisable to
-operate in the central provinces of Spain. The
-country there was exhausted, the lines of supply
-would be longer and more exposed, the army further
-removed from the sea, the Gallicians could not
-be easily brought down to co-operate, the services
-of the northern Partidas would not be so advantageous,
-and the ultimate result would be less decisive
-than operations against the great line of communication
-with France; wherefore against the northern
-provinces he had early resolved to direct his attack
-and had well considered how to evade those lines
-which he could scarcely hope to force.</p>
-
-<p>All the enemy’s defences on the Lower Duero
-could be turned by a movement on the right, across
-the Upper Tormes, and from thence skirting the
-mountains towards the Upper Duero; but that line
-although most consonant to the rules of art, because
-the army would thus be kept in one mass, led
-through a very difficult and wasted country, the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_508"></a>[508]</span>
-direct aid of the Gallicians must have been dispensed
-with, and moreover it was there the French
-looked for the allies. Hence Wellington resolved
-not to operate by his right, and with great skill and
-dexterity, he had by the disposition of his troops in
-winter-quarters, by false reports and false movements
-masked his real intentions. For the gathering
-of the Partidas in the valley of the Tagus, the
-demonstrations made in Estremadura and La Mancha
-by Penne Villemur, Morillo and Del Parque’s army,
-together with the presence of Hill at Coria, that general’s
-hold of the passes of Bejar, and the magazines
-formed there, all intimated a design of moving
-either by the valley of the Tagus or by the district
-of Avila; and the great magazines collected at
-Celerico, Viseu, Penamacor, Almeida, and Ciudad
-Rodrigo, in no manner belied the other indications.
-But half the army widely cantoned in the interior
-of Portugal, apparently for the sake of subsistence
-or health, was really so placed as to be in the
-direction of the true line of operations which was
-by the left through the Tras os Montes.</p>
-
-<p>Wellington’s plan was to pass the Duero, within
-the Portuguese frontier, with a part of his army; to
-ascend the right bank of that river towards Zamora,
-and then crossing the Esla, to unite with the
-Gallician forces, while the remainder of the army,
-advancing from the Agueda, forced the passage of
-the Tormes. By this great movement, which he
-hoped to effect so suddenly that the king would
-not have time to concentrate the French armies in
-opposition, the front of the allies would be changed
-to their right, the Duero and the Pisuerga would
-be turned, and the enemy forced in confusion over
-the Carion. Then with his powerful army well in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_509"></a>[509]</span>
-hand the English general could march in advance
-without fear, strong enough to fight and strong
-enough to turn the right flank of any position
-which the French might take up; and with this advantage
-also, that at each step he would gain additional
-help by the junction of the irregular Spanish
-forces until he gave his hand to the insurgents in
-Biscay, and every port opened would furnish him a
-new dépôt and magazines.</p>
-
-<p>But in executing this movement the army would
-necessarily be divided into three separate divisions
-each too weak to beat the whole French force
-singly; the march of the centre division by the
-Tras os Montes, upon the nice execution of which
-the concentration of the whole depended, would
-be through an extremely difficult and mountainous
-country, and there were three great rivers to pass.
-The operation was therefore one of extreme delicacy
-requiring nice and extensive arrangements;
-yet there was not much danger to be apprehended
-from failure; because as each separate corps had
-a strong country to retire upon, the probable
-extent of the mischief would only be the loss of
-time, and the disadvantage of pursuing other operations
-when the harvest being ripe the French
-could easily keep in masses. The secret then was
-to hide the true plan as long as possible, to gain
-some marches for the centre corps, and by all
-means to keep the French so scattered and occupied
-by minor combinations, that they should be unable
-to assemble in time to profit from their central
-positions. Now the bridge equipage being prepared
-at Abrantes in the interior of Portugal was
-unknown, and gave no intimation of the real design,
-for the bullocks which drew it came with cars from<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_510"></a>[510]</span>
-Spain to Lamego and from thence went down to
-Abrantes; the free navigation of the Douro up to
-the Agueda was more conducive to a movement by
-the right, and it furnished abundance of large boats
-wherewith to pass that river without creating any
-suspicion from their presence; the wide cantonments
-of the allies permitted various changes of
-quarters under the pretence of sickness, and the
-troops thus gradually closed upon the Douro, within
-the Portuguese frontier, unobserved of the enemy
-who was likewise deceived by many reports purposely
-spread abroad. The menacing head which
-Hill, and the Spaniards in southern Estremadura
-and Andalusia, carried towards the valley of the
-Tagus and towards the Avila district, also contributed
-to draw the enemy’s attention away from the
-true point of danger; but more than all other things
-the vigorous excitement of the insurrection in the
-north occupied the French, scattered their forces,
-and rendered the success of the English general’s
-plan nearly certain.</p>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote7">1813.</span>
-Neither did lord Wellington fail to give ample
-employment to Suchet’s forces, for his wings were
-spread for a long flight even to the Pyrennees, and
-he had no desire to find that marshal’s army joined
-with the other French forces on the Ebro. The
-lynx eyes of Napoleon had scanned this point of
-war also, and both the king and Clauzel had received
-orders to establish the shortest and most
-certain line of correspondence possible with Suchet,
-because the emperor’s plan contemplated the arrival
-of the army of Aragon in the north, but Wellington
-furnished a task for it elsewhere. Sir John Murray
-as we have seen, had just repulsed the French at
-Castalla, and general Frere’s cavalry had joined the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_511"></a>[511]</span>
-Andalusian reserve under Abispal, but Elio with the
-third army remained near Alicant and Wellington
-destined Del Parque’s army to join him. This
-with the Anglo-Sicilian army made more than fifty
-thousand men, including the divisions of Duran,
-Villa Campa, the Empecinado, and other partizans
-always lying on Suchet’s right flank and rear. Now
-with such a force, or even half this number of
-good troops, the simplest plan would have been to
-turn Suchet’s right flank and bring him to action
-with his back to the sea; but the Spanish armies
-were not efficient for such work and Wellington’s
-instructions were adapted to the actual circumstances.
-To win the open part of the kingdom, to
-obtain a permanent footing on the coast beyond the
-Ebro, and to force the enemy from the lower line
-of that river by acting in conjunction with the
-Catalans, these were the three objects which Wellington
-proposed to reach and in the following manner.
-Murray was to sail against Taragona, to save it
-Suchet would have to weaken his army in Valencia;
-Elio and Del Parque might then seize that kingdom.
-If Taragona fell, good. If the French proved too
-strong, Murray could return instantly by sea, and
-secure possession of the country gained by the
-Spanish generals. These last were however to
-remain strictly on the defensive until Murray’s
-operations drew Suchet away, for they were not
-able to fight alone, and above all things it was
-necessary to avoid a defeat which would leave the
-French general free to move to the aid of the
-king.</p>
-
-<p>The force necessary to attack Taragona Wellington
-judged at ten thousand, and if Murray could
-not embark that number there was another mode of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_512"></a>[512]</span>
-operating. Some Spanish divisions, to go by sea,
-were then to reinforce Copons in Catalonia and
-enable him to hold the country between Taragona,
-Tortoza, and Lerida; meanwhile Murray and Elio
-were to advance against Suchet in front, and Del
-Parque in conjunction with the Portuguese troops
-to turn his right flank by Requeña; and this operation
-was to be repeated until the allies communicated
-with Copons by their left, the partizans advancing
-in proportion and cutting off all communication
-with the northern parts of Spain. Thus
-in either case Suchet would be kept away from the
-Upper Ebro, and there was no reason to expect any
-interruption from that quarter.</p>
-
-<p>But Wellington was not aware that the infantry of
-the army of Portugal were beyond the Ebro; the spies
-deceived by the multitude of detachments passing
-in and out of the Peninsula supposed the divisions
-which reinforced Clauzel to be fresh conscripts from
-France; the arrangements for the opening of the
-campaign were therefore made in the expectation
-of meeting a very powerful force in Leon. Hence
-Freire’s cavalry, and the Andalusian reserve
-under the Conde de Abispal, received orders to
-march upon Almaraz, to pass the Tagus there by a
-pontoon bridge which was established for them,
-and then crossing the Gredos by Bejar or Mombeltran,
-to march upon Valladolid while the Partidas
-of that quarter should harass the march of Leval
-from Madrid. Meanwhile the Spanish troops in
-Estremadura were to join those forces on the
-Agueda which were destined to force the passage
-of the Tormes. The Gallicians under Giron were
-to come down to the Esla, and unite with the
-corps destined to pass that river and turn the line<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_513"></a>[513]</span>
-of the Duero. Thus seventy thousand Portuguese
-and British, eight thousand Spaniards from Estremadura,
-and twelve thousand Gallicians, that is
-to say, ninety thousand fighting men would be
-suddenly placed on a new front, and marching
-abreast against the surprised and separated masses
-of the enemy would drive them refluent to the
-Pyrennees. A grand design and grandly it was
-executed! For high in heart and strong of hand
-Wellington’s veterans marched to the encounter,
-the glories of twelve victories played about their
-bayonets, and he the leader so proud and confident,
-that in passing the stream which marks the frontier
-of Spain, he rose in his stirrups and waving his
-hand cried out “Farewell Portugal!”</p>
-
-<p>But while straining every nerve, and eager to
-strike, as well to escape from the Portuguese politics
-as to keep pace with Napoleon’s efforts in Germany,
-the English general was mortified by having again
-to discuss the question of a descent on Italy. Lord
-William Bentinck had relinquished his views upon
-that country with great reluctance, and now, thinking
-affairs more favourable than ever, again proposed
-to land at Naples, and put forward the duke
-of Orleans or the arch-duke Francis. He urged in
-favour of this project the weak state of Murat’s
-kingdom, the favourable disposition of the inhabitants,
-the offer of fifteen thousand auxiliary Russians
-made by admiral Grieg, the shock which would be
-given to Napoleon’s power, and the more effectual
-diversion in favour of Spain. He supported his
-opinion by an intercepted letter of the queen of
-Naples to Napoleon, and by other authentic documents,
-and thus, at the moment of execution,
-Wellington’s vast plans were to be disarranged to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_514"></a>[514]</span>
-meet a new scheme of war which he had already
-discussed and disapproved of, and which, however
-promising in itself, would inevitably divide the
-power of England and weaken the operations in
-both countries.</p>
-
-<p>His reply was decisive. His opinion on the state
-of affairs in Sicily was, he said, not changed, by
-the intercepted letters, as Murat evidently thought
-himself strong enough to attack the allies. Lord
-William Bentinck should not land in Italy with less
-than forty thousand men of all arms perfectly
-equipped, since that army would have to depend
-upon its own means and to overcome all opposition
-before it could expect the people to aid or even to
-cease to oppose it. The information stated that
-the people looked for protection from the French
-and they preferred England to Austria. There
-could be no doubt of this, the Austrians would
-demand provisions and money and would insist
-upon governing them in return, whereas the English
-would as elsewhere defray their own expenses
-and probably give a subsidy in addition. The
-south of Italy was possibly for many reasons the
-best place next to the Spanish Peninsula for the
-operations of a British army, and it remained for the
-government to choose whether they would adopt
-an attack on the former upon such a scale as he had
-alluded to. But of one thing they might be certain,
-that if it were commenced on a smaller scale, or with
-any other intention than to persevere to the last,
-and by raising, feeding, and clothing armies of the
-natives, the plan would fail and the troops would
-re-embark with loss and disgrace.</p>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote7">April.</span>
-This remonstrance at last fixed the wavering
-judgment of the ministers, and Wellington was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_515"></a>[515]</span>
-enabled to proceed with his own plans. He designed
-to open the campaign in the beginning of
-May, and as the green forage was well advanced, on
-the 21st of April, he directed Murray, Del Parque,
-Elio, and Copons to commence their operations on
-the eastern coast; Abispal and Freire were already
-in march and expected at Almaraz on the 24th;
-the Spanish divisions of Estremadura had come up
-to the Coa, and the divisions of the Anglo-Portuguese
-force were gradually closing to the front.
-But heavy rains broke up the roads, and the cumbrous
-pontoon train being damaged, on its way
-from the interior, did not reach Sabugal before the
-13th and was not repaired before the 15th. Thus
-the opening of the campaign was delayed, yet the
-check proved of little consequence, for on the
-French side nothing was prepared to meet the
-danger.</p>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote7">May.</span>
-Napoleon had urged the king to send his heavy
-baggage and stores to the rear and to fix his hospitals
-and dépôts at Burgos, Vittoria, Pampeluna,
-Tolosa, and San Sebastian. In neglect of this the
-impediments remained with the armies, the sick
-were poured along the communications, and in
-disorder thrown upon Clauzel at the moment when
-that general was scarcely able to make head against
-the northern insurrection.</p>
-
-<p>Napoleon had early and clearly fixed the king’s
-authority as generalissimo and forbad him to exercise
-his monarchical authority towards the French
-armies. Joseph was at this moment in high dispute
-with all his generals upon those very points.</p>
-
-<p>Napoleon had directed the king to enlarge and
-strengthen the works of Burgos castle and to form
-magazines in that place, and at Santona, for the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_516"></a>[516]</span>
-use of the armies in the field. At this time no
-magazines had been formed at either place, and
-although a commencement had been made to
-strengthen the castle of Burgos, it was not yet
-capable of sustaining four hours’ bombardment and
-offered no support for the armies.</p>
-
-<p>Napoleon had desired that a more secure and
-shorter line of correspondence than that by Zaragoza
-should be established with Suchet; for his
-plan embraced though it did not prescribe the
-march of that general upon Zarogoza, and he had
-warned the king repeatedly how dangerous it
-would be to have Suchet isolated and unconnected
-with the northern operations. Nevertheless the
-line of correspondence remained the same and the
-allies possessed the means of excising Suchet’s
-army from the operations in the north.</p>
-
-<p>Napoleon had long and earnestly urged the king
-to put down the northern insurrection in time to
-make head against the allies on the Tormes. Now
-when the English general was ready to act, that
-insurrection was in full activity, and all the army
-of the north and the greatest part of the army of
-Portugal was employed to suppress it instead of
-being on the lower Duero.</p>
-
-<p>Napoleon had clearly explained to the king the
-necessity of keeping his troops concentrated towards
-the Tormes in an offensive position, and he
-had desired that Madrid might be held in such a
-manner that it could be abandoned in a moment.
-The campaign was now being opened, the French
-armies were scattered, Leval was encumbered at
-Madrid, with a part of the civil administration,
-with large stores and parcs of artillery, and with
-the care of families attached to Joseph’s court,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_517"></a>[517]</span>
-while the other generals were stretching their
-imaginations to devise which of the several projects
-open to him Wellington would adopt. Would
-he force the passage of the Tormes and the Duero
-with his whole army, and thus turn the French
-right? Would he march straight upon Madrid
-either by the district of Avila or by the valley of
-the Tagus or by both; and would he then operate
-against the north, or upon Zaragoza, or towards
-the south in co-operation with the Anglo-Sicilians?
-Every thing was vague, uncertain, confused.</p>
-
-<p>The generals complained that the king’s conduct
-was not military, and Napoleon told him if he
-would command an army he must give himself up
-entirely to it, thinking of nothing else; but Joseph
-was always demanding gold when he should have
-trusted to iron. His skill was unequal to the arrangements
-and combinations for taking an initiatory
-and offensive position, and he could neither discover
-nor force his adversary to show his real
-design. Hence the French armies were thrown
-upon a timid defensive system, and every movement
-of the allies necessarily produced alarm, and the
-dislocation of troops without an object. The
-march of Del Parque’s army towards Alcaraz, and
-that of the Spanish divisions from Estremadura,
-towards the Agueda, in the latter end of April
-were judged to be the commencement of a general
-movement against Madrid, because the first was
-covered by the advance of some cavalry into La
-Mancha, and the second by the concentration of the
-Partidas, in the valley of the Tagus. Thus the
-whole French army was shaken by the demonstration
-of a few horsemen, for when Leval took the
-alarm, Gazan marched towards the Guadarama<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_518"></a>[518]</span>
-with three divisions, and D’Erlon gathered the
-army of the centre around Segovia.</p>
-
-<p>Early in May a fifth division of the army of
-Portugal was employed on the line of communication
-at Pampliega, Burgos, and Briviesca, and
-Reille remained at Valladolid with only one division
-of infantry and his guns, his cavalry being on the
-Esla. D’Erlon was then at Segovia and Gazan at
-Arevalo, Conroux’s division was at Avila, and Leval
-still at Madrid with outposts at Toledo. The king
-who was at Valladolid could not therefore concentrate
-more than thirty-five thousand infantry on the
-Duero. He had indeed nine thousand excellent cavalry
-and one hundred pieces of artillery, but with
-such dispositions to concentrate for a battle in
-advance was not to be thought of, and the first
-decided movement of the allies was sure to roll
-his scattered forces back in confusion. The lines
-of the Tormes and the Duero were effaced from
-the system of operations.</p>
-
-<p>About the middle of May, D’Armagnac’s division
-of the army of the centre came to Valladolid,
-Villatte’s division of the army of the south reinforced
-by some cavalry occupied the line of the
-Tormes from Alba to Ledesma. Daricau’s, Digeon’s,
-and D’Armagnac’s divisions were at Zamora,
-Toro, and other places on both sides of the Duero,
-and Reille’s cavalry was still on the Esla. The
-front of the French was thus defined by these
-rivers, for the left was covered by the Tormes, the
-centre by the Duero, the right by the Esla. Gazan’s
-head-quarters were at Arevalo, D’Erlon’s at
-Segovia, and the point of concentration was at
-Valladolid; but Conroux was at Avila, and Leval
-being still at Madrid was thrown entirely out of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_519"></a>[519]</span>
-the circle of operations. At this moment Wellington
-entered upon what has been in England called, not
-very appropriately, the march to Vittoria. That
-march was but one portion of the action. The concentration
-of the army on the banks of the Duero
-was the commencement, the movement towards the
-Ebro and the passage of that river was the middle,
-the battle of Vittoria was the catastrophe, and the
-crowning of the Pyrennees the end of the splendid
-drama.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_520"></a>[520]</span><br /></p>
-
-<h3 id="CHAPTER_BXX_VII">CHAPTER VII.</h3>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="sidenote7">1813.</span>
-In the latter part of April the Spanish troops from
-Estremadura being assembled on the Tormes near
-Almada, Carlos d’España’s division moved to
-Miranda del Castanar, and every thing was ready to
-open the campaign when an unexpected and formidable
-danger menacing ruin arose. Some specie
-sent from England had enabled the general to pay
-up the British soldiers’ arrears to November 1812,
-but the Portuguese troops were still neglected by
-their government, a whole year’s pay was due
-to them, a suspicion that a systematic difference
-in this respect was to be established, pervaded
-their minds, and at the same time many regiments
-which had been raised for a limited period and
-whose term of service was now expired, murmured
-for their discharge, which could not be legally refused.
-The moment was critical, but Wellington
-applied suitable remedies. He immediately threatened
-to intercept the British subsidy for the payment
-of the troops which brought the Portuguese regency
-to its senses, and he then made an appeal to the
-honour and patriotism of the Portuguese soldiers
-whose time had expired. Such an appeal is never
-made in vain to the poorer classes of any nation;
-one and all those brave men remained in the service
-notwithstanding the shameful treatment they<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_521"></a>[521]</span>
-had endured from their government. This noble
-emotion would seem to prove that Beresford, whose
-system of military reform was chiefly founded upon
-severity, might have better attained his object in
-another manner; but harshness is the essence of
-the aristocratic principle of government, and the
-marshal only moved in the straight path marked
-out for him by the policy of the day.</p>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote7">May.</span>
-When this dangerous affair was terminated Castaños
-returned to Gallicia, and the British cavalry,
-of the left wing, which had wintered about the
-Mondego crossed the Duero, some at Oporto some
-near Lamego, and entered the Tras os Montes.
-The Portuguese cavalry had been already quartered<span class="sidenote">French correspondence, MSS.</span>
-all the winter in that province, and the enemy supposed
-that Sylveira would as formerly advance from
-Braganza to connect the Gallicians with the allies.
-But Sylveira was then commanding an infantry
-division on the Agueda, and a very different power
-was menacing the French on the side of Braganza.
-For about the middle of May the cavalry were followed
-by many divisions of infantry, and by the
-pontoon equipage, thus forming with the horsemen
-and artillery a mass of more than forty thousand
-men under general Graham. The infantry and
-guns being rapidly placed on the right of the
-Duero by means of large boats assembled between
-Lamego and Castelo de Alva, near the mouth of
-the Agueda, marched in several columns towards
-the lower Esla; the cavalry moved down to the
-same point by Braganza.</p>
-
-<p>On the 20th Hill came to Bejar with the second
-division, and on the 22d of May, Graham being
-well advanced, Wellington quitted his head-quarters
-at Freneda and put his right wing in motion towards<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_522"></a>[522]</span>
-the Tormes. It consisted of five divisions of
-Anglo-Portuguese and Spanish infantry, and five
-brigades of cavalry, including Julian Sanchez’
-horsemen, the whole forming with the artillery a
-mass of from twenty-five to thirty thousand men.
-The right under general Hill moved from Bejar
-upon Alba de Tormes, the left under Wellington
-himself by Matilla upon Salamanca.</p>
-
-<p>On the 24th Villatte withdrew his detachment
-from Ledesma, and on the 26th at ten o’clock in
-the morning the heads of the allied columns with
-admirable concert appeared on all the different
-routes leading to the Tormes. Morillo’s and Long’s
-cavalry menaced Alba, Hill coming from Tamames
-bent towards the fords above Salamanca, and Wellington
-coming from Matilla marched straight
-against that city.</p>
-
-<p>Villatte, a good officer, barricaded the bridge
-and the streets, sent his baggage to the rear,
-called in his detachment from Alba, and being
-resolved to discover the real force of his enemy
-waited for their approaching masses on the heights
-above the ford of Santa Marta. Too long he
-waited, for the ground on the left side of the river
-had enabled Wellington to conceal the movements,
-and already Fane’s horsemen with six guns were
-passing the ford at Santa Marta in Villatte’s rear,
-while Victor Alten’s cavalry removed the barricades
-on the bridge and pushed through the town to attack
-him in front. The French general being thus suddenly
-pressed gained the heights of Cabrerizos,
-marching towards Babila Fuente, before Fane got
-over the river; but he had still to pass the defiles
-of Aldea Lengua and was overtaken by both
-columns of cavalry.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_523"></a>[523]</span></p>
-
-<p>The guns opening upon the French squares
-killed thirty or forty men, and the English horsemen
-charged, but horsemen are no match for such
-infantry whose courage and discipline nothing
-could quell; they fell before the round shot, and
-nearly one hundred died in the ranks without a
-wound, from the intolerable heat, yet the cavalry
-made no impression on those dauntless soldiers,
-and in the face of thirty thousand enemies they
-made their way to Babila Fuente where they were
-joined by general Lefol with the troops from Alba,
-and finally the whole disappeared from the sight of
-their admiring and applauding opponents. Nevertheless
-two hundred had sunk dead in the ranks, a
-like number unable to keep up were made prisoners,
-and a leading gun having been overturned
-in the defile of Aldea Lengua, six others were
-retarded and the whole fell in the allies’ hands
-together with their tumbrils.</p>
-
-<p>The line of the Tormes being thus gained the
-allied troops were on the 27th and 28th pushed
-forward with their left towards Miranda and Zamora,
-and their right towards Toro; so placed the
-latter covered the communications with Ciudad
-Rodrigo while the former approached the point on
-the Duero where it was proposed to throw the
-bridge for communication with Graham’s corps.
-This done Wellington left general Hill in command,
-and went off suddenly, for he was uneasy about
-his combinations on the Esla. On the 29th he
-passed the Duero at Miranda, by means of a basket
-slung on a rope which was stretched from rock to
-rock, the river foaming several hundred feet below.
-The 30th he reached Carvajales.</p>
-
-<p>Graham had met with many difficulties in his<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_524"></a>[524]</span>
-march through the rugged Tras os Montes, and
-though the troops were now close to the Esla
-stretching from Carvajales to Tabara, and their
-left was in communication with the Gallicians who
-were coming down to Benevente, the combination
-had been in some measure thwarted by the difficulty
-of crossing the Esla. The general combination
-required that river to be passed on the 29th,
-at which time the right wing, continuing its march
-from the Tormes without halting, could have been
-close to Zamora, and the passage of the Duero
-would have been insured. The French armies
-would then have been entirely surprised and separated,
-and some of their divisions overtaken and
-beaten. They were indeed still ignorant that a
-whole army was on the Esla, but the opposite
-bank of that river was watched by picquets of
-cavalry and infantry, the stream was full and rapid,
-the banks steep, the fords hard to find, difficult,
-and deep, with stony beds, and the alarm had
-spread from the Tormes through all the cantonments.</p>
-
-<p>At day-break on the 31st some squadrons of hussars,
-with infantry holding by their stirrups, entered
-the stream at the ford of Almendra, and at the same
-time Graham approached the right bank with all
-his forces. A French picquet of thirty men was
-surprised in the village of Villa Perdrices by the
-hussars, the pontoons were immediately laid down,
-and the columns commenced passing, but several
-men, even of the cavalry, had been drowned at the
-fords.</p>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote7">June.</span>
-On the 1st of June, while the rear was still on
-the Esla, the head of the allies entered Zamora
-which the French evacuated after destroying the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_525"></a>[525]</span>
-bridge. They retired upon Toro, and the next day
-having destroyed the bridge there also, they again
-fell back, but their rear-guard was overtaken near
-the village of Morales by the hussar brigade under
-colonel Grant. Their horsemen immediately passed
-a bridge and swamp under a cannonade, and then
-facing about in two lines, gave battle, whereupon
-major Roberts with the tenth regiment, supported
-by the fifteenth, broke both the lines with one
-charge and pursued them for two miles, and they
-lost above two hundred men, but finally rallied on
-the infantry reserves.</p>
-
-<p>The junction of the allies’ wings on the Duero
-was now secure, for that river was fordable, and
-Wellington had also, in anticipation of failure on
-one point, made arrangements for forming a boat-bridge
-below the confluence of the Esla; and he
-could also throw his pontoons without difficulty at
-Toro, and even in advance, because Julian Sanchez
-had surprised a cavalry picquet at Castronuño on
-the left bank, and driven the French outposts from
-the fords of Pollos. But the enemy’s columns were
-concentrating, it might be for a battle, wherefore
-the English general halted the 3d to bring the
-Gallicians in conjunction on his left, and to close
-up his own rear which had been retarded by the
-difficulty of passing the Esla. The two divisions
-of his right wing, namely, the second and light
-division, passed the Duero on the morning of the
-3rd, the artillery and baggage by a ford, the infantry
-at the bridge of Toro, which was ingeniously
-repaired by the lieutenant of engineers Pringle, who
-dropped ladders at each side of the broken arch, and
-then laid planks from one to the other just above the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_526"></a>[526]</span>
-water level. Thus the English general mastered
-the line of the Duero, and those who understand
-war may say whether it was an effort worthy of the
-man and his army.</p>
-
-<p>Let them trace all the combinations, follow the
-movement of Graham’s columns, some of which
-marched one hundred and fifty, some more than
-two hundred and fifty miles, through the wild
-districts of the Tras os Montes. Through those
-regions, held to be nearly impracticable even for
-small corps, forty thousand men, infantry, cavalry,
-artillery, and pontoons, had been carried and
-placed as if by a supernatural power upon the
-Esla, before the enemy knew even that they were
-in movement! Was it fortune or skill that presided?
-Not fortune, for the difficulties were such
-that Graham arrived later on the Esla than Wellington
-intended, and yet so soon, that the enemy
-could make no advantage of the delay. For had
-the king even concentrated his troops behind the
-Esla on the 31st, the Gallicians would still have been
-at Benevente and reinforced by Penne Villemur’s
-cavalry which had marched with Graham’s corps,
-and the Asturians would have been at Leon on the
-Upper Esla which was fordable. Then the final
-passage of that river could have been effected by a
-repetition of the same combinations on a smaller
-scale, because the king’s army would not have
-been numerous enough to defend the Duero against
-Hill, the Lower Esla against Wellington, and the
-Upper Esla against the Spaniards at the same time.
-Wellington had also, as we have seen, prepared
-the means of bringing Hill’s corps or any part of
-it over the Duero below the confluence of the Esla,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_527"></a>[527]</span>
-and all these combinations, these surprising exertions
-had been made merely to gain a fair field of
-battle.</p>
-
-<p>But if Napoleon’s instructions had been ably
-worked out by the king during the winter, this
-great movement could not have succeeded, for the
-insurrection in the north would have been crushed
-in time, or at least so far quelled, that sixty thousand
-French infantry, ten thousand cavalry, and
-one hundred pieces of artillery would have been
-disposable, and such a force held in an offensive
-position on the Tormes would probably have obliged
-Wellington to adopt a different plan of campaign.
-If concentrated between the Duero and the Esla
-it would have baffled him on that river, because
-operations which would have been effectual against
-thirty-five thousand infantry would have been powerless
-against sixty thousand. Joseph indeed complained
-that he could not put down the insurrection
-in the north, that he could not feed such large
-armies, that a thousand obstacles arose on every
-side which he could not overcome, in fine that he
-could not execute his brother’s instructions. They
-could have been executed notwithstanding. Activity,
-the taking time by the forelock, would have
-quelled the insurrection; and for the feeding of the
-troops, the boundless plains called the “<em>Tierras
-de Campos</em>,” where the armies were now operating,
-were covered with the ripening harvest; the only
-difficulty was to subsist that part of the French
-army not engaged in the northern provinces during
-the winter. Joseph could not find the means
-though Soult told him they were at hand, because
-the difficulties of his situation overpowered him;
-they would not have overpowered Napoleon, but<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_528"></a>[528]</span>
-the difference between a common general and a
-great captain is immense, the one is victorious
-when the other is defeated.</p>
-
-<p>The field was now clear for the shock of battle,
-but the forces on either side were unequally
-matched. Wellington had ninety thousand men,
-with more than one hundred pieces of artillery.
-Twelve thousand were cavalry, and the British and
-Portuguese present with the colours, were, including
-serjeants and drummers, above seventy thousand
-sabres and bayonets; the rest of the army was
-Spanish. Besides this mass there were the irregulars
-on the wings, Sanchez’ horsemen, a thousand
-strong, on the right beyond the Duero; Porlier,
-Barceña, Salazar and Manzo on the left between
-the Upper Esla and the Carion. Saornil had moved
-upon Avila, the Empecinado was hovering about
-Leval. Finally the reserve of Andalusia had crossed
-the Tagus at Almaraz on the 30th, and numerous
-minor bands were swarming round as it advanced.
-On the other hand though the French could collect
-nine or ten thousand horsemen and one hundred
-guns, their infantry was less than half the number
-of the allies, being only thirty-five thousand strong
-exclusive of Leval. Hence the way to victory was
-open, and on the 4th Wellington marched forward
-with a conquering violence.</p>
-
-<p>The intrusive monarch was in no condition to
-stem or to evade a torrent of war, the depth and
-violence of which he was even now ignorant of,
-and a slight sketch of his previous operations will<span class="sidenote">French Official correspondence, MSS.</span>
-shew that all his dispositions were made in the
-dark and only calculated to bring him into trouble.
-Early in May he would have marched the army of
-the centre to the Upper Duero when Leval’s reports<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_529"></a>[529]</span>
-checked the movement. On the 15th of that
-month a spy sent to Bejar by D’Erlon, brought
-intelligence that a great number of country carts
-had been collected there and at Placentia, to follow
-the troops in a march upon Talavera, but after
-two days were sent back to their villages; that fifty
-mules had been purchased at Bejar and sent to
-Ciudad Rodrigo; that about the same time the first
-and fourth divisions and the German cavalry had
-moved from the interior towards the frontier, saying
-they were going, the first to Zamora, and the last
-to Fuente Guinaldo; that many troops were already
-gathered at Ciudad Rodrigo under Wellington and
-Castaños; that the divisions at Coria and Placentia
-were expected there, the reserves of Andalusia were
-in movement, and the pass of Baños which had
-been before retrenched and broken up was now
-repaired; that the English soldiers were paid their
-arrears, and every body said a grand movement
-would commence on the 12th. All this was extremely
-accurate, but with the exception of the
-march to Zamora, which seemed to be only a blind,
-the information obtained indicated the principal
-movement as against the Tormes, and threw no light
-upon the English general’s real design.</p>
-
-<p>On the other flank Reille’s cavalry under Boyer,
-having made an exploring sweep round by Astorga,
-La Baneza and Benevente, brought intelligence that
-a Gallician expedition was embarking for America,
-that another was to follow, and that several English
-divisions were also embarking in Portugal. The
-23d of May a report from the same quarter gave
-notice that Salazar and Manzo were with seven
-hundred horsemen on the Upper Esla, that Porlier
-was coming from the Asturias to join them with<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_530"></a>[530]</span>
-two thousand five hundred men, and Giron with
-six thousand Gallicians had reached Astorga; but
-it was uncertain if Sylveira’s cavalry would come
-from Braganza to connect the left of the English
-with the Gallicians as it had done the year before.</p>
-
-<p>Thus on the 24th of May the French were still
-entirely in the dark with respect to Graham’s movement,
-and although it was known the 26th at Valladolid,
-that Wellington had troops in the country
-beyond the Esla, it was not considered a decisive
-movement because the head-quarters were still at
-Freneda. However on the 29th Reille united his
-cavalry at Valderas, passed the Esla, entered Benevente
-and sent patroles towards Tobara and Carvajales;
-from their reports and other sources he
-understood the whole allied army was on the Esla,
-and as his detachments were closely followed by
-the British scouting parties, he recrossed the Esla
-and broke the bridge of Castro Gonzalo, leaving
-his light horsemen to watch it. But the delay in
-the passage of the Esla, after Graham had reached
-Carvajales, made Reille doubt both the strength of
-the allies and their inclination to cross that river.
-He expected the main attack on the Tormes, and
-proposed in conjunction with Daricau’s infantry,
-and Digeon’s dragoons, then at Toro and Zamora,
-to defend the Duero and the Lower Esla, leaving
-the Gallicians, whose force he despised, to pass
-the Upper Esla at their peril.</p>
-
-<p>D’Armagnac’s division was now at Rio Seco, and
-Maucune’s division, which had been spread along
-the road to Burgos, was ordered to concentrate at
-Palencia on the Carion, but meanwhile Gazan on
-the other flank of the French position was equally
-deceived by the movements of the English general.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_531"></a>[531]</span>
-The 7th of May he heard from the Tormes that the
-allies’ preparations indicated a movement towards
-that river. Leval wrote from Madrid that he had
-abandoned Toledo because fifteen thousand English
-and ten thousand Spaniards were to advance by the
-valley of the Tagus, that rations had been ordered
-at Escalona for Long’s English cavalry, and that
-magazines were formed at Bejar. At the same
-time from a third quarter came news that three
-divisions would pass the Duero to join the Gallicians
-and march upon Valladolid.</p>
-
-<p>Gazan rightly judging that the magazines at
-Bejar were to supply Hill and the Spaniards, in
-their movement to join Wellington, expected at
-first that the whole would operate by the Esla,
-but on the 14th fresh reports changed this opinion;
-he then judged Hill would advance by the Puente
-Congosto upon Avila, to cut Leval off from the
-army, while Wellington attacked Salamanca. On
-the 24th however his doubts vanished. Villatte
-told him that Wellington was over the Agueda,
-Graham over the Lower Douro, and at the same
-time Daricau, writing from Zamora, told him that
-Graham’s cavalry had already reached Alcanizas,
-only one march from the Esla. Conroux was instantly
-directed to march from Avila to Arevalo,
-Tilly to move with the cavalry of the army of the
-south, from Madrigal towards the Trabancos, Daricau
-to send a brigade to Toro, and Leval to come
-over the Guadarama pass and join D’Erlon at
-Segovia.</p>
-
-<p>On the 26th, Gazan thinking Wellington slow and
-crediting a report that he was sick and travelling
-in a carriage, relapsed into doubt. He now judged
-the passage of the Agueda a feint, thought the allies’<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_532"></a>[532]</span>
-operations would be in mass towards the Esla, and
-was positively assured by his emissaries that
-Hill would move by the Puente Congosto against
-Segovia. However on the 27th he heard of the
-passage of the Tormes and of Villatte’s retreat,
-whereupon evacuating Arevalo he fixed his head-quarters
-at Rueda, and directed Conroux who was
-marching upon Arevalo, and so hastily that he
-left a moveable column behind him on the Upper
-Tormes, to come to the Trabancos.</p>
-
-<p>Gazan at first designed to take post behind that
-river but there was no good position there, and the
-28th he rallied Conroux’s, Rey’s, and Villatte’s infantry
-and Tilly’s cavalry behind the Zapardiel.
-Daricau’s division was meanwhile concentrated at
-Toro, and Digeon’s at Zamora; a bridge-head was
-commenced at Tordesillas, which was the point of
-retreat, and guards were placed at Pollos where the
-fords of the Duero were very low though as yet impracticable.
-These movements were made in tranquillity,
-for Hill had no desire by driving the French
-over the Duero to increase the number of their
-troops on the Esla. However on the 30th Gazan,
-hearing that Hill was advancing and that the troops
-on the Esla were likely to attempt the passage of that
-river, crossed the Duero in the night and took post
-at Tordesillas, intending to concentrate the whole
-army of the south on the right of that river; but
-Leval, though he had quitted Madrid on the 27th,
-was not yet arrived and a large artillery convoy,
-the ministers and Spanish families, and the pictures
-from the palace of Madrid were likewise on the
-road from that capital by the Segovia passes.</p>
-
-<p>At this time the army of Portugal and D’Armagnac’s
-division was extended from the Esla to the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_533"></a>[533]</span>
-Carion, the king’s guards were at Valladolid, and
-D’Erlon was in march to the Puente Duero, from
-Segovia and Sepulveda, yet slowly and apparently
-not aware of the crisis. Meanwhile the passage
-of the Esla had been effected, and hence if that
-river had been crossed at the time fore-calculated
-by Wellington, and a rapid push made upon Placentia
-and Valladolid, while Hill marched upon
-Rueda, the whole French army might have been
-caught in what Napoleon calls “<i lang="la" xml:lang="la">flagrante delicto</i>”
-and destroyed. And even now it would seem that
-Wellington could have profited more by marching,
-than by halting at Toro on the 3d, for though
-Leval’s troops and part of the army of the centre
-were then between the Puente Duero and Valladolid,
-D’Erlon had left a large division at Tudela
-de Duero to protect the arrival of the convoy from
-Madrid, which had not yet crossed the Duero;
-another great convoy was still on the left bank of
-the lower Pisuerga, and the parcs of the armies of
-Portugal and of the south were waiting on the
-right bank of that river, until the first convoy had
-passed over the Carion. Nevertheless it was prudent
-to gather well to a head first, and the general
-combinations had been so profoundly made that the
-evil day for the French was only deferred.</p>
-
-<p>On the 30th Joseph’s design was to oppose Wellington’s
-principal force with the army of the south,
-while the army of the centre held the rest in
-check, the army of Portugal to aid either as the case
-might be; and such was his infatuation as to his
-real position, that even now, from the Duero, he was
-pressing upon his brother the immediate establishment
-of a civil Spanish administration for the provinces
-behind the Ebro, as the only remedy for the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_534"></a>[534]</span>
-insurrection, and for the rendering of the army of
-the north disposable. He even demanded an order
-from the emperor to draw Clauzel’s troops away
-from the Ebro, that he might drive the allies back
-to the Coa, and take the long-urged offensive position
-towards Portugal, Napoleon being then at
-Dresden and Wellington on the Duero!</p>
-
-<p>On the 2d when the allies had passed the Esla,
-the king, who expected them at Toro the 1st,
-became disturbed to find his front unmolested, and
-concluded, as he had received no letter from Reille,
-that Wellington had cut his communication, turned
-his right, and was marching towards the Carion.
-His alarm was considerable and with reason, but in
-the evening of the 2d he heard from Reille, who
-had retired unmolested to Rio Seco and there rallied
-D’Armagnac’s troops, but Maucune’s division was
-still in march from different parts to concentrate at
-Palencia. The halt of the 3d was therefore to the
-profit of the French, for during that time they
-received the Madrid convoy and insured the concentration
-of all their troops, recovering even Conroux’s
-moveable column which joined Leval near
-Olmedo. They also destroyed the bridges of Tudela
-and Puente Duero on the Duero, and that of
-Simancas and Cabeçon on the Pisuerga, and they
-passed their convoys over the Carion, directing
-them, under escort of Casa Palacios’ Spanish division,
-upon Burgos.</p>
-
-<p>The army of the south now moved upon Torrelobaton
-and Penaflor, the army of the centre upon
-Duenas, the army of Portugal upon Palencia; and
-the spirits of all were raised by intelligence of the
-emperor’s victory at Lutzen, and by a report that
-the Toulon fleet had made a successful descent on<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_535"></a>[535]</span>
-Sicily. It would appear that Napoleon certainly
-contemplated an attack upon that island, and lord
-William Bentinck thought it would be successful,
-but it was prevented by Murat’s discontent, who
-instead of attacking fell off from Napoleon and
-opened a negociation with the British.</p>
-
-<p>The 4th Wellington moved in advance, his
-bridge of communication was established at Pollos,
-and considerable stores of ammunition were formed
-at Valladolid; some had also been taken at Zamora,
-and the cavalry flankers captured large magazines
-of grain at Arevalo. Towards the Carion the
-allies marched rapidly by parallel roads, and in
-compact order, the Gallicians on the extreme left,
-Morillo and Julian Sanchez on the extreme right,
-and the English general expected the enemy would
-make a stand behind that river, but the report of
-the prisoners and the hasty movement of the French
-columns soon convinced him that they were in full
-retreat for Burgos. On the 6th all the French
-armies were over the Carion, Reille had even
-reached Palencia on the 4th and there rallied
-Maucune’s division, and a brigade of light cavalry
-which had been employed on the communications.</p>
-
-<p>Although the king’s force was now about fifty-five
-thousand fighting men, exclusive of his Spanish division,
-which was escorting the convoys and baggage,
-he did not judge the Carion a good position
-and retired behind the upper Pisuerga, desiring if
-possible to give battle there. He sent Jourdan to
-examine the state of Burgos castle, and expedited
-fresh letters, for he had already written from Valladolid
-on the 27th and 30th of May, to Foy, Sarrut,
-and Clauzel, calling them towards the plains of
-Burgos; and others to Suchet directing him to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_536"></a>[536]</span>
-march immediately upon Zaragoza and hoping he
-was already on his way there; but Suchet was then
-engaged in Catalonia, Clauzel’s troops were on the
-borders of Aragon, Foy and Palombini’s Italians
-were on the coast of Guipuscoa, and Sarrut’s
-division was pursuing Longa in the Montaña.</p>
-
-<p>Joseph was still unacquainted with his enemy.
-Higher than seventy or eighty thousand he did not
-estimate the allied forces, and he was desirous of
-fighting them on the elevated plains of Burgos. But
-more than one hundred thousand men were before
-and around him. For all the Partidas of the Asturias
-and the Montaña were drawing together on his
-right, Julian Sanchez and the Partidas of Castile
-were closing on his left, and Abispal with the
-reserve and Frere’s cavalry had already passed the
-Gredos mountains and were in full march for Valladolid.
-Nevertheless the king was sanguine of
-success if he could rally Clauzel’s and Foy’s divisions
-in time, and his despatches to the former were
-frequent and urgent. Come with the infantry of
-the army of Portugal! Come with the army of
-the north and we shall drive the allies over the
-Duero! Such was his cry to Clauzel, and again he
-urged his political schemes upon his brother; but
-he was not a statesman to advise Napoleon nor a
-general to contend with Wellington, his was not
-the military genius, nor were his the arrangements
-that could recover the initiatory movement at such
-a crisis and against such an adversary.</p>
-
-<p>While the king was on the Pisuerga he received
-Jourdan’s report. The castle of Burgos was untenable,
-there were no magazines of provisions,
-the new works were quite unfinished, and they
-commanded the old which were unable to hold<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_537"></a>[537]</span>
-out a day; of Clauzel’s and Foy’s divisions nothing
-had been heard. It was resolved to retire
-behind the Ebro. All the French outposts in the
-Bureba and Montaña were immediately withdrawn,
-and the great dépôt of Burgos was evacuated upon
-Vittoria, which was thus encumbered with the artillery
-dépôts of Madrid, of Valladolid, and of
-Burgos, and with the baggage and stores of so
-many armies and so many fugitive families; and
-at this moment also arrived from France a convoy
-of treasure which had long waited for escort at
-Bayonne.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the tide of war flowed onwards with
-terrible power. The allies had crossed the Carion
-on the 7th, and Joseph quitting Torquemada had
-retired by the high road to Burgos with his left
-wing composed of the army of the south and
-centre, while Reille with that of Portugal forming
-the right wing moved by Castro Xerez. But Wellington
-following hard, and conducting his operations
-continually on the same principle, pushed his
-left wing and the Gallicians along bye-roads, and
-passed the upper Pisuerga on the 8th, 9th, and
-10th. Having thus turned the line of the Pisuerga
-entirely, and outflanked Reille, he made a short
-journey the 11th and halted the 12th with his left
-wing, for he had outmarched his supplies, and
-had to arrange the farther feeding of his troops in
-a country wide of his line of communication.
-Nevertheless he pushed his right wing under
-general Hill along the main road to Burgos, resolved
-to make the French yield the castle or fight
-for the possession, and meanwhile Julian Sanchez
-acting beyond the Arlanzan cut off small posts
-and straggling detachments.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_538"></a>[538]</span></p>
-
-<p>Reille had regained the great road to Burgos on
-the 9th, and was strongly posted behind the Hormaza
-stream, his right near Hormillas, his left on
-the Arlanzan, barring the way to Burgos; the other
-two armies were in reserve behind Estepar, and in
-this situation they had remained for three days and
-were again cheered by intelligence of Napoleon’s
-victory at Bautzen and the consequent armistice.
-But on the 12th Wellington’s columns came up
-and the light division preceded by Grant’s hussars
-and Ponsonby’s dragoons, immediately turned the
-French right, while the rest of the troops attacked
-the whole range of heights from Hormillas to
-Estepar. Reille, whose object was to make the
-allies shew their force, seeing their horsemen in
-rear of his right flank while his front was so
-strongly menaced, made for the bridge of Baniel
-on the Arlanzan; then Gardiner’s horse artillery
-raked his columns, and captain Milles of the fourteenth
-dragoons charging, took some prisoners and
-one of his guns which had been disabled. Meanwhile
-the right of the allies pressing forward towards the
-bridge of Baniel endeavoured to cut off the retreat,
-but the French repelled the minor attacks with the
-utmost firmness, bore the fire of the artillery without
-shrinking, and evading the serious attacks by
-their rapid yet orderly movement, finally passed
-the river with a loss of only thirty men killed and
-a few taken.</p>
-
-<p>The three French armies being now covered by the
-Urbel and Arlanzan rivers, which were swelled by
-the rain, could not be easily attacked, and the stores
-of Burgos were removed; but in the night Joseph
-again retreated along the high road by Briviesca
-to Pancorbo, into which place he threw a garrison<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_539"></a>[539]</span>
-of six hundred men. The castle of Burgos was prepared
-also for destruction, and whether from hurry,
-or negligence, or want of skill, the mines exploded
-outwards, and at the very moment when a column
-of infantry was defiling under the castle. Several
-streets were laid in ruins, thousands of shells and
-other combustibles which had been left in the place
-were ignited and driven upwards with a horrible
-crash, the hills rocked above the devoted column,
-and a shower of iron, timber, and stony fragments
-falling on it, in an instant destroyed more than three
-hundred men! Fewer deaths might have sufficed
-to determine the crisis of a great battle!</p>
-
-<p>But such an art is war! So fearful is the consequence
-of error, so terrible the responsibility of
-a general. Strongly and wisely did Napoleon speak
-when he told Joseph, that if he would command,
-he must give himself up entirely to the business,
-labouring day and night, thinking of nothing else.
-Here was a noble army driven like sheep before
-prowling wolves, yet in every action the inferior
-generals had been prompt and skilful, the soldiers
-brave, ready and daring, firm and obedient in the
-most trying circumstances of battle. Infantry,
-artillery, and cavalry, all were excellent and numerous,
-and the country strong and favourable for
-defence; but that soul of armies, the mind of a
-great commander was wanting, and the Esla, the
-Tormes, the Duero, the Carion, the Pisuerga, the
-Arlanzan, seemed to be dried up, the rocks, the
-mountains, the deep ravines to be levelled. Clauzel’s
-strong positions, Dubreton’s thundering castle,
-had disappeared like a dream, and sixty thousand
-veteran soldiers though willing to fight at every
-step, were hurried with all the tumult and confusion<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_540"></a>[540]</span>
-of defeat across the Ebro. Nor was that
-barrier found of more avail to mitigate the rushing
-violence of their formidable enemy.</p>
-
-<p>Joseph having possession of the impregnable
-rocks, and the defile and forts of Pancorbo, now
-thought he could safely await for his reinforcements,
-and extended his wings for the sake of
-subsistence. On the 16th D’Erlon marched to Aro
-on the left, leaving small posts of communication
-between that place and Miranda, and sending detachments
-towards Domingo Calçada to watch the
-road leading from Burgos to Logroño. Gazan
-remained in the centre with a strong advanced
-guard beyond Pancorbo, for as the king’s hope
-was to retake the offensive, he retained the power
-of issuing beyond the defiles, and his scouting
-parties were pushed forward towards Briviesca in
-front, to Zerezo on the left and to Poya do Sal on
-the right. The rest of the army of the south was
-cantoned by divisions as far as Armiñion behind
-the Ebro, and Reille, who had occupied Busto
-marched to Espejo, also behind the Ebro and on
-the great road to Bilbao. There being joined by
-Sarrut’s division from Orduña he took post, placing
-Maucune at Frias, Sarrut at Osma, and La Martiniere
-at Espejo; guarding also the Puente Lara,
-and sending strong scouting parties towards Medina
-de Pomar and Villarcayo on one side and
-towards Orduña on the other.</p>
-
-<p>While these movements were in progress, all the
-encumbrances of the armies were assembled in the
-basin of Vittoria, and many small garrisons of the
-army of the north came in; for Clauzel having
-received the king’s first letter on the 15th of June
-had stopped the pursuit of Mina, and proceeded<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_541"></a>[541]</span>
-to gather up his scattered columns, intending to
-move by the way of Logroño to the Ebro. He
-had with him Taupin’s and Barbout’s divisions of
-the army of Portugal, but after providing for his
-garrisons, only five thousand men of the army of
-the north were disposable, so that he could not
-bring more than fourteen thousand men to aid
-the king; nevertheless the latter confident in the
-strength of his front was still buoyant with the hope
-of assembling an army powerful enough to retake the
-offensive. His dream was short-lived.</p>
-
-<p>The 13th, while the echoes of the explosion at
-Burgos were still ringing in the hills, Wellington’s
-whole army was in motion by its left towards the
-country about the sources of the Ebro. The Gallicians
-moved from Aguilar de Campo high up on
-the Pisuerga, Graham with the British left wing
-moved from Villa Diego, and in one march
-reaching the river, passed it on the 14th at the
-bridges of Rocamunde and San Martin. The
-centre of the army followed on the 15th, and the
-same day the right wing under Hill marched
-through the Bureba and crossed at the Puente
-Arenas. This general movement was masked by
-the cavalry and by the Spanish irregulars who infested
-the rear of the French on the roads to Briviesca
-and Domingo Calçada, and the allies being
-thus suddenly placed between the sources of the
-Ebro and the great mountains of Reynosa, cut
-the French entirely off from the sea-coast. All the
-ports except Santona and Bilbao, were immediately
-evacuated by the enemy; Santona was invested by
-Mendizabel, Porlier, Barceña, and Campillo, and
-the English vessels entered Sant Andero, where a
-dépôt and hospital station was established, because<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_542"></a>[542]</span>
-the royal road from thence through Reynosa to
-Burgos furnished a free communication with the
-army. This single blow severed the connection
-of the English force with Portugal. That country
-was cast off by the army as a heavy tender is cast
-from its towing rope, and all the British military
-establishments were broken up and transferred by
-sea to the coast of Biscay.</p>
-
-<p>The English general had now his choice of two
-modes of action. The one to march bodily down
-the left bank of the Ebro, and fall upon the enemy
-wherever he could meet with them; the other to
-advance, still turning the king’s right, and by
-entering Guipuscoa, to place the army on the great
-communication with France, while the fleet keeping
-pace with this movement furnished fresh dépôts
-at Bilbao and other ports. The first plan was a
-delicate and uncertain operation, because of the
-many narrow and dangerous defiles which were to
-be passed, but the second which could scarcely be
-contravened, was secure even if the first should
-fail; both were compatible to a certain point,
-inasmuch as to gain the great road leading from
-Burgos by Orduña to Bilbao, was a good step for
-either, and failing in that the road leading by Valmaceda
-to Bilbao was still in reserve. Wherefore
-with an eagle’s sweep Wellington brought his left
-wing round, and pouring his numerous columns
-through all the deep narrow valleys and rugged
-defiles descended towards the great road of Bilbao
-between Frias and Orduña. At Modina de Pomar
-a central point, he left the sixth division to guard
-his stores and supplies, but the march of the other
-divisions was unmitigated; neither the winter
-gullies nor the ravines, nor the precipitate passes<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_543"></a>[543]</span>
-amongst the rocks, retarded the march even of the
-artillery; where horses could not draw men hauled,
-and when the wheels would not roll the guns were
-let down or lifted up with ropes; and strongly did
-the rough veteran infantry work their way through
-those wild but beautiful regions; six days they
-toiled unceasingly; on the seventh, swelled by the
-junction of Longa’s division and all the smaller
-bands which came trickling from the mountains,
-they burst like raging streams from every defile,
-and went foaming into the basin of Vittoria.</p>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote">General Thouvenot’s Correspondence, MSS.</span>
-During this time many reports reached the
-French, some absurdly exaggerated, as that Wellington
-had one hundred and ninety thousand men,
-but all indicating more or less distinctly the true
-line and direction of his march. As early as the<span class="sidenote">Marshal Jourdan’s correspondence, MSS.</span>
-15th Jourdan had warned Joseph that the allies
-would probably turn his right, and as the reports
-of Maucune’s scouts told of the presence of English
-troops, that day, on the side of Puente Arenas,
-he pressed the king to send the army of Portugal to
-Valmaceda, and to close the other armies towards
-the same quarter. Joseph yielded so far, that Reille
-was ordered to concentrate his troops at Osma on
-the morning of the 18th, with the view of gaining
-Valmaceda by Orduña, if it was still possible; if
-not he was to descend rapidly from Lodio upon
-Bilbao, and to rally Foy’s division and the garrisons
-of Biscay upon the army of Portugal. At the
-same time Gazan was directed to send a division
-of infantry and a regiment of dragoons from the
-army of the south, to relieve Reille’s troops at
-Puente Lara and Espejo, but no general and decided
-dispositions were made.</p>
-
-<p>Reille immediately ordered Maucune to quit<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_544"></a>[544]</span>
-Frias, and join him at Osma with his division, yet
-having some fears for his safety gave him the choice
-of coming by the direct road across the hills, or
-by the circuitous route of Puente Lara. Maucune
-started late in the night of the 17th by the direct
-road, and when Reille himself reached Osma,
-with La Martiniere’s and Sarrut’s divisions, on the
-morning of the 18th, he found a strong English
-column issuing from the defiles in his front, and
-the head of it was already at Barbarena in possession
-of the high road to Orduña. This was
-general Graham with the first, third, and fifth divisions,
-and a considerable body of cavalry. The
-French general who had about eight thousand infantry
-and fourteen guns, at first made a demonstration
-with Sarrut’s division in the view of forcing the British<span class="sidenote">Official Journal of the chief of the staff, General Boyer, MSS.</span>
-to shew their whole force, and a sharp skirmish
-and heavy cannonade ensued, wherein fifty men
-fell on the side of the allies, above a hundred on
-that of the enemy. But at half-past two o’clock,
-Maucune had not arrived, and beyond the mountains,
-on the left of the French, the sound of a battle
-arose which seemed to advance along the valley
-of Boveda into the rear of Osma; Reille, suspecting
-what had happened, instantly retired
-fighting, towards Espejo, where the mouths of the
-valleys opened on each other, and from that of
-Boveda, and the hills on the left, Maucune’s troops
-rushed forth begrimed with dust and powder,
-breathless, and broken into confused masses.</p>
-
-<p>That general, proverbially daring, marched
-over the Araçena ridge instead of going by the
-Puente Lara, and his leading brigade, after clearing
-the defiles, had halted on the bank of a rivulet
-near the village of San Millan in the valley of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_545"></a>[545]</span>
-Boveda. In this situation, without planting picquets,
-they were waiting for their other brigade and
-the baggage, when suddenly the light division
-which had been moving by a line parallel with
-Graham’s march, appeared on some rising ground
-in their front; the surprise was equal on both sides,
-but the British riflemen instantly dashed down the hill
-with loud cries and a bickering fire, the fifty-second
-followed in support, and the French retreated fighting
-as they best could. The rest of the English
-regiments having remained in reserve, were watching
-this combat and thinking all their enemies were before
-them, when the second French brigade, followed
-by the baggage, came hastily out from a narrow
-cleft in some perpendicular rocks on the right hand.
-A very confused action now commenced, for the
-reserve scrambled over some rough intervening
-ground to attack this new enemy, and the French
-to avoid them made for a hill a little way in their
-front, whereupon the fifty-second, whose rear
-was thus menaced, wheeled round and running at
-full speed up the hill met them on the summit.
-However, the French soldiers without losing their
-presence of mind threw off their packs, and half
-flying, half fighting, escaped along the side of the
-mountains towards Miranda, while the first brigade
-still retreating on the road towards Espejo
-were pursued by the riflemen. Meanwhile the
-sumpter animals being affrighted, run wildly about
-the rocks with a wonderful clamour, and though the
-escort huddled together fought desperately, all the
-baggage became the spoil of the victors, and four
-hundred of the French fell or were taken; the
-rest, thanks to their unyielding resolution and
-activity, escaped, though pursued through the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_546"></a>[546]</span>
-mountains by some Spanish irregulars, and Reille
-being still pressed by Graham then retreated behind
-Salinas de Añara.</p>
-
-<p>A knowledge of these events reached the king
-that night, yet neither Reille nor the few prisoners
-he had made could account for more than six
-Anglo-Portuguese divisions at the defiles; hence as
-no troops had been felt on the great road from
-Burgos, it was judged that Hill was marching with
-the others by Valmaceda into Guipuscoa, to menace
-the great communication with France. However
-it was clear that six divisions were concentrated
-on the right and rear of the French armies,
-and no time was to be lost in extricating the latter
-from its critical situation; wherefore Gazan and
-D’Erlon marched in the night to unite at Armiñon,
-a central point behind the Zadora river, up the left
-bank of which it was necessary to file in order to
-gain the basin of Vittoria. But the latter could only
-be entered, at that side, through the pass of Puebla de
-Arganzan which was two miles long, and so narrow
-as scarcely to furnish room for the great road; Reille
-therefore, to cover this dangerous movement, fell
-back during the night to Subijana Morillas, on the
-Bayas river. His orders were to dispute the
-ground vigorously, for by that route Wellington
-could enter the basin before Gazan, and D’Erlon
-could thread the pass of Puebla; he could also
-send a corps from Frias to attack their rear on the
-Miranda side, while they were engaged in the
-defile. One of these things by all means he
-should have endeavoured to accomplish, but the
-troops had made very long marches on the 18th,
-and it was dark before the fourth division had
-reached Espejo. D’Erlon and Gazan, therefore,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_547"></a>[547]</span>
-united at Armiñon without difficulty about ten
-o’clock in the morning of the 19th, and immediately
-commenced the passage of the defile of
-Puebla, and the head of their column appeared on
-the other side at the moment when Wellington was
-driving Reille back upon the Zadora.</p>
-
-<p>The allies had reached Bayas before mid-day of
-the 19th, and if they could have forced the passage
-at once, the armies of the centre and of the
-south would have been cut off from Vittoria and
-destroyed; but the army of Portugal was strongly
-posted, the front covered by the river, the right by
-the village of Subijana de Morillas, which was
-occupied as a bridge-head, and the left secured by
-some very rugged heights opposite the village of
-Pobes. This position was turned by the light
-division while the fourth division attacked it in
-front, and after a skirmish in which about eighty
-of the French fell, Reille was forced over the
-Zadora; but the army of the centre had then passed
-the defile of Puebla and was in position behind
-that river, the army of the south was coming
-rapidly into second line, the crisis had passed,
-the combat ceased, and the allies pitched their
-tents on the Bayas. The French armies now formed
-three lines behind the Zadora, and the king hearing
-that Clauzel was at Logroño, eleven leagues
-distant, expedited orders to him to march upon
-Vittoria; general Foy also, who was in march for
-Bilbao, was directed to halt at Durango, to rally all
-the garrisons of Biscay and Guipuscoa there, and
-then to come down on Vittoria. These orders were
-received too late.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_548"></a>[548]</span><br /></p>
-
-<h3 id="CHAPTER_BXX_VIII">CHAPTER VIII.</h3>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="sidenote7">1813. June.</span>
-The basin into which the king had now poured
-all his troops, his parcs, convoys, and encumbrances
-of every kind, was about eight miles broad by ten
-in length, Vittoria being at the further end. The
-river Zadora, narrow and with rugged banks, after
-passing very near that town, runs towards the
-Ebro with many windings and divides the basin
-unequally, the largest portion being on the right
-bank. A traveller coming from Miranda by the
-royal Madrid road, would enter the basin by the
-pass of Puebla, through which the Zadora flows
-between two very high and rough mountain ridges,
-the one on his right hand being called the heights
-of Puebla, that on his left hand the heights of
-Morillas. The road leads up the left bank of the
-river, and on emerging from the pass, on the left
-hand at the distance of about six miles would be seen
-the village of Subijana de Morillas, furnishing that
-opening into the basin which Reille defended while
-the other armies passed the defile of Puebla. The
-spires of Vittoria would appear about eight miles
-distant, and from that town the road to Logroño
-goes off on the right hand, the road to Bilbao by
-Murgia and Orduña on the left hand crossing the
-Zadora at a bridge near the village of Ariaga;
-further on, the roads to Estella and to Pampeluna
-branch off on the right, a road to Durango on the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_549"></a>[549]</span>
-left, and between them the royal causeway leads
-over the great Arlaban ridge into the mountains of
-Guipuscoa by the formidable defiles of Salinas.
-But of all these roads, though several were practicable
-for guns, especially that to Pampeluna, the
-royal causeway alone could suffice for the retreat
-of such an encumbered army. And as the allies
-were behind the hills forming the basin on the
-right bank of the Zadora, their line being parallel
-to the great causeway, it followed that by prolonging
-their left they would infallibly cut off the
-French from that route.</p>
-
-<p>Joseph felt the danger and his first thought was
-to march by Salinas to Durango, with a view to
-cover his communications with France, and to rally
-Foy’s troops and the garrisons of Guipuscoa and
-Biscay. But in that rough country, neither his artillery
-nor his cavalry, on which he greatly depended,
-though the cavalry and artillery of the allies were
-scarcely less powerful, could act or subsist, and
-he would have to send them into France; and if
-pressed by Wellington in front and surrounded by
-all the bands in a mountainous region, favourable
-for those irregulars, he could not long remain in
-Spain. It was then proposed if forced from the
-basin of Vittoria, to retire by Salvatierra to Pampeluna
-and bring Suchet’s army up to Zaragoza;
-but Joseph feared thus to lose the great communication
-with France, because the Spanish regular
-army, aided by all the bands, could seize Tolosa
-while Wellington operated against him on the side
-of Navarre. It was replied that troops detached
-from the army of the north and from that of Portugal
-might oppose them; still the king hesitated,
-for though the road to Pampeluna was called<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_550"></a>[550]</span>
-practicable for wheels, it required something more
-for the enormous mass of guns and carriages of all
-kinds now heaped around Vittoria.</p>
-
-<p>One large convoy had already marched on the
-19th by the royal causeway for France, another,
-still larger was to move on the 21st under escort of
-Maucune’s division; the fighting men in front of the
-enemy were thus diminished and yet the plain was
-still covered with artillery parcs and equipages of all
-kinds, and Joseph shut up in the basin of Vittoria,
-vacillating and infirm of purpose, continued to
-waste time in vain conjectures about his adversary’s
-movements. Hence on the 19th nothing was done,
-but the 20th some infantry and cavalry of the army
-of Portugal passed the Zadora to feel for the allies
-towards Murguia, and being encountered by Longa’s
-Spaniards at the distance of six miles, after some
-successful skirmishing recrossed the Zadora with the
-loss of twenty men. On the 21st at three o’clock
-in the morning Maucune’s division, more than three
-thousand good soldiers, marched with the second
-convoy, and the king took up a new line of battle.</p>
-
-<p>Reille’s army reinforced by a Franco-Spanish
-brigade of infantry, and by Digeon’s division of
-dragoons from the army of the south, now formed
-the extreme right, having to defend the passage of
-the Zadora, where the Bilbao and Durango roads
-crossed it by the bridges of Gamara Mayor and
-Ariaga. The French division defended the bridge;
-the Franco-Spanish brigade was pushed forward to<span class="sidenote">See <a href="#i_b_581fp_8">plan 8.</a></span>
-Durana on the royal road, and was supported by a
-French battalion and a brigade of light horsemen;
-Digeon’s dragoons and a second brigade of light
-cavalry were in reserve behind the Zadora, near
-Zuazo de Alava and Hermandad. The centre of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_551"></a>[551]</span>
-the king’s army, distant six or eight miles from
-Gamara, following the course of the Zadora, was on
-another front, because the stream, turning suddenly
-to the left round the heights of Margarita descends
-to the defile of Puebla, nearly at right angles with
-its previous course. Here covered by the river and
-on an easy open range of heights, for the basin of
-Vittoria is broken by a variety of ground, Gazan’s
-right extended from the royal road to an isolated
-hill in front of the village of Margarita. His
-centre was astride the royal road, in front of the
-village of Arinez; his left occupied more rugged
-ground, being placed behind Subijana de Alava
-on the roots of the Puebla mountain facing the
-defile of that name, and to cover this wing a
-brigade under general Maransin was posted on the
-Puebla mountain. D’Erlon’s army was in second
-line. The principal mass of the cavalry with many
-guns, and the king’s guards formed a reserve,
-behind the centre, about the village of Gomecha,
-and fifty pieces of artillery were massed in the front,
-pointing to the bridges of Mendoza, Tres Puentes,
-Villodas, and Nanclares.</p>
-
-<p>While the king was making conjectures, Wellington
-was making various dispositions for the
-different operations which might occur. He knew
-that the Andalusian reserve would be at Burgos
-in a few days, and thinking that Joseph would not
-fight on the Zadora, detached Giron with the Gallicians
-on the 19th to seize Orduña. Graham’s
-corps was at first destined to follow Giron but
-finally penetrated through difficult mountain ways to
-Murguia, thus cutting the enemy off from Bilbao
-and menacing his communications with France.
-However the rear of the army had been so much<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_552"></a>[552]</span>
-scattered in the previous marches that Wellington
-halted on the 20th to rally his columns, and taking
-that opportunity to examine the position of the
-French armies, observed that they seemed steadfast
-to fight; whereupon immediately changing his own
-dispositions, he gave Graham fresh orders and
-hastily recalled Giron from Orduña.</p>
-
-<p>The long expected battle was now at hand, and
-on neither side were the numbers and courage of the
-troops of mean account. The allies had lost about
-two hundred killed and wounded in the previous
-operations, and the sixth division, six thousand five
-hundred strong, was left at Medina de Pomar; hence
-only sixty thousand Anglo-Portuguese sabres and
-bayonets, with ninety pieces of cannon, were actually
-in the field, but the Spanish auxiliaries were above
-twenty thousand, and the whole army, including
-serjeants and artillery-men, exceeded eighty thousand
-combatants. For the French side, as the
-regular muster-roll of their troops was lost with
-the battle, an approximation to their strength must
-suffice. The number killed and taken in different
-combats, from the Esla and Tormes to the Zadora,
-was about two thousand men, and some five thousand
-had marched to France with the two convoys.
-On the other hand Sarrut’s division, the garrison
-of Vittoria, and the many smaller posts relinquished
-by the army of the north, had increased the king’s
-forces, and hence, by a comparison with former
-returns, it would appear, that in the gross, about
-seventy thousand men were present. Wherefore
-deducting the officers, the artillery-men, sappers,
-miners, and non-combatants, which are always borne
-on the French muster-rolls, the sabres and bayonets
-would scarcely reach sixty thousand, but in the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_553"></a>[553]</span>
-number and size of their guns the French had the
-advantage.</p>
-
-<p>The defects of the king’s position were apparent
-both in the general arrangement and in the details.
-His best line of retreat was on the prolongation of
-his right flank, which being at Gamara Mayor,
-close to Vittoria, was too distant to be supported
-by the main body of the army; and yet the safety
-of the latter depended upon the preservation of
-Reille’s position. Instead of having the rear clear,
-and the field of battle free, many thousand carriages
-and impediments of all kinds were heaped about
-Vittoria, blocking all the roads, and creating confusion
-amongst the artillery parcs. Maransin’s
-brigade placed on the heights above Puebla was
-isolated and too weak to hold that ground. The
-centre indeed occupied an easy range of hills, its
-front was open, with a slope to the river, and
-powerful batteries seemed to bar all access by the
-bridges; nevertheless many of the guns being
-pushed with an advanced post into a deep loop of
-the Zadora, were within musket-shot of a wood on
-the right bank, which was steep and rugged, so
-that the allies found good cover close to the river.</p>
-
-<p>There were seven bridges within the scheme of
-the operations, namely, the bridge of La Puebla
-on the French left beyond the defile; the bridge of
-Nanclares, facing Subijana de Alava and the French
-end of the defile of Puebla; then three bridges
-which, placed around the deep loop of the river
-before mentioned, opened altogether upon the
-right of the French centre, that of Mendoza being
-highest up the stream, that of Vellodas lowest down
-the stream, and that of Tres Puentes in the centre;
-lastly the bridges of Gamara Mayor and Ariaga<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_554"></a>[554]</span>
-on the Upper Zadora, opposite Vittoria, which were
-guarded by Reille, completed the number, and none
-of the seven were either broken or entrenched.</p>
-
-<p>Wellington having well observed these things
-formed his army for three distinct battles.</p>
-
-<p>Sir Thomas Graham moving from Murguia, by
-the Bilbao road, was to fall on Reille, and if possible
-to force the passage of the river at Gamara Mayor
-and Ariaga; by this movement the French would be
-completely turned and the greatest part of their
-forces shut up between the Puebla mountains on one
-side and the Zadora on the other. The first and fifth
-Anglo-Portuguese divisions, Bradford’s and Pack’s
-independent Portuguese brigades, Longa’s Spanish
-division, and Anson’s and Bock’s cavalry, in all
-near twenty thousand men with eighteen pieces of
-cannon, were destined for this attack, and Giron’s
-Gallicians, recalled from Orduña, came up by a
-forced march in support.</p>
-
-<p>Sir Rowland Hill was to attack the enemy’s left,
-and his corps, also about twenty thousand strong,
-was composed of Morillo’s Spaniards, Sylveira’s
-Portuguese, and the second British division together
-with some cavalry and guns. It was collected
-on the southern slope of the ridge of Morillas,
-between the Bayas and the Lower Zadora,
-pointing to the village of Puebla, and was destined
-to force the passage of the river at that point, to
-assail the French troops on the heights beyond, to
-thread the defile of La Puebla and to enter the
-basin of Vittoria, thus turning and menacing all
-the French left and securing the passage of the
-Zadora at the bridge of Nanclares.</p>
-
-<p>The centre attack, directed by Wellington in
-person, consisted of the third, fourth, seventh,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_555"></a>[555]</span>
-and light divisions of infantry, the great mass of
-the artillery, the heavy cavalry and D’Urban’s Portuguese
-horsemen, in all nearly thirty thousand
-combatants. They were encamped along the Bayas
-from Subijana Morillas to Ulivarre, and had
-only to march across the ridges which formed the
-basin of Vittoria on that side, to come down to
-their different points of attack on the Zadora, that
-is to say, the bridges of Mendoza, Tres Puentes,
-Villodas and Nanclares. But so rugged was the
-country and the communications between the different
-columns so difficult, that no exact concert could
-be expected and each general of division was in
-some degree master of his movements.</p>
-
-
-<h4>BATTLE OF VITTORIA.</h4>
-
-<p>At day-break on the 21st the weather being
-rainy, with a thick vapour, the troops moved from
-their camps on the Bayas, and the centre of the
-army, advancing by columns from the right and
-left of the line, passed the ridges in front, and entering
-the basin of Vittoria slowly approached the
-Zadora. The left-hand column pointed to Mendoza,
-the right-hand column skirted the ridge of Morillas
-on the other side of which Hill was marching, and
-that general, having seized the village of Puebla
-about ten o’clock, commenced passing the river
-there. Morillo’s Spaniards led and their first
-brigade moving on a bye way assailed the mountain
-to the right of the great road; the ascent was so steep
-that the soldiers appeared to climb rather than to
-walk up, and the second Spanish brigade, being to
-connect the first with the British troops below,
-ascended only half-way; little or no opposition was
-made until the first brigade was near the summit<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_556"></a>[556]</span>
-when a sharp skirmishing commenced, and Morillo
-was wounded but would not quit the field; his
-second brigade joined him, and the French, feeling
-the importance of the height, reinforced Maransin
-with a fresh regiment. Then Hill succoured Morillo
-with the seventy-first regiment, and a battalion of
-light infantry, both under colonel Cadogan, yet
-the fight was doubtful, for though the British
-secured the summit, and gained ground along the
-side of the mountain, Cadogan, a brave officer and
-of high promise, fell, and Gazan calling Villatte’s
-division from behind Ariñez, sent it to the succour
-of his side; and so strongly did these troops fight
-that the battle remained stationary, the allies being
-scarcely able to hold their ground. Hill however
-again sent fresh troops to their assistance, and with the
-remainder of his corps passing the Zadora, threaded
-the long defile of Puebla and fiercely issuing forth
-on the other side won the village of Subijana de
-Alava in front of Gazan’s line; he thus connected
-his own right with the troops on the mountain, and
-maintained this forward position in despite of the
-enemy’s vigorous efforts to dislodge him.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile Wellington had brought the fourth and
-light divisions, the heavy cavalry, the hussars and
-D’Urban’s Portuguese horsemen, from Subijana
-Morillas, and Montevite, down by Olabarre to the
-Zadora. The fourth division was placed opposite
-the bridge of Nanclares, the light division opposite
-the bridge of Villodas, both well covered by rugged
-ground and woods; and the light division was so
-close to the water, that their skirmishers could with
-ease have killed the French gunners of the advanced
-post in the loop of the river at Villodas. The
-weather had cleared up, and when Hill’s battle<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_557"></a>[557]</span>
-began, the riflemen of the light division, spreading
-along the bank, exchanged a biting fire with the
-enemy’s skirmishers, but no serious effort was made,
-because the third and seventh divisions, meeting
-with rough ground, had not reached their point
-of attack; and it would have been imprudent to
-push the fourth division and the cavalry over the
-bridge of Nanclares, and thus crowd a great body
-of troops in front of the Puebla defile before the
-other divisions were ready to attack the right and
-centre of the enemy.</p>
-
-<p>While thus waiting, a Spanish peasant told
-Wellington that the bridge of Tres Puentes on the
-left of the light division, was unguarded, and
-offered to guide the troops over it. Kempt’s
-brigade of the light division was instantly directed
-towards this point, and being concealed by some
-rocks from the French, and well led by the brave
-peasant, they passed the narrow bridge at a running
-pace, mounted a steep curving rise of ground, and
-halted close under the crest on the enemy’s side of
-the river, being then actually behind the king’s
-advanced post, and within a few hundred yards of
-his line of battle. Some French cavalry immediately
-approached and two round shots were fired by the
-enemy, one of which killed the poor peasant to whose
-courage and intelligence the allies were so much
-indebted; but as no movement of attack was made,
-Kempt called the fifteenth hussars over the river,
-and they came at a gallop, crossing the narrow
-bridge one by one, horseman after horseman, and
-still the French remained torpid, shewing that there
-was an army there but no general.</p>
-
-<p>It was now one o’clock, Hill’s assault on the
-village of Subijana de Alava was developed, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_558"></a>[558]</span>
-a curling smoke, faintly seen far up the Zadora on
-the enemy’s extreme right, being followed by the
-dull sound of distant guns shewed that Graham’s
-attack had also commenced. Then the king finding
-both his flanks in danger caused his reserve about
-Gomecha to file off towards Vittoria, and gave
-Gazan orders to retire by successive masses with
-the army of the south. But at that moment the
-third and seventh divisions having reached their
-ground were seen moving rapidly down to the
-bridge of Mendoza, the enemy’s artillery opened
-upon them, a body of cavalry drew near the bridge,
-and the French light troops which were very strong
-there commenced a vigorous musketry. Some
-British guns replied to the French cannon from the
-opposite bank, and the value of Kempt’s forward
-position was instantly made manifest; for colonel
-Andrew Barnard springing forward, led the riflemen
-of the light division, in the most daring
-manner, between the French cavalry and the river,
-taking their light troops and gunners in flank, and
-engaging them so closely that the English artillery-men,
-thinking his darkly clothed troops were
-enemies, played upon both alike.</p>
-
-<p>This singular attack enabled a brigade of the
-third division to pass the bridge of Mendoza without
-opposition; the other brigade forded the
-river higher up, and the seventh division and Vandeleur’s
-brigade of the light division followed.
-The French advanced post immediately abandoned
-the ground in front of Villodas, and the battle
-which had before somewhat slackened revived with
-extreme violence. Hill pressed the enemy harder,
-the fourth division passed the bridge of Nanclares,
-the smoke and sound of Graham’s attack became<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_559"></a>[559]</span>
-more distinct, and the banks of the Zadora presented
-a continuous line of fire. However the French,
-weakened in the centre by the draft made of Villatte’s
-division and having their confidence shaken
-by the king’s order to retreat, were in evident perplexity,
-and no regular retrograde movement could
-be made, the allies were too close.</p>
-
-<p>The seventh division, and Colville’s brigade of
-the third division which had forded the river,
-formed the left of the British, and they were immediately
-engaged with the French right in front
-of Margarita and Hermandad. Almost at the same
-time lord Wellington, seeing the hill in front of
-Arinez nearly denuded of troops by the withdrawal
-of Villatte’s troops, carried Picton and the rest of
-the third division in close columns of regiments at
-a running pace diagonally across the front of both
-armies towards that central point; this attack was
-headed by Barnard’s riflemen, and followed by the
-remainder of Kempt’s brigade and the hussars, but
-the other brigade of the light division acted in
-support of the seventh division. At the same
-time general Cole advanced with the fourth division
-from the bridge of Nanclares, and the heavy
-cavalry, a splendid body, also passing the river,
-galloped up, squadron after squadron, into the
-plain ground between Cole’s right and Hill’s left.</p>
-
-<p>The French thus caught in the midst of their
-dispositions for retreat, threw out a prodigious
-number of skirmishers, and fifty pieces of artillery
-played with astonishing activity. To answer this
-fire Wellington brought over several brigades of
-British guns, and both sides were shrouded by a
-dense cloud of smoke and dust, under cover of
-which the French retired by degrees to the second<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_560"></a>[560]</span>
-range of heights, in front of Gomecha, on which
-their reserve had been posted, but they still held
-the village of Arinez on the main road. Picton’s
-troops headed by the riflemen, plunged into
-that village amidst a heavy fire of muskets and
-artillery, and in an instant three guns were captured;
-but the post was important, fresh French
-troops came down, and for some time the smoke
-and dust and clamour, the flashing of the fire-arms,
-and the shouts and cries of the combatants, mixed
-with the thundering of the guns, were terrible,
-yet finally the British troops issued forth victorious
-on the other side. During this conflict the seventh
-division, reinforced by Vandeleur’s brigade of the
-light division, was heavily raked by a battery at
-the village of Margarita, until the fifty-second
-regiment, led by colonel Gibbs, with an impetuous
-charge drove the French guns away and carried
-the village, and at the same time the eighty-seventh
-under colonel Gough won the village of Hermandad.
-Then the whole advanced fighting on the
-left of Picton’s attack, and on the right hand of that
-general the fourth division also made way, though
-more slowly because of the rugged ground.</p>
-
-<p>When Picton and Kempt’s brigades had carried
-the village of Arinez and gained the main road,
-the French troops near Subijana de Alava were
-turned, and being hard-pressed on their front, and
-on their left flank by the troops on the summit of
-the mountain, fell back for two miles in a disordered
-mass, striving to regain the great line of retreat
-to Vittoria. It was thought that some cavalry
-launched against them at the moment would have
-totally disorganized the whole French battle and
-secured several thousand prisoners, but this was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_561"></a>[561]</span>
-not done, the confused multitude shooting ahead
-of the advancing British lines recovered order,
-and as the ground was exceedingly diversified,
-being in some places wooded, in others open, here
-covered with high corn, there broken by ditches
-vineyards and hamlets, the action for six miles resolved
-itself into a running fight and cannonade,
-the dust and smoke and tumult of which filled all
-the basin, passing onwards towards Vittoria.</p>
-
-<p>Many guns were taken as the army advanced,
-and at six o’clock the French reached the last defensible
-height, one mile in front of Vittoria.
-Behind them was the plain in which the city
-stood, and beyond the city, thousands of carriages
-and animals and non-combatants, men women and
-children, were crowding together, in all the madness
-of terror, and as the English shot went booming over
-head the vast crowd started and swerved with a convulsive
-movement, while a dull and horrid sound of
-distress arose; but there was no hope, no stay for
-army or multitude. It was the wreck of a nation.
-However the courage of the French soldier was
-not yet quelled, Reille on whom every thing now
-depended, maintained his post on the Upper Zadora,
-and the armies of the south and centre drawing up
-on their last heights, between the villages of Ali
-and Armentia, made their muskets flash like lightning,
-while more than eighty pieces of artillery,
-massed together, pealed with such a horrid uproar,
-that the hills laboured and shook, and streamed
-with fire and smoke, amidst which the dark figures
-of the French gunners were seen, bounding with
-a frantic energy.</p>
-
-<p>This terrible cannonade and musketry kept the
-allies in check, and scarcely could the third division,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_562"></a>[562]</span>
-which was still the foremost and bore the
-brunt of this storm, maintain its advanced position.
-Again the battle became stationary, and the French
-generals had commenced drawing off their infantry
-in succession from the right wing, when suddenly
-the fourth division rushing forward carried the hill
-on the French left, and the heights were at once
-abandoned. It was at this very moment that Joseph,
-finding the royal road so completely blocked by carriages
-that the artillery could not pass, indicated
-the road of Salvatierra as the line of retreat, and the
-army went off in a confused yet compact body on
-that side, leaving Vittoria on its left. The British
-infantry followed hard, and the light cavalry galloped
-through the town to intercept the new line of
-retreat, which was through a marsh, but this road
-also was choked with carriages and fugitive people,
-while on each side there were deep drains. Thus
-all became disorder and mischief, the guns were
-left on the edge of the marsh, the artillery-men
-and drivers fled with the horses, and, breaking
-through the miserable multitude, the vanquished
-troops went off by Metauco towards Salvatierra;
-however their cavalry still covered the retreat with
-some vigour, and many of those generous horsemen
-were seen taking up children and women to carry
-off from the dreadful scene.</p>
-
-<p>The result of the last attack had placed Reille, of
-whose battle it is now time to treat, in great
-danger. His advanced troops under Sarrut had been
-placed at the village of Aranguis, and they also
-occupied some heights on their right which covered
-both the bridges of Ariaga and Gamara Mayor,
-but they had been driven from both the village and
-the height a little after twelve o’clock, by general<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_563"></a>[563]</span>
-Oswald, who commanded the head of Graham’s
-column, consisting of the fifth division, Longa’s
-Spaniards, and Pack’s Portuguese. Longa then
-seized Gamara Menor on the Durango road, while
-another detachment gained the royal road still
-further on the left, and forced the Franco-Spaniards
-to retire from Durana. Thus the first blow on this
-side had deprived the king of his best line of retreat
-and confined him to the road of Pampeluna. However
-Sarrut recrossed the river in good order and
-a new disposition was made by Reille. One of
-Sarrut’s brigades defended the bridge of Ariaga
-and the village of Abechuco beyond it; the other
-was in reserve, equally supporting Sarrut and La
-Martiniere who defended the bridge of Gamara
-Mayor and the village of that name beyond the
-river. Digeon’s dragoons were formed behind the
-village of Ariaga, and Reille’s own dragoons being
-called up from Hermandad and Zuazo, took post
-behind the bridge of Gamara; a brigade of light
-cavalry was placed on the extreme right to sustain
-the Franco-Spanish troops, which were now on the
-Upper Zadora in front of Betonio, and the remainder
-of the light cavalry under general Curto was on the
-French left extending down the Zadora between
-Ariaga and Govea.</p>
-
-<p>Oswald commenced the attack at Gamara with
-some guns and Robinson’s brigade of the fifth
-division. Longa’s Spaniards were to have led and
-at an early hour when Gamara was feebly occupied,
-but they did not stir, and the village was
-meanwhile reinforced. However Robinson’s brigade
-being formed in three columns made the assault
-at a running pace. At first the fire of artillery
-and musketry was so heavy that the British troops<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_564"></a>[564]</span>
-stopped and commenced firing also, and the three
-columns got intermixed, yet encouraged by their
-officers, and especially by the example of general
-Robinson an inexperienced man but of a high and
-daring spirit, they renewed the charge, broke
-through the village and even crossed the bridge.
-One gun was captured, and the passage seemed to
-be won, when Reille suddenly turned twelve pieces
-upon the village, and La Martiniere rallying his
-division under cover of this cannonade, retook the
-bridge; it was with difficulty the allied troops could
-even hold the village until they were reinforced.
-Then a second British brigade came down, and,
-the royals leading, the bridge was again carried, but
-again these new troops were driven back in the same
-manner as the others had been. Thus the bridge
-remained forbidden ground. Graham had meanwhile
-attacked the village of Abechuco which
-covered the bridge of Ariaga, and it was carried at
-once by colonel Halkett’s Germans, who were supported
-by Bradford’s Portuguese and by the fire
-of twelve guns; yet here as at Gamara the French
-maintained the bridge, and at both places the
-troops on each side remained stationary under a
-reciprocal fire of artillery and small arms.</p>
-
-<p>Reille, though considerably inferior in numbers,
-continued to interdict the passage of the river, until
-the tumult of Wellington’s battle, coming up the Zadora,
-reached Vittoria itself, and a part of the British
-horsemen rode out of that city upon Sarrut’s rear.
-Digeon’s dragoons kept this cavalry in check for the
-moment, and some time before, Reille, seeing the <ins class="corr" id="tn-564" title="Transcriber’s Note—Original text: 'retrogade movement'">
-retrograde movement</ins> of the king, had formed a reserve of
-infantry under general Fririon at Betonia which
-now proved his safety. For Sarrut was killed at the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_565"></a>[565]</span>
-bridge of Ariaga, and general Menne the next in
-command, could scarcely draw off his troops while
-Digeon’s dragoons held the British cavalry at
-point, but with the aid of Fririon’s reserve Reille
-covered the movement and rallied all his troops at
-Betonio. He had now to make head on several
-sides, because the allies were coming down from
-Ariaga from Durana and from Vittoria, yet he
-fought his way to Metauco on the Salvatierra road
-covering the general retreat with some degree of
-order. Vehemently and closely did the British
-pursue, and neither the resolute demeanour of the
-French cavalry, which was covered on the flanks
-by some light troops and made several vigorous
-charges, nor the night, which now fell, could stop
-their victorious career until the flying masses of the
-enemy had cleared all obstacles, and passing Metauco
-got beyond the reach of further injury.
-Thus ended the battle of Vittoria; the French
-escaped indeed with comparatively little loss of
-men, but to use Gazan’s words, “they lost all
-their equipages, all their guns, all their treasure,
-all their stores, all their papers, so that no man
-could prove how much pay was due to him;
-generals and subordinate officers alike were reduced
-to the clothes on their backs, and most of
-them were barefooted.”</p>
-
-<p>Never was an army more hardly used by its
-commander, for the soldiers were not half beaten,
-and never was a victory more complete. The trophies
-were innumerable. The French carried off
-but two pieces of artillery from the battle. Jourdan’s
-baton of command, a stand of colours, one
-hundred and forty-three brass pieces, one hundred
-of which had been used in the fight, all the
-parcs and dépôts from Madrid, Valladolid, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_566"></a>[566]</span>
-Burgos, carriages, ammunition, treasure, every
-thing fell into the hands of the victors. The loss
-in men did not however exceed six thousand,
-exclusive of some hundreds of prisoners; the
-loss of the allies was nearly as great, the gross
-numbers being five thousand one hundred and
-seventy-six, killed wounded and missing. Of
-these one thousand and forty-nine were Portuguese
-and five hundred and fifty-three were Spanish;
-hence the loss of the English was more than double
-that of the Portuguese and Spaniards together,
-and yet both fought well, and especially the Portuguese,
-but British troops are the soldiers of
-battle. Marshal Jourdan’s baton was taken by the
-eighty-seventh regiment, and the spoil was immense;
-but to such extent was plunder carried
-principally by the followers and non-combatants,
-for with some exceptions the fighting troops may
-be said to have marched upon gold and silver without
-stooping to pick it up, that of five millions and
-a half of dollars indicated by the French accounts
-to be in the money-chests, not one dollar came to
-the public, and Wellington sent fifteen officers with
-power to stop and examine all loaded animals passing
-the Ebro and the Duero in hopes to recover the
-sums so shamefully carried off. Neither was this
-disgraceful conduct confined to ignorant and vulgar
-people. Some officers were seen mixed up with the
-mob and contending for the disgraceful gain.</p>
-
-<p>On the 22d the allies followed the retreating
-enemy, and Giron and Longa entered Guipuscoa,
-by the royal road, in pursuit of the convoy which
-had moved under Maucune on the morning of the
-battle; the heavy cavalry and D’Urban’s Portuguese
-remained at Vittoria, and general Pakenham with
-the sixth division came up from Medina Pomar;<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_567"></a>[567]</span>
-the remainder of the army pursued Joseph towards
-Pampeluna, for he had continued his retreat up
-the Borundia and Araquil valleys all night. The
-weather was rainy, the roads heavy, and the French
-rear-guard having neither time nor materials to
-destroy the bridges set fire to the villages behind
-them to delay the pursuit. At five o’clock in the
-morning of the 22d Reille had rallied his two
-divisions and all his cavalry in front of Salvatierra,
-where he halted until he was assured that all the
-French had passed, and then continued his march
-to Huerta in the valley of Araquil, thirty miles
-from the field of battle. Joseph was that day at
-Yrursun, a town, situated behind one of the sources
-of the Arga, and from which roads branched off to
-Pampeluna on one side, and to Tolosa and St.
-Esteban on the other. At this place he remained
-all the 23d sending orders to different points on
-the French frontier to prepare provisions and succours
-for his suffering army, and he directed Reille
-to proceed rapidly by St. Estevan to the Bidassoa
-with the infantry, six hundred select cavalry, the
-artillery-men and horses of the army of Portugal;
-meanwhile Gazan’s and D’Erlon’s army
-marched upon Pampeluna intending to cross the
-frontier at St. Jean Pied de Port. Joseph reached
-Pampeluna the 24th, but the army bivouacked on
-the glacis of the fortress, and in such a state of destitution
-and insubordination that the governor would
-not suffer them to enter the town. The magazines
-were indeed reduced very low by Mina’s long<span class="sidenote">Jones’s Sieges.</span>
-blockade, and some writers assert that it was even
-proposed to blow up the works and abandon the
-place; however by great exertions additional provisions
-were obtained from the vicinity, the garrison<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_568"></a>[568]</span>
-was encreased to three thousand men, and the
-army marched towards France leaving a rear-guard
-at a strong pass about two leagues off.</p>
-
-<p>The 23d Wellington having detached Graham’s
-corps to Guipuscoa by the pass of Adrian, left the
-fifth division at Salvatierra, and pursued the king
-with the rest of the army.</p>
-
-<p>On the 24th the light division and Victor Alten’s
-cavalry came up with the French rear-guard; two
-battalions of the riflemen immediately pushed the
-infantry back though the pass, and then Ross’s
-horse artillery galloping forward, killed several
-men and dismounted one of the only two pieces
-of cannon carried off from Vittoria.</p>
-
-<p>The 25th the enemy covered by the fortress of
-Pampeluna went up the valley of Roncevalles.
-He was followed by the light division which turned
-the town as far as Vilalba, and he was harassed by
-the Spanish irregular troops now swarming on
-every side.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile Foy and Clauzel were placed in very
-difficult positions. The former had reached Bergara
-the 21st, and the garrison of Bilbao and the
-Italian division of St. Paul, formerly Palombini’s,
-had reached Durango; the first convoy from Vittoria
-was that day at Bergara, and Maucune was
-with the second at Montdragon. The 22d the garrison
-of Castro went off to Santona; the same day
-the fugitives from the battle spread such an alarm
-through the country that the forts of Arlaban,
-Montdragon, and Salinas, which commanded the
-passes into Guipuscoa were abandoned, and Longa
-and Giron penetrated them without hindrance.</p>
-
-<p>Foy who had only one battalion of his division
-in hand, immediately rallied the fugitive garrisons,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_569"></a>[569]</span>
-and marching upon Montdragon, made some prisoners
-and acquired exact intelligence of the battle.
-Then he ordered the convoy to move day and night,
-towards France; the troops at Durango to march
-upon Bergara, and the troops from all the other posts
-to unite at Tolosa, to which place the artillery, baggage,
-and sick men were now hastening from every
-side; and to cover their concentration Foy, reinforcing
-himself with Maucune’s troops, gave battle to
-Giron and Longa, though three times his numbers,
-at Montdragon; the Spaniards had the advantage
-and the French fell back, yet slowly and fighting,
-to Bergara, but they lost two hundred and fifty men
-and six guns.</p>
-
-<p>On the 23d Foy marched to Villa Real de Guipuscoa,
-and that evening the head of Graham’s
-column having crossed the Mutiol mountain by the
-pass of Adrian, descended upon Segura. It was then
-as near to Tolosa as Foy was, and the latter’s situation
-became critical; yet such were the difficulties
-of passing the mountain, that it was late on the
-24th ere Graham, who had then only collected
-Anson’s light cavalry, two Portuguese brigades of
-infantry, and Halket’s Germans, could move towards
-Villa Franca. The Italians and Maucune’s
-divisions which composed the French rear, were
-just entering Villa Franca as Graham came in sight,
-and to cover that town they took post at the village
-of Veasaya on the right bank of the Orio river.
-Halket’s Germans, aided by Pack’s Portuguese, immediately
-drove Maucune’s people from the village<span class="sidenote">Graham’s despatch.</span>
-with the loss of two hundred men, and Bradford’s brigade
-having engaged the Italians on the French right,<span class="sidenote">General Boyer’s official Journal, MSS.</span>
-killed or wounded eighty, yet the Italians claimed
-the advantage; and the whole position was so<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_570"></a>[570]</span>
-strong, that Graham had recourse to flank operations,
-whereupon Foy retired to Tolosa. Giron
-and Longa now came up by the great road, and
-Mendizabel, having quitted the blockade of Santona,
-arrived at Aspeytia on the Deba.</p>
-
-<p>The 25th Foy again offered battle in front of Tolosa,
-but Graham turned his left with Longa’s division
-and Mendizabel turned his right from Aspeytia;
-while they were in march, colonel Williams, with
-the grenadiers of the first regiment and three companies
-of Pack’s Portuguese, dislodged him from an
-advantageous hill in front, and the fight was then
-purposely prolonged by skirmishing, until six
-o’clock in the evening, when the Spaniards having
-reached their destination on the flanks, a general
-attack was made on all sides. The French being
-cannonaded on the causeway, and strongly pushed
-by the infantry in front, while Longa with equal
-vigour drove their left from the heights, were soon
-forced beyond Tolosa on the flanks; but that town
-was strongly entrenched as a field-post and they
-maintained it until Graham brought up his guns
-and bursting one of the gates opened a passage
-for his troops; nevertheless Foy profiting from the
-darkness made his retreat good with a loss of only
-four hundred men killed and wounded, and some
-prisoners who were taken by Mendizabel and
-Longa. These actions were very severe; the loss
-of the Spaniards was not known, but the Anglo-Portuguese
-had more than four hundred killed and
-wounded in the two days’ operations, and Graham
-himself was hurt.</p>
-
-<p>The 26th and 27th the allies halted to hear of
-lord Wellington’s progress, the enemy’s convoys
-entered France in safety, and Foy occupied a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_571"></a>[571]</span>
-position between Tolosa and Ernani behind the
-Anezo. His force was now encreased by the
-successive arrival of the smaller garrisons to sixteen
-thousand bayonets, four hundred sabres, and
-ten pieces of artillery, and the 28th he threw a
-garrison of two thousand six hundred good troops
-into St. Sebastian and passed the Urumia. The
-29th he passed the Oyarsun, and halted the 30th,
-leaving a small garrison at Passages, which however
-surrendered the next day to Longa.</p>
-
-<p>On the 1st of July the garrison of Gueteria
-escaped by sea to St. Sebastian, and Foy passed
-the Bidassoa, his rear-guard fighting with Giron’s
-Gallicians; but Reille’s troops were now at Vera
-and Viriatu, they had received ammunition and
-artillery from Bayonne, and thus twenty-five thousand
-men of the army of Portugal occupied a
-defensive line from Vera to the bridge of Behobie,
-the approaches to which last were defended by a
-block-house. Graham immediately invested St.
-Sebastian, and Giron concentrating the fire of his
-own artillery and that of a British battery upon
-the block-house of Behobie obliged the French to
-blow it up and destroy the bridge.</p>
-
-<p>While these events were passing in Guipuscoa,
-Clauzel was in more imminent danger. On the
-evening of the 22d he had approached the field
-of battle at the head of fourteen thousand men, by
-a way which falls into the Estella road, at Aracete
-and not far from Salvatierra. Pakenham with the
-sixth division was then at Vittoria, and the French
-general, learning the state of affairs soon retired to
-Logroño, where he halted until the evening of the
-25th. This delay was like to have proved fatal,
-for on that day, Wellington who before thought he<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_572"></a>[572]</span>
-was at Tudela, discovered his real position, and
-leaving general Hill with the second division
-to form the siege of Pampeluna, marched himself
-by Tafalla with two brigades of light cavalry and
-the third, fourth, seventh, and light divisions of
-infantry. The fifth and sixth divisions and the
-heavy cavalry and D’Urban’s Portuguese marched
-at the same time from Salvatierra and Vittoria upon
-Logroño; and Mina also, who had now collected
-all his scattered battalions near Estella, and was
-there joined by Julian Sanchez’ cavalry, followed
-hard on Clauzel’s rear.</p>
-
-<p><span class="sidenote7">July.</span>
-The French general moving by Calahorra, reached
-Tudela on the evening of the 27th, and thinking
-that by this forced march of sixty miles in forty
-hours with scarcely a halt, he had outstripped all
-pursuers, would have made for France by Olite
-and Tafalla. Wellington was already in possession
-of those places expecting him, but an alcalde
-gave Clauzel notice of the danger, whereupon
-recrossing the Ebro he marched upon Zaragoza in
-all haste, and arriving the 1st of July, took post
-on the Gallego, gave out that he would there wait
-until Suchet, or the king, if the latter retook the
-offensive, should come up. Wellington immediately
-made a flank movement to his own left as
-far as Caseda, and could still with an exertion
-have intercepted Clauzel by the route of Jacca,
-but he feared to drive him back upon Suchet and
-contented himself with letting Mina press the
-French general. That chief acted with great ability;
-for he took three hundred prisoners, and having
-every where declared that the whole allied army were
-close at hand in pursuit he imposed upon Clauzel,
-who, being thus deceived, destroyed some of his<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_573"></a>[573]</span>
-artillery and heavy baggage, and leaving the rest
-at Zaragoza retired to Jacca.</p>
-
-<p>During this time Joseph, not being pressed, had
-sent the army of the south again into Spain to take
-possession of the valley of Bastan, which was
-very fertile and full of strong positions. But
-O’Donnel, count of Abispal, had now reduced the
-forts at Pancorbo, partly by capitulation, partly
-by force, and was marching towards Pampeluna;
-wherefore general Hill, without abandoning the
-siege of that place, moved two British and two Portuguese
-brigades into the valley of Bastan, and on
-the 4th, 5th, 6th, and 7th, vigorously driving Gazan
-from all his positions, cleared the valley with a
-loss of only one hundred and twenty men. The
-whole line of the Spanish frontier from Ronscevalles
-to the mouth of the Bidassoa river was thus occupied
-by the victorious allies, and Pampeluna and St.
-Sebastian were invested. Joseph’s reign was over,
-the crown had fallen from his head, and after
-years of toils, and combats which had been rather
-admired than understood, the English general,
-emerging from the chaos of the Peninsula struggle,
-stood on the summit of the Pyrennees a recognised
-conqueror. On those lofty pinnacles the clangor
-of his trumpets pealed clear and loud, and the
-splendour of his genius appeared as a flaming beacon
-to warring nations.</p>
-
-
-<h4>OBSERVATIONS.</h4>
-
-<p>1º. In this campaign of six weeks, Wellington,
-with one hundred thousand men, marched six hundred
-miles, passed six great rivers, gained one
-decisive battle, invested two fortresses, and drove<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_574"></a>[574]</span>
-a hundred and twenty thousand veteran troops from
-Spain. This immense result could not have been
-attained if Joseph had followed Napoleon’s instructions;
-Wellington could not then have turned
-the line of the Duero. It could not have been
-attained if Joseph had acted with ordinary skill
-after the line of the Duero was passed. Time was
-to him most precious, yet when contrary to his
-expectations he had concentrated his scattered
-armies behind the Carion, he made no effort to
-delay his enemy on that river. He judged it an
-unfit position, that is, unfit for a great battle; but
-he could have obliged Wellington to lose a day
-there, perhaps two or three, and behind the Upper
-Pisuerga he might have saved a day or two more.
-Reille who was with the army of Portugal on the
-right of the king’s line complained that he could
-find no officers of that army who knew the Pisuerga<span class="sidenote">King’s correspondence, MSS.</span>
-sufficiently to place the troops in position; the
-king then had cause to remember Napoleon’s
-dictum, namely, that “to command an army well
-a general must think of nothing else.” For why
-was the course of the Pisuerga unknown when the
-king’s head-quarters had been for several months
-within a day’s journey of it?</p>
-
-<p>2º. The Carion and the Pisuerga being given up,
-the country about the Hormaza was occupied and
-the three French armies were in mass between that
-stream and Burgos; yet Wellington’s right wing
-only, that is to say, only twenty-three thousand infantry,
-and three brigades of cavalry, drove Reille’s
-troops over the Arlanzan, and the castle of Burgos
-was abandoned. This was on the 12th, the three
-French armies, not less than fifty thousand fighting
-men, had been in position since the 9th, and the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_575"></a>[575]</span>
-king’s letters prove that he desired to fight in
-that country, which was favourable for all arms.
-Nothing then could be more opportune than Wellington’s
-advance on the 12th, because a retrograde
-<ins class="corr" id="tn-575" title="Transcriber’s Note—Original text: 'defensive sytem is'">
-defensive system is</ins> unsuited to French soldiers,
-whose impatient courage leads them always to
-attack, and the news of Napoleon’s victory at
-Bautzen had just arrived to excite their ardour.
-Wherefore Joseph should have retaken the offensive
-on the 12th at the moment when Wellington approached
-the Hormaza, and as the left and centre
-of the allies were at Villa Diego and Castroxerez,
-the greatest part at the former, that is to say, one
-march distant, the twenty-six thousand men immediately
-under Wellington, would probably have
-been forced back over the Pisuerga, and the king
-would have gained time for Sarrut, Foy and Clauzel
-to join him. Did the English general then owe his
-success to fortune, to his adversary’s fault rather
-than to his own skill? Not so. He had judged
-the king’s military capacity, he had seen the haste,
-the confusion, the trouble of the enemy, and knowing
-well the moral power of rapidity and boldness
-in such circumstances, had acted, daringly indeed,
-but wisely, for such daring is admirable, it is the
-highest part of war.</p>
-
-<p>3º. The manner in which Wellington turned the
-line of the Ebro was a fine strategic illustration.
-It was by no means certain of success, yet failure
-would have still left great advantages. He was
-certain of gaining Santander and fixing a new base
-of operations on the coast, and he would still have
-had the power of continually turning the king’s
-right by operating between him and the coast;
-the errors of his adversary only gave him additional<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_576"></a>[576]</span>
-advantages which he expected, and seized with
-promptness. But if Joseph, instead of spreading
-his army from Espejo on his right to the Logroño
-road on his left, had kept only cavalry on the latter
-route and on the main road in front of Pancorbo;
-if he had massed his army to his right pivoting
-upon Miranda, or Frias, and had scoured all the roads
-towards the sources of the Ebro with the utmost
-diligence, the allies could never have passed the
-defiles and descended upon Vittoria. They would
-have marched then by Valmaceda upon Bilbao,
-but Joseph could by the road of Orduña have met
-them there, and with his force increased by Foy’s
-and Sarrut’s divisions and the Italians. Meanwhile
-Clauzel would have come down to Vittoria, and
-the heaped convoys could have made their way to
-France in safety.</p>
-
-<p>4º. Having finally resolved to fight at Vittoria,
-the king should, on the 19th and 20th, have broken
-some of the bridges on the Zadora, and covered
-others with field-works to enable him to sally
-forth upon the attacking army; he should have
-entrenched the defile of Puebla, and occupied the
-heights above in strength; his position on the
-Lower Zadora would then have been formidable.
-But his greatest fault was in the choice of his line
-of operation. His reasons for avoiding Guipuscoa
-were valid, his true line was on the other side,
-down the Ebro. Zaragoza should have been his
-base, since Aragon was fertile and more friendly
-than any other province of Spain. It is true that
-by taking this new line of operations he would
-have abandoned Foy; but that general, reinforced
-with the reserve from Bayonne, would have had
-twenty thousand men and the fortress of St. Sebastian<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_577"></a>[577]</span>
-as a support, and Wellington must have left a
-strong corps of observation to watch him. The
-king’s army would have been immediately increased
-by Clauzel’s troops, and ultimately by Suchet’s, which
-would have given him one hundred thousand men
-to oppose the allied army, weakened as that would
-have been by the detachment left to watch Foy.
-And there were political reasons, to be told hereafter,
-for the reader must not imagine Wellington
-had got thus far without such trammels, which
-would have probably rendered this plan so efficacious
-as to oblige the British army to abandon
-Spain altogether. Then new combinations would
-have been made all over Europe which it is useless
-to speculate upon.</p>
-
-<p>5º. In the battle the operations of the French,
-with the exception of Reille’s defence of the
-bridges of Gamara and Ariaga, were a series of
-errors, the most extraordinary being the suffering
-Kempt’s brigade of the light division, and the
-hussars, to pass the bridge of Tres Puentes and
-establish themselves close to the king’s line of
-battle, and upon the flank of his advanced posts at
-the bridges of Mendoza and Villodas. It is quite
-clear from this alone that he decided upon retreating
-the moment Graham’s attack commenced
-against his right flank, and his position was therefore
-in his own view untenable. The fitting thing
-then was to have occupied the heights of Puebla
-strongly, but to have placed the bulk of his infantry
-by corps, in succession, the right refused,
-towards Vittoria, while his cavalry and guns
-watched the bridges and the mouth of the Puebla
-defile; in this situation he could have succoured
-Reille, or marched to his front, according to circumstances,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_578"></a>[578]</span>
-and his retreat would have been
-secure.</p>
-
-<p>6º. The enormous fault of heaping up the
-baggage and convoys and parcs behind Vittoria
-requires no comment, but the king added another
-and more extraordinary error, namely the remaining
-to the last moment undecided as to his line of retreat.
-Nothing but misfortunes could attend upon such
-bad dispositions; and that the catastrophe was not
-more terrible is owing entirely to an error which<span class="sidenote">See Wellington’s despatch.</span>
-Wellington and Graham seem alike to have fallen
-into, namely, that Reille had two divisions in reserve
-behind the bridges on the Upper Zadora.
-They knew not that Maucune’s division had marched
-with the convoy, and thought Clauzel had only
-one division of the army of Portugal with him,
-whereas he had two, Taupin’s and Barbout’s.
-Reille’s reserves were composed not of divisions
-but of brigades drawn from La Martiniere’s and
-Sarrut’s divisions, which were defending the
-bridges; and his whole force, including the
-French-Spaniards who were driven back from
-Durana, did not exceed ten thousand infantry and
-two thousand five hundred cavalry. Now Graham
-had, exclusive of Giron’s Gallicians, nearly twenty
-thousand of all arms, and it is said that the river
-might have been passed both above and below the
-points of attack; it is certain also that Longa’s
-delay gave the French time to occupy Gamara
-Mayor in force, which was not the case at first.
-Had the passage been won in time, very few of
-the French army could have escaped from the
-field; but the truth is Reille fought most vigorously.</p>
-
-<p>7º. As the third and seventh divisions did not<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_579"></a>[579]</span>
-come to the point of attack at the time calculated
-upon, the battle was probably not fought after the
-original conception of lord Wellington; it is likely
-that his first project was to force the passage of the
-bridges, to break the right centre of the enemy
-from Arinez to Margarita, and then to envelope the
-left centre with the second, fourth, and light divisions
-and the cavalry, while the third and seventh
-divisions pursued the others. But notwithstanding
-the unavoidable delay, which gave the French
-time to commence their retreat, it is not easy to
-understand how Gazan’s left escaped from Subijana
-de Alava, seeing that when Picton broke the centre
-at Arinez, he was considerably nearer to Vittoria
-than the French left, which was cut off from the
-main road and assailed in front by Hill and Cole.
-The having no cavalry in hand to launch at this
-time and point of the battle has been already
-noticed; lord Wellington says, that the country<span class="sidenote">Despatch.</span>
-was generally unfavourable for the action of that
-arm, and it is certain that neither side used it
-with much effect at any period of the battle;
-nevertheless there are always some suitable openings,
-some happy moments to make a charge, and
-this seems to have been one which was
-neglected.</p>
-
-<p>8º. Picton’s sudden rush from the bridge of
-Tres Puentes to the village of Arinez, with one
-brigade, has been much praised, and certainly
-nothing could be more prompt and daring, but the
-merit of the conception belongs to the general in
-chief, who directed it in person. It was suggested
-to him by the denuded state of the hill in front
-of that village, and viewed as a stroke for the occasion
-it is to be admired. Yet it had its disadvantages.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_580"></a>[580]</span>
-For the brigade which thus crossed a part
-of the front of both armies to place itself in advance,
-not only drew a flank fire from the enemy,
-but was exposed if the French cavalry had been
-prompt and daring, to a charge in flank; it also
-prevented the advance of the other troops in their
-proper arrangement, and thus crowded the centre
-for the rest of the action. However these sudden
-movements cannot be judged by rules, they are
-good or bad according to the result. This was
-entirely successful, and the hill thus carried was
-called the Englishmen’s hill, not, as some recent
-writers have supposed, in commemoration of a
-victory gained by the Black Prince, but because of
-a disaster which there befel a part of his army.
-His battle was fought between Navarrette and
-Najera, many leagues from Vittoria, and beyond
-the Ebro; but on this hill the two gallant knights
-sir Thomas and sir William Felton took post with
-two hundred companions, and being surrounded
-by Don Tello with six thousand, all died or were
-taken after a long, desperate, and heroic resistance.</p>
-
-<p>9º. It has been observed by French writers, and
-the opinion has been also entertained by many
-English officers, that after the battle Wellington
-should have passed the frontier in mass, and
-marched upon Bayonne instead of chasing Clauzel
-and Foy on the right and left; and if, as the
-same authors assert, Bayonne was not in a state
-of defence and must have fallen, there can be little
-question that the criticism is just, because the
-fugitive French army having lost all its guns and
-being without musket ammunition, could not have
-faced its pursuers for a moment. But if Bayonne<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_581"></a>[581]</span>
-had resisted, and it was impossible for Wellington
-to suspect its real condition, much mischief might
-have accrued from such a hasty advance. Foy
-and Clauzel coming down upon the field of Vittoria
-would have driven away if they did not destroy
-the sixth division; they would have recovered
-all the trophies; the king’s army returning by
-Jacca into Aragon, would have reorganized itself
-from Suchet’s dépôts, and that marshal was actually
-coming up with his army from Valencia;
-little would then have been gained by the battle.
-This question can however be more profitably discussed
-when the great events which followed the
-battle of Vittoria have been described.</p>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp50" id="i_b_581fp_1" style="max-width: 25em;">
-<p class="p2 fs60 right">Vol. 5. Nº. 1.</p>
- <div class="bbox">
- <img class="w100" src="images/i_b_581fp_1.jpg" alt="" />
- <a rel="nofollow" href="images/i_b_581fp_1-large.jpg">
- <span class="screenonly fs60 center">click here for larger image.</span></a>
- </div>
-<div class="caption">
-Explanatory Sketch<br />
-<em>of the</em><br />
-<span class="smcap">SURPRISE of ALMARAZ</span>.<br />
-May 1812.<br />
-<em>The Scene of Action Enlarged.</em>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp50" id="i_b_581fp_2" style="max-width: 25em;">
-<p class="p2 fs60 right">Vol. 5. Nº. 2.</p>
- <div class="bbox">
- <img class="w100" src="images/i_b_581fp_2.jpg" alt="" />
- <a rel="nofollow" href="images/i_b_581fp_2-large.jpg">
- <span class="screenonly fs60 center">click here for larger image.</span></a>
- </div>
-<div class="caption">
-<em>Explanatory</em><br />
-Sketch<br />
-<em>of the</em><br />
-Sieges of the Fort<br />
-<em>and</em> Operations, <em>round</em><br />
-SALAMANCA.<br />
-1812.
-</div>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp50" id="i_b_581fp_3" style="max-width: 25em;">
-<p class="p2 fs60 right">Vol. 5. Nº. 3.</p>
- <div class="bbox">
- <img class="w100" src="images/i_b_581fp_3.jpg" alt="" />
- <a rel="nofollow" href="images/i_b_581fp_3-large.jpg">
- <span class="screenonly fs60 center">click here for larger image.</span></a>
- </div>
-<div class="caption">
-Battle of<br />
-SALAMANCA,<br />
-with<br />
-SKETCH of OPERATIONS<br />
-before and after the<br />
-Action.
-</div>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp50" id="i_b_581fp_4" style="max-width: 25em;">
-<p class="p2 fs60 right">Vol. 5. Nº. 4.</p>
- <div class="bbox">
- <img class="w100" src="images/i_b_581fp_4.jpg" alt="" />
- <a rel="nofollow" href="images/i_b_581fp_4-large.jpg">
- <span class="screenonly fs60 center">click here for larger image.</span></a>
- </div>
-<div class="caption">
-<em>Explanatory</em><br />
-Sketch<br />
-<em>of the</em><br />
-<span class="smcap">SIEGE of BURGOS</span>.<br />
-1812.
-</div>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp50" id="i_b_581fp_5" style="max-width: 25em;">
-<p class="p2 fs60 right">Vol. 5. Nº. 5.</p>
- <div class="bbox">
- <img class="w100" src="images/i_b_581fp_5.jpg" alt="" />
- <a rel="nofollow" href="images/i_b_581fp_5-large.jpg">
- <span class="screenonly fs60 center">click here for larger image.</span></a>
- </div>
-<div class="caption">
-Sketch of the Retreat<br />
-<em>from</em> Madrid <em>and</em><br />
-Burgos.<br />
-1812.
-</div>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp100" id="i_b_581fp_6" style="max-width: 35em;">
-<p class="p2 fs60 right">Vol. 5. Nº. 6.</p>
- <div class="bbox">
- <img class="w100" src="images/i_b_581fp_6.jpg" alt="" />
- <a rel="nofollow" href="images/i_b_581fp_6-large.jpg">
- <span class="screenonly fs60 center">click here for larger image.</span></a>
- </div>
-<div class="caption">
-Explanatory Sketch<br />
-<em>of the</em><br />
-POSITION OF THE PARTIDAS.<br />
-And of Lord Wellington’s March from the<br />
-AGUEDA to the PYRENEES.<br />
-1813.
-</div>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp50" id="i_b_581fp_7" style="max-width: 25em;">
-<p class="p2 fs60 right">Vol. 5. Nº. 7.</p>
- <div class="bbox">
- <img class="w100" src="images/i_b_581fp_7.jpg" alt="" />
- <a rel="nofollow" href="images/i_b_581fp_7-large.jpg">
- <span class="screenonly fs60 center">click here for larger image.</span></a>
- </div>
-<div class="caption">
-Battle of Castalla<br />
-<em>and operations</em><br />
-before the Action.
-</div>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp50" id="i_b_581fp_8" style="max-width: 25em;">
-<p class="p2 fs60 right">Vol. 5. Nº. 8.</p>
- <div class="bbox">
- <img class="w100" src="images/i_b_581fp_8.jpg" alt="" />
- <a rel="nofollow" href="images/i_b_581fp_8-large.jpg">
- <span class="screenonly fs60 center">click here for larger image.</span></a>
- </div>
-<div class="caption">
-Battle of<br />
-VITTORIA,<br />
-<em>with the</em><br />
-Operations<br />
-<em>before and after</em><br />
-The Action.
-</div>
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_582"></a>[582]</span><br />
- <span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_583"></a>[583]</span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<p class="p2 pfs150">APPENDIX.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="p4 chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_584"></a>[584]</span><br />
- <span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_585"></a>[585]</span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="APPENDIX">APPENDIX.</h2>
-
-<hr class="r10" />
-
-
-<h3 class="p2" id="NO_I">No. I.</h3>
-
-<p class="noindent">The following extracts of letters are published to avoid any
-future cavils upon the points they refer to, and also to shew how
-difficult it is for the historian to obtain certain and accurate details,
-when eye-witnesses, having no wish to mislead, differ so much.</p>
-
-<hr class="r10" />
-
-<p class="p2 pfs80">BATTLE OF SALAMANCA.</p>
-
-<p class="p1 center"><em>Extract of a memoir by sir Charles Dalbiac, who was one of
-Le Marchant’s brigade of heavy cavalry.</em></p>
-
-<p>“Throughout these charges upon the enemy, <em>the heavy brigade
-was unsupported by any other portion of the cavalry
-whatever</em>; but was followed, as rapidly as it was possible for
-infantry to follow, by the third division which had so gloriously
-led the attack in the first instance and had so effectually turned
-the enemy’s extreme left.”</p>
-
-
-<p class="p1 center"><em>Extract from a memoir by colonel Money, who was one of
-general Anson’s brigade of light cavalry.</em></p>
-
-<p>“The third division moved to the right, and <em>the cavalry, Le
-Marchand’s and Anson’s</em>, were ordered to charge as soon as the
-tirailleurs of the third division began to ascend the right flank of
-the hill.”—“The rapid movement of the cavalry which now began<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_586"></a>[586]</span>
-to gallop, and the third division pressing them (the French), they
-run into the wood, which separated them from the army; <em>we</em>
-(Anson’s light cavalry) <em>charged them under a heavy fire of
-musketry and artillery from another height</em>; near two thousand
-threw down their arms in different parts of the wood, and we
-continued our charge through the wood until our brigade came
-into an open plain of ploughed fields, where the dust was so great
-we could see nothing, and halted; when it cleared away, we
-found ourselves within three hundred yards of a large body of
-French infantry and artillery, formed on the declivity of a hill.
-A tremendous battle was heard on the other side, which prevented
-the enemy from perceiving us. At last they opened a fire of
-musketry and grape-shot, and we retired in good order and without
-any loss.”</p>
-
-
-<p class="p1 center"><em>Extract of a letter from sir Henry Watson, commanding
-the first regiment of Portuguese cavalry under general
-D’Urban.</em></p>
-
-<p>“When Marmont, at the battle of Salamanca, advanced his
-left, lord Wellington ordered down the reserve, of which the
-first and tenth Portuguese cavalry and two squadrons of the
-British cavalry under captain Townsend, now lieutenant-colonel
-Townsend, formed a part under sir B. D’Urban. The cavalry
-was pushed forward in contiguous columns, and were protected
-from the enemy by a small rising ground, which, as soon as I
-had passed, I was ordered to wheel up, and charge the front in
-line. <em>The enemy had formed a square</em>, and gave us a volley as
-we advanced, the eleventh and fourteenth remained en potence.
-<em>In this charge we completely succeeded</em>, and the enemy appeared
-panic-struck, and made no attempt to prevent our cutting and
-thrusting at them in all directions until the moment I was about
-to withdraw; then a soldier, at not more than six or eight paces,
-levelled his musquet at me, and shot me through the shoulder,
-which knocked me off my horse, where I continued to lie till the
-whole of our infantry had passed over.”</p>
-
-
-<p class="p1 center"><em>Extract from a letter of colonel Townsend, 14th Dragoons.</em></p>
-
-<p>“At the battle of Salamanca I perfectly recollect seeing
-D’Urban’s cavalry advance up the hill, and charge the French
-infantry. <em>They were repulsed</em>, and left Watson (now sir Henry),
-who led his regiment, the first Portuguese, badly wounded on the
-field.”—“<em>I am almost positive the French were not in square,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_587"></a>[587]</span>
-but in line, waiting to receive the attack of the leading brigade
-of the third division</em>, which gallantly carried every thing before
-it.”</p>
-
-<hr class="r20" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<h3 id="NO_II">No. II.</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Copies de deux dépêches de l’empereur au ministre de la guerre
-relatives au duc de Raguse.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p1 rt">
-<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Dresde, le 28 Mai, 1812.</i></p>
-
- <div lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">
-<p class="smcap pad2">Monsieur le duc de Feltre,</p>
-
-<p>Je vous renvois la correspondance d’Espagne. Ecrivez au duc
-de Raguse que c’est le roi qui doit lui donner des directions, que
-je suppose qu’il s’est retiré devant lord Wellington selon les règles
-de la guerre, en l’obligéant à se masser, et non en se reployant
-devant sa cavalerie légère; qu’il aura conservé des têtes de pont
-sur l’Agueda, ce qui peut seul lui permettre d’avoir des nouvelles
-de l’ennemi tous les jours, et de le tenir en respect. Que si au
-contraire il a mis trente lieues d’intervalle entre lui et l’ennemi,
-comme il l’a déjà fait deux fois contre tous les principes de la
-guerre, il laisse le général Anglais maître de se porter où il veut,
-il perd constamment l’initiative, et n’est plus d’aucun poids dans
-les affaires d’Espagne, que la Biscaye et le nord sont dans des
-dispositions facheuses par les suites de l’évacuation des Asturias
-par la division Bonnet, que la réoccupation de cette province n’a
-pas encore eu lieu, que le nord est exposé à de grands malheurs,
-que Santona et St. Sebastian sont compromis, que les libres communications
-des guerillas avec la Galice et les Asturies par la mer
-les rendront formidables, que s’il ne fait pas réoccuper promptement
-les Asturies, sa position ne peut s’ameliorer.</p>
-
-<p>Recommandez au général Caffarelli de réunir davantage ses
-troupes, et d’avoir toujours une colonne dans la main.</p>
-
-<p>Ecrivez au général L’Huillier d’avoir l’œil sur St. Sebastian, et
-d’avoir toujours 3000 hommes dans la main pour les diriger sur
-cette place si elle avoit besoin d’être secourue.</p>
-
-<p>En général pour parer à la mauvaise manœuvre et à la mauvaise
-direction que le duc de Raguse donne à nos affaires il est nécessaire
-d’avoir beaucoup de monde à Bayonne. Activez la marche
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_588"></a>[588]</span>du 3<sup>e</sup> et du 106<sup>me</sup> et de la 5<sup>e</sup> demi brigade provisoire sur cette
-place. Tenez y deux généraux de brigade afin que le général
-L’Huillier puisse toujours disposer des forces pour être en mesure
-d’agir selon les circonstances.</p>
-
-<p>Réunissez un millier d’hommes des dépôts de cavalerie de l’armée
-d’Espagne, et dirigez les en régimens de marche sur Bayonne.</p>
-
-<p>Prescrivez au général L’Huillier de tenir ses troupes dans la
-vallée de Bastan, à Bayonne, St. Jean de Luz, et Irun, en les
-munissant bien, les barraquant, les exerçant, et les formant. Ce
-sera au moyen de cette ressource que si le due de Raguse continue
-à faire des bévues on pourra empêcher le mal de devenir
-extrême.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="padr6">Sur ce, je prie Dieu, &amp;c.</span><br />
-(Signé) <span class="pad4 smcap">Napoleon</span>.</p>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p1 center">[<em>For second despatch, see</em> <a href="#NO_VII">Appendix No. VII.</a>]</p>
-
-<hr class="r20" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<h3 id="NO_III">No. III.</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Lettre de M. le duc de Dalmatie au roi.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p1 right">
-<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Seville, 12 Août, 1812.</i></p>
-
- <div lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">
-<p>Je n’avais reçu aucune nouvelle de V. M. depuis les lettres
-qu’elle m’a fait l’honneur m’écrire des 6 et 7 Juillet dernier.
-Enfin je viens de récevoir celle datée de Segovie le 29 du même
-mois. Les rapports publiés par les ennemis m’avaient déjà instruit
-des évènemens survenus en Castille lesquels étaient naturellement
-exagérés; V. M. a bien voulu en quelque sorte fixer à ce sujet
-mes idées. Je déplore les pertes que l’armée de Portugal a
-éprouvées. Dans l’etât ou étaient les affaires d’Espagne une
-bataille ne devait se donner qu’à la dernière extrémité, mais tout
-n’est pas perdu. V. M. après m’avoir communiqué les dispositions
-qu’elle a faites depuis le 6 (date de la dernière lettre) au 19 Juillet
-m’ordonne comme une ressource d’évacuer l’Andalousie et de me
-diriger sur Tolêde. Je ne puis dissimuler que cette disposition
-me parait fort extraordinaire. J’étais loin de penser que V. M.
-s’y serait déterminée. Le sort de l’Espagne est-il done décidé?
-V. M. veut elle sacrifier le royaume à la capitale? et a-t-elle la
-certitude de la conserver en prenant ce parti? Enfin l’évacuation
-de l’Andalousie et ma marche sur Tolêde sont elles l’unique
-ressource qui nous reste? Je vais me préparer à cette disposition
-que je regarde comme des plus funestes pour l’honneur des armes
-impériales, le bien du service de l’empereur et l’intérêt de V. M.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_589"></a>[589]</span>
-dans l’espoir qu’avant qu’elle s’exécute V. M. l’aura changée ou
-modifiée suivant les propositions que j’ai eu l’honneur de lui faire
-le 19 Juillet, le 8 de ce mois, et par M. le colonel Desprez.</p>
-
-<p>J’ai l’honneur d’adresser à votre Majesté triplicata de ma lettre
-du 8 de ce mois. En me référant aux observations et propositions
-qu’elle renferme, si V. M. ne prend pas des dispositions en conséquence,
-je considére que l’évacuation de toute l’Espagne est
-decidée, car il faut que V. M. se persuade que du moment que
-mon mouvement sera commencé je serai suivi par soixante mille
-ennemis lesquels ne me donneront pas le tems ni la liberté de
-prendre la direction que V. M. m’indique et qui se réuniront à ceux
-qui ont penétré en Castille et m’empécheront de séjourner sur le
-Tage encore moins d’arriver à Madrid. Il n’y a qu’un moyen
-pour rétablir les affaires: que V. M. vienne en Andalousie et qu’elle
-y améne toutes les troupes de l’armée du centre, de l’armée de
-Portugal, de l’armée d’Arragon auxquelles ses ordres pourront
-parvenir, quand bien même tout le royaume de Valence devrait
-être évacué. Qu’importe à V. M. de conserver Madrid si elle
-perd le royaume? Philippe V. en sortit trois fois et y rentra en
-souverain. Du moment que nous aurons 70 ou 80 mille Français
-réunis dans le midi de l’Espagne, le théâtre de la guerre est changé;
-l’armée de Portugal se trouve dégagée et elle peut se reporter
-successivement jusqu’au Tage. D’ailleurs ce serait sans inconvénient
-qu’elle gardât Burgos et la rive gauche de l’Ebre et que
-tout l’espace compris entre elle et le Sierra Morena fut à la disposition
-des ennemis jusqu’à ce que des renforts vinssent de France
-et que l’empereur eût pu prendre des dispositions. Le sacrifice une
-fois fait il n’y a plus de moyen d’y remédier. Les armées impériales
-en Espagne repassent l’Ebre d’ou peut-être la famine les chassera,
-les affaires de l’empereur dans le nord de l’Europe peuvent s’en
-ressentir, l’Amerique qui vient de déclarer la guerre à l’Angleterre
-fera peut-être la paix. V. M. a sans doute refléchi à toutes les
-conséquences d’un pareil changement; la perte momentanée de
-Madrid et des Castilles est nulle pour la politique de l’empereur,
-elle peut se réparer en plus ou moins de tems. La perte d’une
-bataille par l’armée de Portugal n’est qu’un grand duel qui se
-répare également, mais la perte de l’Andalousie et la levée du siége
-de Cadiz sont des évènemens dont les effets seront ressentis dans
-toute l’Europe et dans le nouveau monde. Enfin en fidèle sujet
-de l’empereur je dois déclarer à V. M. que je ne crois pas les
-affaires d’Espagne assez désespérées pour prendre un parti aussi
-violent. J’entrevois encore du remède si V. M. veut prendre les<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_590"></a>[590]</span>
-dispositions que j’ai proposées; tout en me préparant à l’exécution
-de ses ordres je me permets de lui demander de nouvelles
-instructions. J’ai surtout l’honneur de prier V. M. d’ordonner
-que les communications de l’Andalousie avec Toléde soient rétablies
-et quelque évènement qui survienne de vouloir bien faire prendre à
-l’armée du centre, la direction de Despeña Perros ou d’Almaden
-pour se joindre à l’armée du midi. Alors je reponds de tout, et
-j’exécuterai les dispositions que j’ai enoncées dans ma lettre du 8
-de ce mois.</p>
-
-<p class="center">Je, &amp;c. &amp;c. &amp;c.</p>
- </div>
-
-<hr class="r20" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<h3 id="NO_IV">No. IV.</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Lettre de M. le maréchal due de Dalmatie à M. le Ministre
-de la guerre à Paris.</i></p>
-
- <div lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">
-<p><span class="smcap pad2">Monsieur le Duc</span>,</p>
-
-<p>Toute communication de l’Andalousie avec la France étant
-interrompue et n’ayant rien réçu depuis les premiers jours de
-Mai; depuis un mois le roi ayant même retiré les troupes qui
-étoient dans la Manche et ne pouvant communiquer avec Madrid,
-j’entreprens de faire parvenir mes rapports à votre excellence par
-la voie de mer. Si le bâtiment que je fais à cet effet partir de
-Malaga peut arriver à Marseille, l’empereur sera plutôt instruit
-de ce qui se passe dans le midi de l’Espagne et de la position de
-son armée.</p>
-
-<p>A ce sujet j’ai l’honneur d’adresser à votre excellence copie
-des derniers rapports que j’ai faits au roi, lesquels contiennent les
-représentations que j’ai cru devoir soumettre à sa majesté pour le
-bien du service de l’empereur, la conservation des conquêtes et
-l’honneur des armées impériales.</p>
-
-<p>Je ne suis instruit des malheurs que l’armée de Portugal a
-éprouvés que par les bruits populaires et les rapports de l’ennemi;
-car le roi en m’écrivant le 29 Juillet de Ségovie ne m’en a donné
-aucun détail. Je dois donc m’imaginer que les pertes que nous
-avons faites en Castile sont beaucoup exagérées et j’en tire la conséquence
-que les affaires de l’empereur en Espagne ne sont pas
-aussi desespérées que le roi parait en être persuadé. Cependant
-sa majesté après être resté 23 jours sans m’écrire, lorsque les ennemis<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_591"></a>[591]</span>
-étoient on plein mouvement et que sa majesté se portoit
-avec 14,000 hommes de l’armée du centre à la rencontre du duc
-de Raguse qui sans l’attendre s’etoit engagé precipitamment et
-éprouvait une défaite; le roi dis-je en me faisant part le 29 Juillet
-de ses mouvemens me donna l’ordre formel d’évacuer l’Andalousie
-et me diriger sur Tolede, et il me dit expressément que c’est
-l’unique ressource qui nous reste.</p>
-
-<p>Je suis loin de partager l’avis de sa majesté, je crois fermement
-qu’il est possible de mieux faire et que tout peut s’arranger en
-attendant que d’après les ordres de l’empereur V. E. ait pû
-mettre les armées qui sont dans le nord de l’Espagne à même de
-reprendre les opérations, ainsi que j’en fais la proposition à sa majesté
-dans les lettres dont je mets ci-joint copies. Mais mon
-devoir est d’obéïr et je me chargerais d’une trop grande responsibilité
-si j’éludais l’exécution de l’ordre formel d’évacuer que le
-roi m’a donné.</p>
-
-<p>Je vais donc me préparer à exécuter cette disposition que
-je regarde comme funeste, puisqu’elle me force à livrer aux
-ennemis des places de guerre susceptibles d’une bonne défense
-tout aprovisionnées, les établissemens et un matériel d’artillerie
-immense et de laisser dans les hôpitaux beaucoup de malades que
-leur situation et le manque de transport ne permettent point
-d’emmener. Je ne ferai cependant mon mouvement que progressivement
-et je ne négligerai aucun soin pour qu’il ne reste
-en arrière rien de ce qui peut être utile à l’armée.</p>
-
-<p>Je ne puis encore assurer que je ne ferai ce mouvement par
-Tolede, car du moment qu’il sera entrepris je serai suivi par
-60,000 ennemis qui se joindront aux divisions que lord Wellington
-aura déjà portées sur le Tage. Ainsi il est possible que
-je me dirige par Murcie sur Valence suivant ce que j’apprendrai
-ou les nouveaux ordres que je recevrai du roi.</p>
-
-<p>Dans cet état de choses, je ne puis dissimuler à V. E. que je
-regarde l’évacuation de l’Espagne au moins jusqu’à l’Ebre comme
-décidée du moment que le roi m’ordonna d’évacuer l’Andalousie et
-de me diriger sur Toléde, car il est bien certain qu’il ne sera pas
-possible de rester en position sur le Tage ni dans les Castilles et
-que dès-lors les conquêtes des armes impériales en Espagne dont
-l’empereur avait ordonné la conservation, sont sacrifiées.</p>
-
-<p>A ce sujet je ne puis me défendre de réflechir sur d’autres
-évènemens qui se passent. J’ai lu dans les journaux de Cadiz,
-que l’ambassadeur du roi en Russie avait joint l’armée Russe,
-que le roi avait fait des insinuations au gouvernement insurgent<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_592"></a>[592]</span>
-de Cadiz, que la Suéde avait fait un traité avec l’Angleterre, et
-que le prince héréditaire avait demandé à la regence de Cadiz
-250 Espagnols pour sa garde personelle. (Avant hier un parlementaire
-que le général Semélé avait envoyé à l’escadre Anglaise
-pour réclamer des prisonniers resta pendant quelques instans à
-bord de l’amiral, lequel lui montra une frégate, qui, dit il, est
-destinée a porter en Angleterre et ensuite en Suéde les 250 Espagnols
-que le prince Bernadotte demande pour sa garde personelle.)
-Enfin j’ai vu dans les mêmes journaux que Moreau et
-Blucher étaient arrivés à Stockholm, et que Rapatel, aide-de-camp
-de Moreau, était à Londres. Je ne tire aucune conséquence
-de tous ces faits, mais j’en serai plus attentif. Cependant j’ai
-cru devoir déposer mes craintes entre les mains de six généraux
-de l’armée, après avoir exigé d’eux le serment qu’ils ne révéleront
-ce que je leur ai dit qu’à l’empereur lui-même ou aux personnes que
-S. M. aura specialement déléguées pour en reçevoir la déclaration,
-si auparavant je ne puis moi-même en rendre compte. Il est
-pourtant de mon devoir de manifester à V. E. que je crains que
-le bût de toutes les fausses dispositions que l’on a prises et celui
-des intrigues qui ont lieu ne soient de forcer les armées impériales
-qui sont en Espagne à repasser au moins l’Ebre et ensuite de présenter
-cet évènement comme l’unique ressource (expression du roi,
-lettre du 20 Juillet) dans l’espérance d’en profiter par quelque
-arrangement.</p>
-
-<p>Mes craintes sont peut-être mal fondées, mais en pareille situation
-il vaut mieux les pousser à l’extremité que d’être négligent,
-d’autant plus que ces craintes et ma sollicitude tournent au bien
-du service de l’empereur et à la sureté de l’armée dont le commandement
-m’est confié.</p>
-
-<p>J’ai l’honneur de prier V. E. de vouloir bien si ma lettre lui
-parvient, la mettre le plutôt possible sous les yeux de l’empereur
-et d’assurer S. M. que moi et son armée du midi serons toujours
-dignes de sa suprême confiance. Je désire bien vivement que
-V. E. puisse me faire savoir que mes dépêches lui sont parvenues
-et surtout recevoir par elle les ordres de sa majesté.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="padr4">J’ai l’honneur, &amp;c.</span><br />
-(Signé) <span class="pad4 smcap">Dalmatie</span>.</p>
- </div>
-
-<p><i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Seville, 12 Août, 1812.</i></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_593"></a>[593]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="r20" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<h3 id="NO_V">No. V.</h3>
-
- <div lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">
-<p><span class="smcap pad2">Sire</span>,</p>
-
-<p>Je suis arrivé à Paris hier 21 du courant. Je me suis sur le
-champ présenté chez le ministre de la guerre et je lui ai remis la
-lettre de V. M. ainsi que celles de M. le maréchal Jourdan. S. E.
-m’a questionné sur les affaires d’Espagne, mais sans me demander
-mes dépêches pour l’empereur. Elle m’a, suivant les intentions
-de V. M., pourvu des ordres dont j’ai besoin pour poursuivre ma
-route avec célérité.</p>
-
-<p>Ce matin le ministre m’a fait appeler et j’ai eu avec lui une
-longue conférence. Il m’a pressé de m’expliquer avec franchise
-sur ce que j’avais pu remarquer pendant mon séjour en Andalousie,
-m’a témoigné quelque inquiétude sur l’influence que pouvoit exercer
-le maréchal tant sur l’armée que sur les autorités civiles. Il a rappelé
-les intrigues de Portugal et a conclu en me disant qu’il dépouillait
-devant moi le caractère de ministre pour causer avec un homme
-de votre confiance, et que les services que vous lui aviez rendus
-à l’époque de sa disgrâce devaient être pour V. M. une garantie
-du désir qu’il avait d’agir suivant ses intentions. Quelque franches
-que m’aient parus ces ouvertures, je n’ai pas cru devoir parler de
-la partie la plus délicate de ma mission. J’ai seulement répondu
-que l’armée du midi serait toujours celle de l’empereur, que
-lorsque S. M. enverrait ses ordres déterminés, elle serait obéie,
-et que tout ce que j’avais entendu en Andalousie ne me laissait
-à ce sujet aucun doute. Au reste ma conversation avec le duc de
-Feltre m’a prouvé qu’aucune lettre de la nature de celle dont je
-suis porteur ne lui etait encore parvenue et cela est pour ma
-mission une circonstance favorable.</p>
-
-<p>J’ai causé avec S. E. de la résistance que les chefs de l’armée
-française en Espagne avaient toujours opposée aux ordres de
-V. M. Il a declaré que tous avaient été mis sous vos ordres et
-sans aucune restriction, qu’avant son départ l’empereur avait
-témoigné son étonnement sur les doutes que manifestaient à cet
-égard les lettres de V. M. et qu’il avait ordonné que l’on fit connaître
-ses intentions d’une manière encore plus positive. J’ai cité
-la lettre ou le maréchal Suchet s’autorise d’une phrase du Prince de
-Neufchatel, celles du général Dorsenne et du général Caffarelli, il
-parait que tous les obstacles qui pouvaient entraver l’exécution de vos
-ordres ont été levés par des instructions adressées postérieurement<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_594"></a>[594]</span>
-aux généraux en chef. Quant à la désobeissance formelle du
-maréchal Soult S. E. a dit d’abord que V. M. avait le droit de lui ôter
-le commandement, mais elle est convenue ensuite qu’une démarche
-semblable ne pouvait être faite que par l’ordre exprès de l’empereur.</p>
-
-<p>Le ministre est aussi entré dans quelques détails sur les affaires
-militaires, les ordres donnés par V. M. et par le maréchal Jourdan
-aux diverses époques de la campagne, ont eu, m’a-t-il dit, l’approbation
-générale et ce qu’a écrit l’empereur depuis qu’il a appris la
-bataille de Salamanque prouve qu’il donne entièrement droit à V. M.
-l’opinion publique à cet égard est encore plus prononcée que celle
-des hommes en place, et je ne puis exprimer à V. M. avec
-quelle rigueur sont jugés en France les maréchaux Soult et Marmont.</p>
-
-<p>Le duc de Feltre m’a parlé du mouvement sur Blasco Sancho.
-Peut-être a-t-il dit, l’empereur reprochera un peu d’hésitation;
-exécuté deux jours plutôt il aurait produit les plus heureux effets.
-V. M. se rappelle que j’avais prévu cette objection et je ne serai
-point embarrassé pour y répondre.</p>
-
-<p>S. E. a cru que j’allais auprès de l’empereur pour solliciter de
-nouveaux renforts; elle m’a dit que la guerre de Russie avait
-jusqu’à présent absorbé tous les moyens, qu’il était loin de pouvoir
-envoyer les troupes sur lesquelles paraissait compter M. le maréchal
-Jourdan, que l’on pourrait seulement pourvoir à la perte matérielle
-faite par l’armée de Portugal, il parait que les nouvelles troupes
-envoyées en Espagne ne s’élélvent pas au-delà de vingt mille
-hommes, au reste la grande victoire remportée par l’empereur fera
-probablement prendre des dispositions plus favorables aux affaires
-de la Peninsule.</p>
-
-<p>Le duc de Feltre à reçu des nouvelles du général Clauzel.
-Ce général annonce que l’armée anglaise marche vers le nord,
-que lord Wellington s’est de sa personne porté vers le Duero, que
-l’armée de Portugal s’est ralliée, que ses pertes sont beaucoup
-moindres qu’on ne l’avait cru, que le général Foy avait fait un
-mouvement pour délivrer Astorga et Tordesillas, mais que déja ces
-deux places s’étaient rendues que l’on pourrait accuser de faiblesse
-les deux gouverneurs et que peut-être la conduite de celui de
-Tordesillas devait être jugée plus sévèrement encore.</p>
-
-<p>J’ai parlé au ministre de la position embarrassante dans laquelle
-me mettait le décret du 26 Août, il a répondu que je pouvais sans
-inconvénient me présenter à l’empereur avec les décorations du
-grade que m’a donné V. M. que ce n’était point contre les officiers<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_595"></a>[595]</span>
-à votre service que le décret avait été dirigé et qu’il serait modifié
-en leur faveur.</p>
-
-<p>J’ai l’honneur de prévenir V. M. que je partirai ce soir de Paris,
-je poursuivrai sans m’arrêter ma route jusqu’au quartier général
-de l’empereur.</p>
-
-<p>J’ai l’honneur de mettre aux pieds de V. M. l’hommage de mon
-profond respect et de mon entier dévouement.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-(Signé) <span class="pad4 smcap">Le Colonel Despres</span>.</p>
- </div>
-
-<p><i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Paris, 22 Septembre, 1812.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="r20" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<h3 id="NO_VI_A">No. VI. A.</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Lettre confidentielle écrite au roi par monsieur le duc de
-Feltre.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p1 rt">
-<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Paris, 10 Novembre, 1812.</i></p>
-
- <div lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">
-<p><span class="smcap pad2">Sire</span>,</p>
-
-<p>La lettre chiffrée que V. M. m’a écrite de Requeña le 18
-Octobre, m’est parvenue il y a quelques jours, et je l’ai sur le
-champ transmise à l’empereur qui ne la recevra toute fois que
-19 jours après le départ de cette même lettre de Paris. A la
-distance ou l’empereur se trouve de sa capitale, il est des choses
-sur lesquelles la politique force à fermer les yeux: du moins
-momentanement. Si la conduite de monsieur le marechal duc
-de Dalmatie est équivoque et cauteleuse; si ses démarches présentent
-le même aspect que celles qu’il paroît avoir faites et qui
-ont précédé l’abandon du Portugal après la prise d’Oporto, il
-viendra un moment ou l’empereur pourra l’en punir s’il le juge
-convenable, et peut-être est-il moins dangereux où il est qu’il ne
-le serait ici où quelques factieux ont pu du sein même des prisons
-qui les renfermaient méditer en l’absence de l’empereur, une révolution
-contre l’empereur et sa dynastie, et presque l’exécuter,
-le 2 et 3 Octobre dernier. Je pense donc, sire, qu’il est prudent
-de ne pas pousser à bout le maréchal duc de Dalmatie tout en contrariant
-sous main les démarches ambitieuses qu’il pourrait tenter,
-et en s’assurant de la fidelité des principaux officiers de l’armée du
-midi envers l’empereur et même de celle des Espagnols qu’il
-traine à sa suite. L’arme du ridicule qu’il est facile de manier<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_596"></a>[596]</span>
-en cette occasion suffira, ce me semble, pour déjouer ses coupables
-projets s’ils existent, et le ramener à son devoir, sauf à faire
-prendre par la suite des précautions pour qu’il ne s’en écarte
-jamais.</p>
-
-<p>Quoiqu’il en soit je suis incontestablement dans la nécessité
-d’attendre les ordres de l’empereur sur le contenu de la lettre de
-V. M. datée de Requeña le 18 Oct. Elle voit par la présente que
-je partage ses sentimens sur l’objet dont elle traite; je viens
-d’être assez heureux pour donner à l’empereur et a sa famille
-de nouvelles preuves de ma fidelité et de mon attachement, et je
-suis assuré que si V. M. connaît les détails de ma conduite le
-2 et 3 Octobre, elle la trouvera conforme aux sentimens que je
-me suis fait un plaisir de lui exprimer en faveur de l’empereur et
-de sa famille au moment ou j’ai pris congé de V. M. à Luneville il
-y a quelques années, &amp;c. &amp;c.</p>
- </div>
-
-
-<p class="fs90"><em>Note.</em>—It is only necessary to add to this letter that notwithstanding
-the duke of Feltre’s professions of attachment he was
-soon afterwards one of the most zealous courtiers of the Bourbons
-and the most bitter enemy of the emperor.</p>
-
-<p class="fs90">The constancy with which the duke of Dalmatia served that
-great man is well known.</p>
-
-<hr class="r20" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<h3 id="NO_VI_B">No. VI. B.</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><em>Colonel Desprez to the King.</em></p>
-
-<p class="p1 rt">
-<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Paris, 3 Janvier, 1813.</i></p>
-
- <div lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">
-<p><span class="pad2 smcap">Sire</span>,</p>
-
-<p>J’ai eu l’honneur d’annoncer à V. M. mon arrivée à Paris.
-Mais j’ai dû en me servant de la voie de l’estafette user d’une
-extrême discrétion. La reine m’ayant conseillé de vous écrire
-avec quelque détail et ayant daigné m’offrir de faire partir ma lettre
-par le premier courier qu’elle expédierait, j’en profite pour
-rendre compte à V. M. de ma mission et lui faire connaître une
-partie des évènements dont j’ai été témoin.</p>
-
-<p>Je suis arrivé à Moscou le 18 Octobre au soir. L’empereur
-venait d’apprendre que l’avant garde commandée par le roi de<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_597"></a>[597]</span>
-Naples avait été attaquée et forcée à la retraite avec une partie de
-son artillerie. Déja le départ était résolu et les troupes se mettaient
-en mouvement. On m’annonça à S. M. qui répondit
-d’abord d’une manière peu favorable. Cependant au milieu de la
-nuit on me fit appeler. Je remis à l’empereur les dépêches dont
-V. M. m’avait chargé, et sans les ouvrir, il me questionna sur
-leur contenu. Puis il fit sur les opérations de la campagne une
-partie des objections qu’avait prévues V. M.</p>
-
-<p>Il dit que le mouvement en faveur de l’armée de Portugal avait
-été commencé trop tard, qu’il aurait pu être fait un mois plutôt,
-que lui-même avait daté la conduite à tenir dans cette circonstance
-lorsqu’en 1808 il avait sans hésiter quitté Madrid pour marcher
-aux Anglais qui s’étaient avancés jusqu’à Valladolid. Je répondis
-que V. M. s’était mise en marche peu d’heures après la division
-Palombini, qu’elle avait dû attendre cette division pour conduire
-vers l’armée de Portugal un renfort tel que le succès ne
-pût être douteux; qu’elle avait d’autant moins cru devoir
-précipiter son mouvement, que M. le maréchal Marmont avait écrit
-plusieurs fois qu’il se croyait trop faible pour lutter seul contre
-l’armée Anglaise, que ce maréchal avait été maître du tems,
-qu’il n’avait point été battu dans sa position sur le Duero, mais
-bien sur un champ de bataille dans lequel rien ne l’avait forcé de
-s’engager. L’empereur prétendit ensuite que V. M. après avoir
-appris la perte de la bataille de Salamanque aurait dû se porter
-sur le Duero et rallier l’armée de Portugal. Je rappelai alors le
-mouvement fait du Guadarama vers Ségovie et la position critique
-dans laquelle vous avez laissé la duc de Raguse qui avait lui-même
-propose ce mouvement. L’empereur dit qu’il connaissait très bien
-tous les reproches qu’à cet égard on pouvait faire au maréchal
-Marmont. Il ajouta que l’armée du centre ayant fait sa retraite
-sur Madrid elle aurait du garder plus longtems les défilés du
-Guadarama, qu’on avait trop tôt passé le Tage, que du moins ce
-mouvement ayant été resolu, il fallait ne point laisser de garnison
-au Retiro, briser tous les affuts, emporter les aigles et bruler les
-effets d’habillement; qu’il n’avait jamais considéré ce poste que
-comme propre à contenir la population de Madrid, que l’ennemi
-étant maître de la campagne, on devait l’abandonner et que de
-toutes les fautes de la campagne c’était celle qu’il avait le moins
-conçue. Je répondis à cette objection ainsi que j’en étais convenu
-avec V. M. L’empereur en venant ensuite à la lettre du duc
-de Dalmatie me dit qu’elle lui était déja parvenue par une autre
-voie, mais qu’il n’y avait attaché aucune importance; que le<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_598"></a>[598]</span>
-maréchal Soult s’était trompé, qu’il ne pouvait s’occuper de semblables
-<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">pauvretés</i> dans un moment où il <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">était à la tête de cinq
-cent mille hommes et faisait des choses immenses</i>. Ce sont ses
-expressions, qu’au reste les soupçons du duc de Dalmatie ne l’étonnaient
-que faiblement; que beaucoup de généraux de l’armée
-d’Espagne les partageaient et pensaient que V. M. préférait
-l’Espagne à la France; qu’il savait parfaitement qu’elle avait le
-cœur françois mais que ceux qui la jugeaient par ses discours
-devaient avoir une autre opinion. Il ajouta que le maréchal
-Soult était la seule tête militaire qu’il eut en Espagne, qu’il
-ne pouvait l’en retirer sans compromettre l’armée, que d’ailleurs
-il devait être parfaitement tranquille sur ses intentions
-puisqu’il venait d’apprendre par les journaux anglais qu’il
-évacuait l’Andalousie et se réunissait aux armées du centre et
-d’Aragon, que cette réunion opérée on devait être assez en force
-pour reprendre l’offensive; que d’ailleurs il n’avait point d’ordres
-à envoyer, qu’il ne savait point en donner de si loin, qu’il ne se
-dissimulait point l’étendue du mal et qu’il regrettait plus que
-jamais que V. M. n’ait point suivi le conseil qu’il lui avait donné
-de ne pas retourner en Espagne; qu’il était inutile que je repartisse,
-que je resterai à l’armée ou l’on m’emploieroit. J’insistai
-alors pour être renvoyé à V. M. d’une manière qui parut faire
-sur l’empereur quelque impression, et il finit par me dire que je
-serai expédié mais que je ne pouvais l’être dans ce moment,
-qu’ayant besoin de repos je resterais à Moscou, et que puisque
-j’étais officier du génie, je serais chargé de diriger sous les ordres
-du duc de Trevise les travaux et la défense du Kremlin. Je
-reçus en consequence un ordre écrit du Prince de Neufchatel.
-Lorsqu’après l’entière évacuation de Moscou le corps de M. le M.
-Mortier eut rejoint l’armée, je demandai et j’obtins d’y rester
-attaché jusqu’à ce que je fusse expédié. Je craignais que si je
-restais au quartier général on ne m’y désignât des fonctions qui
-seraient un nouvel obstacle à mon retour. Je pensai que peut-être
-on éviterait d’envoyer à V. M. un témoin des évènements qui se
-passaient, et je préférai attendre qu’une occasion favorable se présentât.
-Etant arrivé à Wilna peu de tems après le départ de
-l’empereur, je demandai au duc de Bassano, et il me donna
-l’autorisation de venir attendre des ordres à Paris. J’ai eu l’honneur
-d’annoncer à V. M. dans un autre lettre que l’altération de
-ma santé me forçait à suspendre mon retour en Espagne.</p>
-
-<p>L’armée au moment où je la quittai était dans la plus affreuse
-détresse. Depuis longtems déjà la désorganisation et les pertes<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_599"></a>[599]</span>
-étaient effrayantes, l’artillerie et la cavalerie n’existaient plus.
-Tous les corps étaient confondus. Les soldats marchaient pêle-mêle
-et ne songaient qu’à prolonger machinalement leur existence;
-quoique l’ennemi fut sur nos flancs, chaque jour des
-milliers d’hommes isolés se répandaient dans les villages voisins
-de la route et tombaient dans les mains des Cosaques. Cependant
-quelque grand que soit le nombre des prisonniers, celui des morts
-l’est incomparablement davantage. Il est impossible de peindre
-jusqu’à quel point la disette s’est fait sentir pendant plus d’un
-mois; il n’y eut point de distributions; les chevaux morts étaient
-la seule ressource, et bien souvent les maréchaux mêmes manquaient
-de pain. La rigueur du climat rendait la disette plus meurtrière,
-chaque nuit nous laissions au bivouac plusieurs centaines de morts.
-Je crois pouvoir sans exagérer porter à cent mille le nombre qu’on
-a perdu ainsi, et peindre avec assez de vérité la situation des
-choses en disant que l’armée est morte: la jeune garde qui faisait
-partie du corps auquel j’étais attaché était forte de 8000 hommes
-lorsque nous avons quitté Moscou, à Wilna elle en comptait à
-peine quatre cents. Tous les autres corps d’armée sont réduits
-dans la même proportion, et la retraite ayant dû se prolonger au-delà
-du Niemen, je suis convaincu que vingt mille hommes
-n’auront pas atteints la Vistule. On croyait à l’armée que beaucoup
-de soldats avaient pris les devants et qu’ils se rallieraient
-lorsqu’on pourrait suspendre le mouvement rétrograde. Je me
-suis assuré du contraire; à cinq lieues du quartier général, je ne
-rencontrai plus d’hommes isolés et je connus bien alors la profondeur
-de la plaie. Une phrase pourrait donner à V. M. une idée
-de l’état des choses, depuis le passage du Niemen un corps de
-800 Napolitains, le seul corps qui eût conservé quelque consistance,
-faisait l’arrière garde d’une armée française, forte naguère
-de trois cents mille hommes. Il est impossible d’exprimer
-jusqu’à quel point le désordre était contagieux; les corps réunis
-des ducs de Bellune et de Reggio comptaient 30,000 hommes
-au passage de la Beresina, deux jours après ils étaient dissous
-comme le reste de l’armée. Envoyer des renforts c’était augmenter
-les pertes et l’on reconnut enfin qu’il fallait empêcher les
-troupes neuves de se mettre en contact avec cette multitude en
-désordre à laquelle on ne peut plus donner le nom d’armée. Le
-roi de Naples disait hautement qu’en lui laissant le commandement
-l’empereur avait exigé le plus grand sacrifice qu’il pût
-attendre de son dévouement. Les forces physiques et morales
-du prince de Neufchâtel étaient entièrement épuisées. Si maintenant<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_600"></a>[600]</span>
-V. M. me demandait quel doit être le terme du mouvement
-rétrograde, je lui répondrais que l’ennemi est maître de le
-fixer. Je ne crois pas que les Prussiens fassent de grands efforts
-pour défendre leur territoire. M. de Narbonne que j’ai vu à
-Berlin et qui était chargé de lettres de l’empereur pour le roi de
-Prusse, m’a dit que les dispositions de ce prince et de son premier
-ministre étaient favorables, mais il ne se dissimulait pas que celles
-de la nation ne sont pas les mêmes. Déjà plusieurs rixes s’étaient
-engagées entre les habitans de Berlin et des soldats de la garnison
-française; et en traversant la Prusse j’ai eu lieu de m’assurer
-que l’on ne pouvait guère compter sur cette alliée de nouvelle
-date.</p>
-
-<p>Il parait aussi que dans l’armée autrichienne les officiers déclamaient
-publiquement contre la guerre.</p>
-
-<p>Quel triste que soit ce tableau, je crois l’avoir peint sans exagération
-et l’avoir observé de sang froid. Mon opinion sur l’étendue
-du mal est la même que lorsque j’étais plus voisin du théâtre.</p>
- </div>
-
-<hr class="r20" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<h3 id="NO_VII">No. VII.</h3>
-
-<p class="p1 rt"><i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Ghiart, le 2 Septembre, 1812.</i></p>
-
- <div lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">
-<p><span class="pad2 smcap">Monsieur le duc de feltre</span>,</p>
-
-<p>J’ai reçu le rapport du duc de Raguse sur la bataille du 22. Il
-est impossible de rien lire de plus insignifiant: il y a plus de
-fatras et plus de rouages que dans une horloge, et pas un mot qui
-fasse connaître l’état réel des choses. Voici ma manière de voir
-sur cette affaire, et la conduite que vous devez tenir. Vous
-attendrez que le duc de Raguse soit arrivé, qu’il soit remis de sa
-blessure, et à-peu-près entièrement rétabli. Vous lui demanderez
-alors de répondre catégoriquement à ces questions. Pourquoi
-a-t-il livré bataille sans les ordres de son général-en-chef? Pourquoi
-n’a-t-il pas pris des ordres sur le parti qu’il devoit suivre,
-subordonné au systême général sur mes armées d’Espagne? Il
-y a là <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">un crime d’insubordination</i> qui est la cause de tous les malheurs
-de cette affaire, et quand même il n’eut pas été dans l’obligation
-de se mettre en communication avec son général-en-chef
-pour exécuter les ordres qu’il en recevrait, comment a-t-il pu
-sortir de sa défensive sur le Duero, lorsque, sans un grand effort
-d’imagination, il étoit facile de concevoir qu’il pouvoit être secourn<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_601"></a>[601]</span>
-par l’arrivée de la division de dragons, d’une trentaine de pièces de
-canon, et de plus de 15 mille hommes de troupes Françaises que
-le roi avoit dans la main? Et comment pouvoit il sortir de la
-défensive pour prendre l’offensive sans attendre la réunion et le
-secours d’un corps de 15 à 17 mille hommes?</p>
-
-<p>Le roi avoit ordonné à l’armée du nord d’envoyer sa cavalerie
-à son secours; elle étoit en marche. Le duc de Raguse ne
-pouvoit l’ignorer, puisque cette cavalerie est arrivée le soir de la
-bataille. De Salamanque à Burgos il y a bien des marches.
-Pourquoi n’a-t-il pas retardé de deux jours pour avoir le secours
-de cette cavalerie, qui lui étoit si importante? Il faudroit avoir
-une explication sur les raisons qui ont porté le duc de Raguse à
-ne pas attendre les ordres de son général-en-chef pour livrer
-bataille sans attendre les renforts que le roi, comme commandant
-supérieur de mes armées en Espagne, pouvoit retirer de l’armée
-du centre, de l’armée de Valence et de l’Andalousie. Le seul
-fonds de l’armée du centre fournissoit 15 mille hommes de pied,
-et 2500 chevaux, lesquels pouvoient être rendus dans le même
-temps que le duc de Raguse faisoit battre son corps, et en prenant
-dans ses deux armées, le roi pouvoit lui amener 40 mille hommes.
-Enfin le duc de Raguse sachant que 1500 chevaux étoient partis
-de Burgos pour le rejoindre, comment ne les a-t-il pas attendus?</p>
-
-<p>En faisant coincider ces deux circonstances d’avoir pris l’offensive
-sans l’ordre de son général-en-chef et de ne pas avoir retardé
-la bataille de deux jours pour ne pas recevoir 15,000 hommes
-d’infanterie que lui amenoit le roi, et 1500 chevaux de l’armée du
-nord, on est fondé à penser que ce maréchal a craint que le roi
-ne participe au succès de la bataille, et qu’il a sacrifié à la vanité
-la gloire de la patrie et l’avantage de mon service.</p>
-
-<p>Donnez ordre aux généraux divisionnaires d’envoyer les états
-de leurs pertes. Il est intolérable qu’on rende des comptes faux et
-qu’on me dissimule la vérité.</p>
-
-<p>Prescrivez au général Clausel, qui commande l’armée, d’envoyer
-la situation avant et après la bataille. Demandez également
-aux chefs de corps des situations exactes. Finalement, vous
-ferez connoître au duc de Raguse en temps opportun combien je
-suis indigné de la conduite inexplicable qu’il a tenue, en n’attendant
-pas deux jours que les secours de l’armée du centre et de
-l’armée du nord le rejoignissent. J’attends avec impatience l’arrivée
-du général aide-de-camp du roi pour avoir des renseignemens
-précis. Ce qu’il a écrit no signifie pas grande chose.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-(Signé) <span class="pad4 smcap">Napoleon.</span></p>
- </div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_602"></a>[602]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="r20" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<h3 id="NO_VIII_A">No. VIII. A.</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><em>Extract from general Souham’s despatch to the minister of
-war, Briviesca, 2d October, 1812.</em></p>
-
- <div lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">
-<p>Par votre lettre du 6 Octobre vous m’annoncez que le duc de
-Dalmatie venait de réunir son armée à Grenade et à Jaen, et que
-le roi alloit se mettre incessamment en communication avec ce
-maréchal pour marcher de concert sur Madrid. En consequence
-de ces mouvemens je resolus de marcher à la rencontre de l’ennemi,
-et de le forcer à lever le siège de Burgos. Le 18 toute mon armée
-se mit en mouvement sur trois colonnes, et le 19 elle occupait les
-positions ainsi qu’il suit. La droite à Termino, le centre sur
-les hauteurs de Monasterio, et la gauche à Villa Escuso la
-Solano et Villa Escuso la Sombria. La journée du 20 devait être
-celle du combat, lorsque je reçus à l’instant, à deux heures du
-matin, par un aide-de-camp, une lettre de S. M. C. qui m’ordonne
-de ne point engager d’affaire générale, et d’attendre que par ses
-manœuvres lord Wellington soit forcé d’évacuer sa position de
-Burgos; ainsi il me faut renoncer à tous mes projets, et non sans
-un violent chagrin, car je puis assurer V. E. que mon armée
-était parfaitement disposée, et que j’aurais pu combattre l’ennemi
-avec avantage. Cependant l’armée n’a des vivres que pour
-quatre jours, et à cette epoque, si lord Wellington n’est point en
-retraite, je serai forcé de l’attaquer. J’entrevois moins de peril de
-marcher en avant que de rétrograder. Dans un instant où le
-moral du soldat commence à se raffermir tout mouvement en
-arrière produit le plus mauvais effet.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-(Signé) <span class="pad4 smcap">Comte Souham.</span></p>
- </div>
-
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<h3 id="NO_VIII_B">No. VIII. B.</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><em>Extracts from two letters written by the duke of Feltre to
-King Joseph, dated Paris, 8th Oct. and 19th Nov., 1812.</em></p>
-
-<p class="fs90">On one of the letters is the following note, in pencil, by the
-duke of Wellington. “<em>Advantage of English newspapers.</em>”</p>
-
- <div lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">
-<p class="p1">“Sire,—J’ai l’honneur d’adresser ci-joint à votre majesté<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_603"></a>[603]</span>
-quelques extraits des journaux Anglais les plus récents dont j’ai
-choisi ce qui pourrait être de quelque intérêt dans les circonstances
-actuels.”</p>
-
-<p class="p1">“Sire,—J’ai l’honneur d’adresser ci-joint à V. M. plusieurs
-extraits des journaux Anglais contenant quelques faits utiles ou
-intéressans à connaître.”</p>
- </div>
-
-<p class="fs90">These extracts taken from the Courier, Morning Post, Times,
-Alfred, Statesman, and Morning Chronicle, contained minute
-details upon the numbers, situation, and destination of the Sicilian,
-Spanish, and Anglo-Portuguese armies, and the most exact
-account of the reinforcements sent from England. In fine a
-complete system of intelligence for the enemy.</p>
-
-<hr class="r20" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<h3 id="NO_IX">No. IX.</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><em>Extract of a letter from marshal Jourdan to colonel Napier.</em></p>
-
-<p class="p1 right">
-<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Soisy sous Etiole, 14 Janvier, 1829.</i></p>
-
- <div lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">
-<p>Le 10 Novembre, 1812. Les armées du midi, du Portugal,
-et du centre se trouvaient réunies sur la Tormes. Vous connaissez
-la position qu’occupait l’armée des alliés. Cette position
-ayant été bien reconnue, dans la journée du 11, par le roi,
-accompagné du duc de Dalmatie, de plusieurs généraux, et de moi,
-je proposai de passer la Tormes, guéable prèsque partout entre
-Villa-Gonzala et Huerta, et de nous porter rapidement sur
-Calvarissa de Ariba, qui se trouvait au centre de la ligne des
-ennemis. J’esperais que lord Wellington ne pourrait éviter la
-bataille; et j’étais d’avis que nous devions faire tous nos efforts
-pour le forcer à l’accepter; me flattant qu’avec une armée de 80
-milles hommes, dont 10 milles de cavalerie et 120 pièces de
-canon,<a id="FNanchor_2" href="#Footnote_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> nous étions en état de remporter un brilliant succès, sur
-le même champ de bataille où quelques mois avant nous avions
-essuyé un revers.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_604"></a>[604]</span></p>
-
-<p>Le duc de Dalmatie, n’étant pas de mon avis, proposa d’aller
-passer la Tormes, à des guès qu’il avait reconnus à deux lieues
-au-dessus d’Alba; ce parti était sans doute plus prudent; mais il
-avoit, suivant moi, l’inconvenient que je voulais éviter, c’est-à-dire,
-qu’il laissait à nos adversaires la facilité de se retirer sans
-combattre. Cependant comme je n’étais revêtu d’aucun commandement,
-tandis que le duc de Dalmatie avait sous ses ordres
-les deux tiers de l’armée, le roi jugea convenable d’adopter son
-plan, et lui en confia l’exécution; vous en connaissez le résultat:
-il fut tel que je l’avais prévu.</p>
-
-<p>Permettez moi, Monsieur, d’ajouter une reflexion; Il me semble
-que lord Wellington decidé à battre en retraite, aurait dû commencer
-à l’opérer le 14ème jour, où nous franchîmes la Tormes.
-En ne se mettant en mouvement que le 15, il se trouva dans la
-nécessité de défiler devant nous pendant une partie de la journée;
-et sans les mauvais tems, et surtout sans beaucoup trop de circonspection
-de notre côté il eût peut-être couru quelque danger.</p>
-
-<p>On a publié que pendant leur retraite les alliés ne perdirent que
-50 ou 60 tués, 150 blessés, 170 prisonniers. Il est, cependant,
-certain que le nombre de prisonniers Anglais, Portugais, et
-Espagnols, conduits au quartier général à Salamanque, étoit, le
-20 Novembre, de 3520.</p>
- </div>
-
-<hr class="r10" />
-
-<p class="fs90">The justice of the marshal’s opinion as to lord Wellington
-having staid too long on the Tormes is confirmed by the following
-note of a conversation held with the duke of Wellington on the
-subject.</p>
-
-<p class="fs90">“Lord Wellington would have fought the French on the old
-position of the Arapiles in 1812 notwithstanding their superior
-numbers, but he staid too long at Salamanca.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_605"></a>[605]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="r20" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<h3 id="NO_X">No. X.</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><em>The duke of Feltre, minister of war, to the king of Spain.</em></p>
-
-<p class="p1 rt">
-<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Paris, le 29 Janvier, 1813.</i></p>
-
- <div lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">
-<p><span class="pad2 smcap">Sire</span>,</p>
-
-<p>J’ai eu l’honneur d’écrire à V. M. le 4 de ce mois pour lui
-faire connaître les intentions de l’empereur au sujet des affaires
-d’Espagne, et la necessité de transporter le quartier général de
-Madrid à Valladolid. Cette dépêche a été expédiée par duplicate
-et triplicate, et j’ignore encore si elle est parvenue à V. M.
-Depuis sa dépêche de Madrid du 4 Decembre je suis privé de ses
-lettres, et ce long silence me prouve que les communications de
-Madrid à Vittoria restent constamment <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">interceptées</i>. Il est vrai
-que les opérations du général Caffarelli qui s’est porté avec toutes
-ses troupes disponsibles sur la côte de Biscaye pour dégager Santona
-fortement menacé par l’ennemi et parcourir la côte, a donné aux
-bandes de la Castille une facilité entière d’intercepter la route de
-Burgos à Vittoria. Les dernières nouvelles que je reçois à l’instant
-de l’armée de Portugal sont du 5 Janvier. A cette époque
-tout y était tranquille, mais je vois toujours la même difficulté pour
-communiquer. Cet état de choses rend toujours plus nécessaire de
-s’occuper très sérieusement et très instamment de balayer les provinces
-du nord, et de les délivrer enfin de ces bandes qui ont
-augmentés en forces et en consistance à un point qui exige indispensablement
-toute notre attention et tous nos efforts. Cette
-pensée a tellement attire l’attention de l’empereur que S. M. I.
-m’a réitéré quatre fois successivement l’ordre exprès de renouveller
-encore l’expression de ses intentions que j’ai déjà adressée
-à V. M. par ma lettre du 4 Janvier pour l’engager à revenir à
-Valladolid, à garder Madrid par une division seulement, et à
-concentrer ses forces de manière à pouvoir envoyer des troupes de
-l’armée de Portugal vers le nord, en Navarre, et en Biscaye, afin
-de délivrer ces provinces, et d’y rétablir la tranquillité. Le général
-Reille également frappé de l’état des choses dans le nord de
-l’Espagne a bien compris la nécessité de prendre un parti decisif
-à cet égard. Il m’a transmis à cette occasion la lettre qu’il a eu
-l’honneur d’écrire à V. M. le 13 Octobre dernier, et j’ai vu qu’il
-lui a présenté un tableau frappant et vrai de la situation des
-affaires qui vient entièrement à l’appui de ma dépêche du 4 courant.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_606"></a>[606]</span>
-Quant à l’occupation de Madrid, l’empereur m’ordonne
-de mettre sous les yeux de V. M. le danger qu’il y aurait dans
-l’état actuel des affaires de vouloir occuper cette capitale comme
-point central, et d’y avoir encore des hôpitaux et établissemens
-qu’il faudrait abandonner à l’ennemi au premier mouvement prononcé
-qu’il ferait vers le nord. Cette considération seule doit
-l’emporter sur toute autre, et je n’y ajouterai que le dernier mot
-de l’empereur à ce sujet; c’est que toutes les convenances dans
-la position de l’Europe veulent que V. M. occupe Valladolid, et
-pacifie le nord. Le premier objet rempli facilitera beaucoup le
-second, et pour y contribuer par tous les moyens comme pour
-économiser un tems précieux, et mettre à profit l’inaction des
-Anglais, je transmets directement aux généraux commandant
-en chef les armées du nord et de Portugal, les ordres de l’Empereur
-pour que leur exécution ne souffre aucun retard, et que
-ceux de V. M. pour appuyer et consolider leurs opérations n’éprouvent
-ni lenteur ni difficulté lorsqu’ils parviendront à ces
-généraux. Je joins ici copie de mes lettres, sur lesquelles j’ai
-toujours reservé les ordres que V. M. jugera à-propos de donner
-pour l’entière exécution de ceux de l’empereur. Ma lettre était
-terminée lorsqu’un aide-de-camp de M. le maréchal Jourdan est
-arrivé avec plusieurs dépêches, dont la dernière est du 24 Decembre.
-J’ai eu soin de les mettre sous les yeux de l’empereur,
-mais leur contenu ne saurait rien changer aux intentions de S. M. I.
-et ne peut que confirmer les observations qui se trouvent dans ma
-lettre. J’aurai l’honneur d’écrire encore à V. M. par le retour
-de l’officier porteur des dépêches de M. le maréchal Jourdan. Je
-suis avec respect, Sire, de votre majesté, le très humble et très
-obéïssant serviteur,</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="padr6">Le ministre de la guerre,</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">Duc de Feltre</span>.</p>
- </div>
-
-<hr class="r20" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<h3 id="NO_XI">No. XI.</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><em>The duke of Feltre to the king of Spain.</em></p>
-
- <div lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">
-<p><span class="pad2 smcap">Sire</span>,</p>
-
-<p>Depuis la lettre que j’ai eu l’honneur d’écrire à votre majesté le
-29 Janvier, l’empereur, après avoir pris connoissance des dépêches
-apportées par l’aide-de-camp de monsieur le maréchal Jourdan, me<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_607"></a>[607]</span>
-charge encore de réitérer son intention formelle et déjà deux fois
-transmise à votre majesté, qu’elle porte son quartier général à
-Valladolid afin de pouvoir s’occuper efficacement de soumettre et
-pacifier le nord; par une conséquence nécessaire de ce changement,
-Madrid ne doit être occupé que par l’extremité de la gauche
-de manière à ne plus faire partie essentielle de la position générale
-et à pouvoir être abandonné sans inconvénient, au cas qu’il
-soit nécessaire de se réunir sur un autre point. Cette nouvelle disposition
-procure à votre majesté les moyens de faire réfluer des
-forces considérables dans le nord et jusqu’à l’Arragon pour y
-détruire les rassemblemens qui existent, occuper en force tous les
-points importans, interdire l’accès des côtes aux Anglais, et opérer
-la soumission entière du pays. Il est donc d’une importance extrême
-pour parvenir à ce bût, de profiter de l’inaction des Anglais,
-qui permet en ce moment l’emploi de tous nos moyens contre les
-insurgés et doit amener promptement leur entière destruction, si
-les opérations entreprises pour cette effet sont conduites avec
-l’activité, l’energie et la suite qu’elles exigent. Votre majesté a
-pu se convaincre par la longue et constante interruption des communications
-autant que par les rapports qui lui sont parvenus de
-toute l’étendue du mal, et de la nécessité d’y porter remède. On
-ne peut donc mettre en doute son empressement à remplir les intentions
-de l’empereur sur ces points importans des changemens,
-qui ont eu lieu pour le commandement en chef des armées du
-midi, du nord, et de Portugal, me font espérer que votre majesté
-n’éprouvera plus de difficultés pour l’exécution de ses ordres et que
-tout marchera au même bût sans contradiction, et sans obstacle.
-Ces nouvelles dispositions me dispensent de répondre à différentes
-observations contenues dans les lettres de votre majesté, et m’engagent
-à attendre qu’elle me fasse connoître les résultats des
-changemens ordonnés par l’empereur. Je ne dois pas oublier de
-prévenir votre majesté d’un ordre que sa majesté impériale m’a
-chargé de transmettre directement à monsieur le général Reille
-pour lui faire envoyer une division de son armée en Navarre dont
-la situation exige impérieusement des secours prompts et efficaces.
-Cette disposition ne peut contrarier aucune de celles que votre majesté
-sera dans le cas d’ordonner à l’armée de Portugal pour concourir
-au même bût et amener la soumission des provinces du
-nord de l’Espagne.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="padr4">Je suis avec respect, Sire, de votre majesté</span><br />
-<span class="padr2">Le très humble et très obéïssant serviteur</span><br />
-<span class="padr6">Le Ministre de la Guerre,</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">Duc de Feltre</span>.</p>
- </div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_608"></a>[608]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="r20" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<h3 id="NO_XII">No. XII.</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><em>Duke of Feltre to the king of Spain.</em></p>
-
-<p class="p1 rt">
-<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Paris, le 12 Fevrier, (No. 2.) 1813.</i></p>
-
- <div lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">
-<p><span class="pad2 smcap">Sire</span>,</p>
-
-<p>Par ma lettre de ce jour No. 1, j’ai eu l’honneur de faire connaître
-à V. M. les intentions de l’empereur sur les opérations à
-suivre en Espagne. La présente aura pour bût de répondre plus particulièrement
-à la lettre dont V. M. m’a honoré en date du 8
-Janvier et que j’ai eu soin de mettre sous les yeux de l’empereur.
-Les plaintes qu’elle contient sur la conduite du maréchal duc de
-Dalmatie et du général Caffarelli deviennent aujourd’hui sans
-objet par l’éloignement de ces deux généraux en chef. Je dois
-cependant prévenir V. M. qu’ayant fait connaître au général Caffarelli
-qu’on se plaignait à Madrid de ne point recevoir de comptes
-de l’armée du nord, ce général me répond sous la date du 27
-Janvier qu’il a eu l’honneur de rendre à V. M. des comptes
-extrêmement frequens, qu’il lui a envoyé la situation de l’armée et
-des doubles des rapports qui me sont adressés. La général Caffarelli
-ajoute qu’il avait demandé à V. M. d’ordonner que deux
-divisions de l’armée de Portugal vinssent appuyer les opérations
-de l’armée du nord, et il pense que ces lettres se seront croisées
-avec les dépêches de Madrid parceque les courriers out éprouvé
-beaucoup de retard, mais il y a lieu de présumer que tout ce qui a
-été adressé de l’armée du nord a du parvenir à Madrid avant la
-fin de Janvier. V. M. réitère dans sa lettre du 8 Janvier ses
-demandes relativement aux besoins de l’armée. Toutes ont été
-mises sous les yeux de l’empereur. S. M. I. m’ordonne de répondre
-au sujet des fonds dont la demande se retrouve dans plusieurs
-dépêches précédentes que l’argent nécessaire aux armées
-d’Espagne se serait trouvé dans ces riches et fertiles provinces
-dévastées par les bandes et par les juntes insurrectionelles, qu’en
-s’occupant avec l’activité et la vigueur convenables pour rétablir
-l’ordre et la tranquillité, on y gagnera toutes les ressources qu’elles
-peuvent encore offrir, et que le tems ramènera dans toute leur
-étendue. C’est donc un motif de plus pour V. M. d’employer
-tous les moyens dont elle dispose pour mettre fin à cette guerre
-interne qui trouble le repos des habitans paisibles, ruine le pays,
-fatigue nos armées et les prive de tous les avantages qu’elles
-trouveraient dans l’occupation tranquille de ces belles contrées.
-L’Arragon et la Navarre aujourd’hui sous les loix de Mina alimentent<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_609"></a>[609]</span>
-de leurs productions et de leur revenus cette lutte désastreuse,
-il est tems de mettre un terme à cet état de choses et de
-faire rentrer dans les mains du gouvernement légitime les ressources
-d’un pays florissant lorsqu’il est paisible, mais qui ne
-servent aujourd’hui qu’à son détriment.</p>
-
-<p>Je suis avec respect, Sire, de votre majesté, le très humble et
-très obéïssant serviteur,</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="padr6">Le ministre de la guerre,</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">Duc de Feltre</span>.</p>
- </div>
-
-<hr class="r20" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<h3 id="NO_XIII">No. XIII.</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><em>The duke of Feltre to the king of Spain.</em></p>
-
-<p class="p1 rt">
-<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Paris, le 12 Fevrier, 1813.</i></p>
-
- <div lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">
-<p><span class="pad2 smcap">Sire</span>,</p>
-
-<p>J’ai eu l’honneur d’écrire trois fois à V. M. dans le courant de
-Janvier, pour lui transmettre les intentions de l’empereur sur la
-conduite des affaires en Espagne, et j’ai eu soin de faire expedier
-toutes mes dépêches au moins par triplicata, tellement que je puis
-et dois espérer aujourd’hui qu’elles sont parvenues à leur destination.
-Je reçois en ce moment le dup<sup>ta</sup> d’une lettre de V. M.
-en date du 8 Janvier, dont le primata n’est point arrivé et j’y
-vois une nouvelle preuve de la difficulté toujours subsistante de
-communication, les inconveniens de cet état de choses deviennent
-plus sensibles dans les circonstances actuelles, où il étoit
-d’une haute importance que les ordres de l’empereur reçussent
-une prompte exécution. S. M. I. pénétrée de cette idée, attend
-avec une véritable impatience de savoir ce qui s’est opéré à Madrid,
-d’après ses instructions, et cette attente, journellement deçue
-lui fait craindre qu’on n’ait perdu un temps précieux, les Anglais
-étant depuis plus de deux mois dans l’impuissance de rien faire.
-L’empereur espère du moins que lorsque V. M. aura eu connaisance
-du 29<sup>me</sup> bulletin, elle aura été frappée de la nécessité de se
-mettre promptement en communication avec la France et de
-l’assurer par tous les moyens possibles. On ne peut parvenir à
-ce bût qu’en faisant refluer successivement les forces dont
-V. M. peut disposer sur la ligne de communication de Valladolid à
-Bayonne, et en portant en outre des forces suffisantes en Navarre<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_610"></a>[610]</span>
-et en Aragon pour combattre avec avantage et détruire les bandes
-qui dévastent ces provinces.</p>
-
-<p>L’armée de Portugal combinée avec celle du nord est bien suffisante
-pour remplir cet objet tandis que les armées du centre et
-du midi, occupant Salamanque et Valladolid, présentent assez de
-forces pour tenir les Anglais en échec en attendant les évènements.
-L’empereur m’ordonne de réitérer à V. M. que l’occupation
-de <em>Valladolid</em> comme quartier général et résidence pour la
-personne, est un préliminaire indispensable, à toute operation.
-C’est de-là qu’il faut diriger sur la route de Burgos et successivement
-sur tous les points convenables les forces disponibles qui
-doivent renforcer ou seconder l’armée du nord. Madrid et
-même Valence ne peuvent être considérés dans ce systême que
-comme des points à occuper par l’extremité gauche de la ligne, et
-nullement comme lieux à maintenir exclusivement par une concentration
-de forces. Valladolid et Salamanque deviennent
-aujourd’hui les points essentiels entre lesquels doivent être réparties
-des forces prêtes à prendre l’offensive contre les Anglais et
-à faire échouer leurs projets. L’empereur est instruit qu’ils se
-renforcent en Portugal, et qu’ils paraissent avoir le double projet
-ou de pousser en Espagne ou de partir du port de Lisbonne pour
-faire une expédition de 25 mille hommes, partie Anglais partie
-Espagnols, sur un point quelconque des côtes de France pendant
-que la lutte sera engagée dans le nord. Pour empêcher l’exécution
-de ce plan il faut être toujours en mésure de se porter en
-avant et ménacer de marcher sur Lisbonne ou de conquerir le
-Portugal. En même tems il faut conserver des communications
-aussi sûres que faciles avec la France pour être promptement instruits
-de tout ce qui s’y passe, et le seul moyen d’y parvenir est
-d’employer le tems ou les Anglais sont dans l’inaction pour pacifier
-la Biscaye et la Navarre comme j’ai eu soin de le faire connaître
-à V. M. dans mes précédentes. La sollicitude de l’empereur
-pour les affaires d’Espagne lui ayant fait réitérer à plusieurs
-reprises et reproduire sous toutes les formes ses intentions à cet
-égard je ne puis achever mieux de les remplir qu’en récapitulant
-les idées principales que j’ai eu l’ordre de faire connaître à V. M.
-Occuper Valladolid et Salamanque, employer avec la plus grande
-activité possible tous les moyens de pacifier la Navarre et l’Aragon,
-maintenir des communications très rapides et très sûres avec la
-France, rester toujours en mésure de prendre l’offensive au besoin,
-voilà ce que l’empereur me prescrit de faire considérer à V. M.
-comme instruction générale pour toute la campagne et qui doit<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_611"></a>[611]</span>
-faire la base de ses operations. J’ai à peine besoin d’ajouter que
-si les armées Françaises en Espagne restaient oisives et laissaient
-les Anglais maîtres de faire des expeditions sur nos côtes, la tranquillité
-de la France serait compromise et la décadence de nos
-affaires en Espagne en serait l’infaillible résultat, Je suis avec
-respect,</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="padr6">Sire, de votre majesté,</span><br />
-<span class="padr4">le très humble et très obéïssant serviteur</span><br />
-<span class="padr2">Le Ministre de la Guerre,</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">Duc de Feltre</span>.</p>
- </div>
-
-<hr class="r20" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<h3 id="NO_XIV">No. XIV.</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><em>The duke of Feltre to the king of Spain.</em></p>
-
-<p class="p1 rt"><i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Paris, le 12 Mars, 1813.</i></p>
-
- <div lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">
-<p><span class="pad2 smcap">Sire</span>,</p>
-
-<p>La difficulté toujours subsistante des communications a apporté
-dans ma correspondance avec V. M. des retards considérables et
-de longues interruptions dont les résultats ne peuvent être que très
-préjudiciables au service de l’empereur. Depuis plus de deux
-mois j’expédie sans cesse et par tous les moyens possibles ordre
-sur ordre pour faire exécuter les dispositions prescrites par
-S. M. I. et je n’ai aucune certitude que ces ordres soient parvenus
-à leur destination. L’empereur extrêmement mécontent de cet
-état de choses renouvelle sans cesse l’injonction la plus précise de
-le faire cesser, et j’ignore encore en ce moment si les mouvemens
-prescrits se préparent ou s’exécutent, mais je vois toujours d’avantage
-que si des ordres relatifs à cette mesure doivent partir de
-Madrid cela entrainerait une grande perte de tems. L’empereur en
-a été frappé, Il devient donc tout-à-fait indispensable de s’écarter
-un moment de la voie ordinaire et des dispositions par lesquelles
-tout devroit emaner de V. M. au moins pour ce qui concerne le
-nord et l’armée de Portugal. Je prends pour cet effet le parti
-d’adresser directement aux généraux commandant de ces armées
-les ordres d’exécution qui dans d’autres circonstances devraient
-leur parvenir de Madrid, et j’ai l’honneur d’adresser ci-joint à
-V. M. copies des lettres que j’ai écrites au général Reille et au
-général Clauzel pour déterminer enfin l’arrivée des renforts absolument<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_612"></a>[612]</span>
-nécessaires pour soumettre l’Aragon, la Navarre et la
-Biscaye; les details contenus dans ma lettre au général Clauzel
-me dispensent de m’étendre d’avantage sur cet objet important.
-V. M. y verra surtout qu’en prescrivant l’exécution prompte et
-entière des ordres de l’empereur j’ai toujours reservé l’exercise de
-l’autorité supérieure remise entre les mains de V. M. et qu’elle
-conserve également la direction ultérieure des opérations des
-qu’elle pourra les conduire par elle-même.</p>
-
-<p>Toutes mes précédentes dépêches sont d’allieurs assez précises
-sur ce point pour ne de laisser pas doute à cet egard.</p>
- </div>
-
-<hr class="r20" />
-
-<p class="p2 center"><em>The duke of Feltre to the king.</em></p>
-
-<p class="p1 rt">
-<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Paris, 18 Mars, 1813.</i></p>
-
- <div lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">
-<p><span class="pad2 smcap">Sire</span>,</p>
-
-<p>Parmi les lettres dont V.M. m’a honoré, la plus récente de celles
-qui me sont parvenues jusqu’à ce jour est du 1 Fevrier, et je vois
-qu’à cette epoque V. M. n’avait point encore reçu celle que j’ai
-eu l’honneur de lui adresser par ordre de l’empereur le 4 Janvier
-pour l’engager à transferer son quartier général à Valladolid.
-Cette disposition a été renouvellée dans toutes mes dépêches postérieures
-sous les dates de 14, 29 Janvier, 3, 12, 25 Fevrier,
-1, 11 et 12 Mars, sans avoir eu jusqu’à present de certitude que
-mes lettres fussent arrivées à leur destination. Enfin une lettre de
-M. le duc d’Albufera en date 4 Mars me transmit copie de celle
-que V. M. lui a adressée le 23 Fevrier pour le prevenir que
-ma lettre du 4 Janvier est arrivée à Madrid, et qu’on s’y préparait
-à exécuter les dispositions prescrites par l’empereur. Ainsi c’est
-de Valence que j’ai reçu la première nouvelle positive à cet égard,
-et cette circonstance qui dévoile entièrement nôtre situation dans
-le nord d’Espagne est une nouvelle preuve de l’extrême urgence
-des mesures prescrites par l’empereur et de tout le mal que d’inexplicables
-retards ont causé. S. M. I. vient à cette occasion de
-me réitérer l’injonction de faire sentir à V. M. la fausse direction
-qu’ont prise les affaires d’Espagne par le peu de soin qu’on a
-apporté à maintenir les communications avec les frontières. L’empereur
-est etonné qu’on ait si peu compris à Madrid l’extrême
-importance de conserver des communications sûres et rapides avec<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_613"></a>[613]</span>
-la France. Le defaut constant de nouvelles était un avertissement
-assez clair et assez positif de l’impuissance ou se trouvait
-l’armée du nord de proteger la route de Madrid à Bayonne.
-L’état des affaires dans le nord de l’Europe devait plus que jamais
-faire sentir la nécessité de recevoir des nouvelles de Paris et de
-prendre enfin des mesures décisives pour ne pas rester si longuement
-dans un état d’isolement et d’ignorance absolu sur les vues
-et l’intention de l’empereur. V. M. avoit trois armées à sa disposition
-pour rétablir les communications avec l’armée du nord, et
-l’on ne voit pas un mouvement de l’armée de Portugal ou de celle
-du centre qui soit approprié aux circonstances, tandis que l’inaction
-des Anglais permettait de profiter de notre supériorité pour
-chasser les bandes, nettoyer la route, assurer la tranquillité dans
-le pays. L’empereur m’a ordonné de faire connaître sa façon de
-penser sur cet objet au général Reille, auquel j’ai adressé directement
-les ordres de S. M. I. pour les forces qu’il a dû mettre
-sans retard sous les ordres du général Clauzel ainsi que j’ai eu l’honneur
-d’en prévenir V. M. par mes lettres du 29 Janvier, 3 Fevrier
-et 12 Mars. En effet les circonstances rendent cette mesure d’une
-extrême urgence. L’inaction où l’on est resté pendant l’hiver a
-encouragé et propagé l’insurrection. Elle s’etend maintenant de la
-Biscaye, en Catalogne, et l’Aragon exige, pour ainsi dire, le même
-emploi des forces pour la pacifier, que la Biscaye et la Navarre.
-Il est donc de la plus haute importance que V. M. etende ses soins
-sur l’Aragon comme sur les autres provinces du nord de l’Espagne,
-et les évènemens qui se préparent rendront ce soin toujours plus
-nécessaire. D’un côte toutes les bandes chassées de la Biscaye
-et de la Navarre se trouveront bientôt forcées à refluer dans l’Aragon,
-et d’autre part l’évacuation de Cuenca, par résultat du mouvement
-général des armées du centre et du midi priverait le général
-Suchet de toute communication avec V. M. dans un moment ou
-les ennemis se renforcent devant lui d’une manière assez <em>inquiétante</em>.
-Il est donc très important de se procurer une autre ligne
-de communication avec Valence et cette ligne ne peut s’établir
-que par l’Aragon. C’est à votre majesté qu’il appartient de donner
-à cet égard les ordres nécessaires. Il suffira sans doute de lui
-avoir fait connaître l’état de choses et la position du maréchal
-Suchet pour lui faire prendre les déterminations que les circonstances
-rendraient les plus convenables. Il me tarde beaucoup
-d’apprendre enfin de V. M. elle-même l’exécution des ordres de
-l’empereur et de pouvoir satisfaire sur ce point la juste impatience
-de S. M. I.</p>
- </div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_614"></a>[614]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="r20" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<h3 id="NO_XV">No. XV.</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><em>Joseph O’Donnel to general Donkin.</em></p>
-
-<p class="p1 rt">
-<em>Malaga, the 6th December, 1812.</em></p>
-
-<p><span class="pad2 allsmcap">DEAR SIR</span>,</p>
-
-<p>The letter you did me the honour to adress to me on the 6th
-of September has been mislaid all this long time on account of
-my being separated from the armie since the moment I gave up the
-command of it, and it was only last night I had the pleasure of
-receiving it. I feel a great comfort in seingh an officer of your
-reputation affected so kindly with the sorrows which so unlucky
-as undeservedly (I believe) fell upon me as a consequence of my
-shamefull defaite at Castalla. But I beg to be excused if I continue
-this letter in French. I kno you understand it very well
-and I can not explain my toughts so well in English. <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Je crois, M. le
-général, que tout militaire, instruit des faits, et à la vue du malheureux
-champ de bataille de Castalla, ou du plan qui le représente,
-doit faire le même raisonement que vous avez fait, à moins qu’il ne
-soit épris des petites passions et des prejugés qui ne dominent que
-trop souvent les hommes. Je crois l’avoir demontré à l’evidence
-dans mon rapport officiel au gouvernement (que vous devez avoir
-vu imprimmé) accompagné de la carte des environs et des copies
-de toutes les ordres que je donnai la veille du combat. J’aurois
-certainement été vainquer si l’officier qui commandoit les 760
-chevaux, avec deux pièces de 8 à mon aile gauche eut obéi mes
-ordres, on eut seulement tâché de se laisser voir de loin par la
-cavallerie enemie, qui au nombre de 400 chevaux étoit stationée
-dans le village de Viar; mais point du tout, cet officier, au lieu
-de se trouver sur Viar au point du jour de la bataille, pour tenir
-en échec la cavallerie ennemie, pour la battre s’il en trouvoit une
-occasion probable, ou pour la suivre en tout cas, et l’empêcher de
-tomber sur Castalla impunément, comme il lui était très expressément
-ordonné par des ordres écrites qu’il avoue, cet officier alla se
-cacher derriére Villena, et quoiqu’il entendit le canon de Castalla,
-et qu’il fut instruit de la marche des dragons de Viar par la route
-d’Onil, il resta tranquilement en position de l’autre côté de
-Villena jusqu’à passé huit heures du matin. Nous étions déjà
-battus, et trois malheureux bataillons hachés en pièces (quoi-qu’ayant
-repoussé la première charge) quand M. le brigadier<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_615"></a>[615]</span>
-Santistevan se mit en marche de Villena pour venir à mon
-secours. Jugez done, Mons. le général, si j’ay pû empêcher ce
-désastre. Cependant, le public, qui ne peut juger que par les resultats,
-se dechaina d’abord contre moi, et je ne m’en plains pas,
-car cela étoit fort naturel; c’est un malheur attaché à notre profession,
-et que les généraux Espagnols doivent resentir sur touts
-les autres, puisqu’ils font la guerre sans resources, et manquant
-de tout contre un ennimi aguerri qui ne manque de rien; mais je
-me plains des <em>Cortes</em> de la nation, je me plains de ces pères de la
-patrie, qui sachant que j’avois demandé moimême à être jugé par
-un conseille de guerre, out cependant donné le ton à l’opinion
-publique se rependant en invectives contre moi, et même contre mon
-frère le régent, avant de scavoir si je suis en effet coupable. Après
-un pareile traitement, et dans l’etât de misère et de détresse où se
-trouvent nos armées, ou trouvera t’on de généraux qui veuillent
-exposer leur honneur, et en accepter le commandement? Quant à
-moi je servirai ma patrie par devoir et par inclination jusqu’au
-dernier soupir, mais je n’accepterai jamais aucun commandement,
-supposant qu’il me fut offert. Les informations que l’on prend
-relativement à l’affaire en question ne sont pas encore finies, car
-tout va doucement chez nous. J’en attends le resultat ici avec
-l’aveu du gouvernement, et aussitôt que l’on aura prononcé en
-justice j’irai me présenter comme simple volontaire dans une de
-nos armées si l’on ne veut pas m’employer dans ma calité de général
-subalterne. Je vous ay trop ennuyé de mes peines; c’est que j’en
-ay le cœur navré, et que votre bonté m’a excité à m’en soulager
-en vous les racontant. Il me reste encore un espoir flatteur, c’est
-le jugement de touts mes camarades qui out vû de près mes dispositions
-à l’affaire de Castalla, et les efforts que j’avois fait pendant
-sept mois, luttant toujours contre la detresse et le désordre, pour
-préparer à la victoire une armée qui étoit tout-à-fait nulle quand
-je fus obligé a en prendre, malgré moi, le commandement. Je
-m’estimerai heureux, Monsieur le général, de mériter aussi le
-sufrage d’un officier aussi distingué que vous l’êtes, et je vous prie
-d’agréer le temoignage du sincère attachement de votre très humble
-et très obéissant serviteur,</span></p>
-
-<p class="rt">
-<span class="smcap">Josef O’Donell</span>.</p>
-
-<p><i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Monsieur le général Donkin</i>,<br />
-<span class="pad6">&amp;c. &amp;c.</span></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_616"></a>[616]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="r20" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<h3 id="NO_XVI">No. XVI.</h3>
-
-<p class="p1 rt">
-<em>Freneda, February 15th, 1813.</em></p>
-
-<p><span class="pad2 smcap">Sir</span>,</p>
-
-<p>I have received your letter of the 12th instant, regarding the
-conduct of the second Italian regiment, and I entirely concur in
-all the measures you have adopted, and applaud the decision and
-firmness of your conduct. I am prepared likewise to approve of
-whatever you shall determine upon deliberation regarding the
-future state of the men of the regiment, whether to be formed
-into a regiment again, or not; or if so formed, whether to be kept
-as part of the army or sent back to Sicily.</p>
-
-<p>The foreign troops are so much addicted to desertion that they
-are very unfit for our armies, of which they necessarily form too
-large a proportion to the native troops. The evil is aggravated by
-the practice which prevails of enlisting prisoners as well as deserters,
-and Frenchmen as well as other foreigners, notwithstanding
-the repeated orders of government upon the subject. The
-consequence is therefore that a foreign regiment cannot be placed
-in a situation in which the soldiers can desert from it, that they
-do not go off in hundreds; and in the Peninsula they convey to
-the enemy the only intelligence which he can acquire.</p>
-
-<p>With this knowledge I seldom if ever use the foreign British
-troops of this army on the duty of outposts; and whatever you may
-determine regarding the second Italian regiment, I recommend the
-same practice to your consideration.</p>
-
-<p>There is nothing new on this side of the Peninsula. The
-armies are nearly in the stations which they took up in the end of
-November.</p>
-
-<p class="rt">
-<span class="padr6">I have the honour to be,</span><br />
-<span class="padr13">Sir,</span><br />
-<span class="padr2">Your most obedient Servant,</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">Wellington</span>.</p>
-
-<p><em>Major-General Campbell,<br />
-<span class="pad4">&amp;c. &amp;c. &amp;c.</span></em></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_617"></a>[617]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="r20" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<h3 id="NO_XVII">No. XVII.</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><em>Extract of a letter from the marquis of Wellington to lieutenant-general
-sir John Murray, dated Freneda, April 6th,
-1813.</em></p>
-
-<p>“In regard to feeding the Spanish troops in Spain, I have invariably
-set my face against it and have never consented to it or
-done it, even for a day in any instance. My reasons are, first
-that it entails upon Great Britain an expense which the country
-is unable to bear; secondly, that it entails upon the department
-of the army which undertakes it a detail of business, and a burthen
-in respect to transport, and other means to which the departments
-if formed upon any moderate scale must be quite unequal;
-thirdly, I know from experience that if we don’t interfere, the
-Spanish troops, particularly if paid as yours are, and in limited
-numbers, will not want food in any part of Spain, whereas the
-best and most experienced of our departments would not be able
-to draw from the country resources for them. I have already
-consented to the formation of a magazine for the use of general
-Whittingham and general Roche’s corps for a certain number of
-days, if it should be found necessary to give them assistance of
-this description. I can go no farther, and I earnestly recommend
-to you if you give assistance to all, to give over a magazine to
-last a given time, but not to take upon yourself to supply the
-Spanish troops engaged in operations. If, however, you should
-notwithstanding this recommendation take upon yourself to give
-such supplies, I must object, as commander-in-chief of the
-Spanish army, to your giving more than bread to the troops who
-receive pay, as that is positively contrary to the regulations and
-customs of the Spanish army. I recommend to you also to attend
-with caution to the demands of both general Whittingham
-and general Roche, and to observe that in proportion as you will
-comply with their demands, demands will be made upon you by
-general Elio and others, and you will involve yourself in a scale of
-expense and difficulty, which will cramp all your operations, and
-which is quite inconsistent with the views of government on the
-eastern coast of the Peninsula.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_618"></a>[618]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="r20" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<h3 id="NO_XVIII">No. XVIII.</h3>
-
-<p class="pfs90">General state of the French army, April 15, 1812.</p>
-
-<p class="pfs90">Extracted from the Imperial Muster-rolls.</p>
-
-<table class="autotable fs70">
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr" colspan="3">Present under Arms.</td>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="2">Detached.</td>
-<td class="tdc">Hosp.</td>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="2">Total.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">Armée de</td>
-<td class="tdr">Men.</td>
-<td class="tdr">Horses.</td>
-<td class="tdr">Men.</td>
-<td class="tdr">Horses.</td>
-<td class="tdr"></td>
-<td class="tdr">Men.</td>
-<td class="tdr">Horses.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl pad3">Midi</td>
-<td class="tdr">55,797</td>
-<td class="tdr">11,014</td>
-<td class="tdr">2,498</td>
-<td class="tdr">700</td>
-<td class="tdr">6,065</td>
-<td class="tdr">64,360</td>
-<td class="tdr">11,714</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl pad3">Centre</td>
-<td class="tdr">19,148</td>
-<td class="tdr">3,993</td>
-<td class="tdr">144</td>
-<td class="tdr">51</td>
-<td class="tdr">624</td>
-<td class="tdr">19,916</td>
-<td class="tdr">4,044</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl pad3">Portugal</td>
-<td class="tdr">56,937</td>
-<td class="tdr">8,108</td>
-<td class="tdr">4,394</td>
-<td class="tdr">2,278</td>
-<td class="tdr">7,706</td>
-<td class="tdr">69,037</td>
-<td class="tdr">10,386</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl pad3">Ebre</td>
-<td class="tdr">16,830</td>
-<td class="tdr">1,873</td>
-<td class="tdr">21</td>
-<td class="tdr">6</td>
-<td class="tdr">3,425</td>
-<td class="tdr">20,276</td>
-<td class="tdr">1,879</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl pad3">Arragon</td>
-<td class="tdr">14,786</td>
-<td class="tdr">3,269</td>
-<td class="tdr">2,695</td>
-<td class="tdr">658</td>
-<td class="tdr">1,467</td>
-<td class="tdr">18,948</td>
-<td class="tdr">3,927</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl pad3">Catalogne</td>
-<td class="tdr">28,924</td>
-<td class="tdr">1,259</td>
-<td class="tdr">1,163</td>
-<td class="tdr">49</td>
-<td class="tdr">5,540</td>
-<td class="tdr">35,627</td>
-<td class="tdr">1,308</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl pad3">Nord</td>
-<td class="tdrb">48,232</td>
-<td class="tdrb">7,074</td>
-<td class="tdrb">1,309</td>
-<td class="tdr">72</td>
-<td class="tdr">8,677</td>
-<td class="tdr">58,276</td>
-<td class="tdr">7,213</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="bb" colspan="7"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc">Total</td>
-<td class="tdr">240,654</td>
-<td class="tdr">36,590</td>
-<td class="tdr">12,224</td>
-<td class="tdr">3,614</td>
-<td class="tdr">33,504</td>
-<td class="tdr">286,440</td>
-<td class="tdr">40,471</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">Reserve de Bayonne</td>
-<td class="tdr">4,038</td>
-<td class="tdr">157</td>
-<td class="tdr">36</td>
-<td class="tdr">35</td>
-<td class="tdr">865</td>
-<td class="tdr">4,939</td>
-<td class="tdr">192</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="bb" colspan="7"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">General&#160;Total</td>
-<td class="tdr">244,692</td>
-<td class="tdr">36,747</td>
-<td class="tdr">12,260</td>
-<td class="tdr">3,849</td>
-<td class="tdr">34,369</td>
-<td class="tdr">291,370</td>
-<td class="tdr">40,663</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="bb" colspan="7"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">Civic guards attached to the army of the south.</td>
-<td class="tdr">6,497</td>
-<td class="tdr">1,655</td>
-<td class="tdr">” &#160;</td>
-<td class="tdr">” &#160;</td>
-<td class="tdr">258</td>
-<td class="tdr">6,755</td>
-<td class="tdr">1,497</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">Troupes Espagnols.</td>
-<td class="tdr">33,952</td>
-<td class="tdr">525</td>
-<td class="tdr">” &#160;</td>
-<td class="tdr">” &#160;</td>
-<td class="tdr">” &#160;</td>
-<td class="tdr">33,952</td>
-<td class="tdr">525</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="bb" colspan="7"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">Total Espagnols</td>
-<td class="tdr">40,449</td>
-<td class="tdr">2,180</td>
-<td class="tdr">” &#160;</td>
-<td class="tdr">” &#160;</td>
-<td class="tdr">258</td>
-<td class="tdr">40,707</td>
-<td class="tdr">2,022</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="bb" colspan="7"></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-
-<p class="p2 pfs90">General state, May 15, 1812.</p>
-
-<table class="autotable fs70">
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr" colspan="3">Present under Arms.</td>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="2">Detached.</td>
-<td class="tdr">Hosp.</td>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="3">Total.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">Armée de</td>
-<td class="tdr">Men.</td>
-<td class="tdr">Horses.</td>
-<td class="tdr">Men.</td>
-<td class="tdr">Horses.</td>
-<td class="tdr"></td>
-<td class="tdr">Men.</td>
-<td class="tdr">Cav.</td>
-<td class="tdr">Art.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl pad3">Midi</td>
-<td class="tdr">56,031</td>
-<td class="tdr">12,101</td>
-<td class="tdr">2,787</td>
-<td class="tdr">660</td>
-<td class="tdr">4,652</td>
-<td class="tdr">63,470</td>
-<td class="tdr">7,311</td>
-<td class="tdr">4,340</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl pad3">Centre</td>
-<td class="tdr">17,395</td>
-<td class="tdr">4,208</td>
-<td class="tdr">158</td>
-<td class="tdr">37</td>
-<td class="tdr">766</td>
-<td class="tdr">19,203</td>
-<td class="tdr">3,332</td>
-<td class="tdr">420</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl pad3">Portugal</td>
-<td class="tdr">52,618</td>
-<td class="tdr">7,244</td>
-<td class="tdr">9,750</td>
-<td class="tdr">1,538</td>
-<td class="tdr">8,332</td>
-<td class="tdr">70,700</td>
-<td class="tdr">4,481</td>
-<td class="tdr">3,448</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl pad3">Arragon</td>
-<td class="tdr">27,218</td>
-<td class="tdr">4,768</td>
-<td class="tdr">4,458</td>
-<td class="tdr">605</td>
-<td class="tdr">3,701</td>
-<td class="tdr">35,377</td>
-<td class="tdr">2,976</td>
-<td class="tdr">1,980</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl pad3">Catalonia</td>
-<td class="tdr">33,677</td>
-<td class="tdr">1,577</td>
-<td class="tdr">1,844</td>
-<td class="tdr">267</td>
-<td class="tdr">6,009</td>
-<td class="tdr">41,530</td>
-<td class="tdr">1,376</td>
-<td class="tdr">279</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl pad3">Nord</td>
-<td class="tdr">38,771</td>
-<td class="tdr">6,031</td>
-<td class="tdr">2,560</td>
-<td class="tdr">271</td>
-<td class="tdr">7,767</td>
-<td class="tdr">49,098</td>
-<td class="tdr">4,443</td>
-<td class="tdr">1,163</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="bb" colspan="8"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl pad2">Total</td>
-<td class="tdr">225,710</td>
-<td class="tdr">35,929</td>
-<td class="tdr">21,557</td>
-<td class="tdr">3,378</td>
-<td class="tdr">31,227</td>
-<td class="tdr">279,378</td>
-<td class="tdr">23,919</td>
-<td class="tdr">11,630</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">Old Reserve at Bayonne</td>
-<td class="tdr">3,894</td>
-<td class="tdr">221</td>
-<td class="tdr">1,642</td>
-<td class="tdr">” &#160;</td>
-<td class="tdr">964</td>
-<td class="tdr">6,500</td>
-<td class="tdr">207</td>
-<td class="tdr">” &#160;</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">New Reserve at Bayonne</td>
-<td class="tdr">2,598</td>
-<td class="tdr">116</td>
-<td class="tdr">3,176</td>
-<td class="tdr">” &#160;</td>
-<td class="tdr">5</td>
-<td class="tdr">5,769</td>
-<td class="tdr">103</td>
-<td class="tdr">” &#160;</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="bb" colspan="8"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl pad2">General Total</td>
-<td class="tdr">232,202</td>
-<td class="tdr">36,266</td>
-<td class="tdr">26,375</td>
-<td class="tdr">3,378</td>
-<td class="tdr">32,196</td>
-<td class="tdr">291,647</td>
-<td class="tdr">24,229</td>
-<td class="tdr">11,630</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="bb" colspan="8"></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-
-<p class="p2 pfs90">General state of the French Armies, March 15, 1813.</p>
-
-<table class="autotable fs70">
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr" colspan="3">Present under Arms.</td>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="2">Detached.</td>
-<td class="tdr">Hosp.</td>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="3">Total.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">Armée de</td>
-<td class="tdr">Men.</td>
-<td class="tdr">Horses.</td>
-<td class="tdr">Men.</td>
-<td class="tdr">Horses.</td>
-<td class="tdr"></td>
-<td class="tdr">Men.</td>
-<td class="tdr">Cav.</td>
-<td class="tdr">Train.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl pad3">Midi</td>
-<td class="tdr">36,605</td>
-<td class="tdr">6,602</td>
-<td class="tdr">2,060</td>
-<td class="tdr">1,617</td>
-<td class="tdr">7,144</td>
-<td class="tdr">45,809</td>
-<td class="tdr">8,650</td>
-<td class="tdr">2,601</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl pad3">Centre</td>
-<td class="tdr">16,227</td>
-<td class="tdr">1,966</td>
-<td class="tdr">940</td>
-<td class="tdr">76</td>
-<td class="tdr">2,401</td>
-<td class="tdr">19,568</td>
-<td class="tdr">2,790</td>
-<td class="tdr">451</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl pad3">Portugal</td>
-<td class="tdr">34,825</td>
-<td class="tdr">3,654</td>
-<td class="tdr">157</td>
-<td class="tdr">” &#160;</td>
-<td class="tdr">7,731</td>
-<td class="tdr">42,713</td>
-<td class="tdr">6,726</td>
-<td class="tdr">2,149</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl pad3">Arragon</td>
-<td class="tdr">36,315</td>
-<td class="tdr">3,852</td>
-<td class="tdr">55</td>
-<td class="tdr">” &#160;</td>
-<td class="tdr">2,442</td>
-<td class="tdr">38,812</td>
-<td class="tdr">6,123</td>
-<td class="tdr">1,799</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl pad3">Catalonia</td>
-<td class="tdr">27,323</td>
-<td class="tdr">1,109</td>
-<td class="tdr">110</td>
-<td class="tdr">” &#160;</td>
-<td class="tdr">2,013</td>
-<td class="tdr">29,446</td>
-<td class="tdr">1,884</td>
-<td class="tdr">635</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl pad3">Nord</td>
-<td class="tdr">40,476</td>
-<td class="tdr">1,978</td>
-<td class="tdr">41</td>
-<td class="tdr">” &#160;</td>
-<td class="tdr">8,030</td>
-<td class="tdr">48,547</td>
-<td class="tdr">3,171</td>
-<td class="tdr">830</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">Reserve de Bayonne</td>
-<td class="tdr">5,877</td>
-<td class="tdr">55</td>
-<td class="tdr">80</td>
-<td class="tdr">” &#160;</td>
-<td class="tdr">634</td>
-<td class="tdr">6,591</td>
-<td class="tdr">78</td>
-<td class="tdr">21</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="bb" colspan="8"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl pad3">Total</td>
-<td class="tdr">197,648</td>
-<td class="tdr">19,216</td>
-<td class="tdr">3,443</td>
-<td class="tdr">1,693</td>
-<td class="tdr">30,395</td>
-<td class="tdr">231,486</td>
-<td class="tdr">29,422</td>
-<td class="tdr">8,486</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="bb" colspan="8"></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="p1 fs80">The operations and misfortunes of the French prevented any general
-states being sent home between the 15th of March and the 15th of August,
-when a new organization of the armies took place; but the numbers
-given in the narrative of this History are the result of calculations
-founded on the comparison of a variety of documents, and are believed to
-be a very close approximation to the real strength of the armies.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_619"></a>[619]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="r20" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<h3 id="NO_XIX">No. XIX.</h3>
-
-<p class="p2 pfs90">Especial state of the army of Portugal, June 15, 1812.</p>
-
-<p class="p1 pfs90">Head-quarters, Tordesillas.</p>
-
-<table class="autotable fs70">
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr" colspan="5">Present under arms.</td>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="2">Detached.</td>
-<td class="tdr">Hosp.</td>
-<td class="tdr">Total.</td>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="2">Horses.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr" colspan="4">Men.</td>
-<td class="tdr">Horses</td>
-<td class="tdr">Men.</td>
-<td class="tdr">Horses.</td>
-<td class="tdr"></td>
-<td class="tdr">Men.</td>
-<td class="tdr">Cav.</td>
-<td class="tdr">Train.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">1st</td>
-<td class="tdl">Division</td>
-<td class="tdl">Foy</td>
-<td class="tdr">5,138</td>
-<td class="tdr">” &#160;</td>
-<td class="tdr">319</td>
-<td class="tdr">” &#160;</td>
-<td class="tdr">516</td>
-<td class="tdr">5,973</td>
-<td class="tdr">” &#160;</td>
-<td class="tdr">” &#160;</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">2d</td>
-<td class="tdc">do.</td>
-<td class="tdl">Clausel</td>
-<td class="tdr">7,405</td>
-<td class="tdr">” &#160;</td>
-<td class="tdr">678</td>
-<td class="tdr">” &#160;</td>
-<td class="tdr">613</td>
-<td class="tdr">8,696</td>
-<td class="tdr">” &#160;</td>
-<td class="tdr">” &#160;</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">3d</td>
-<td class="tdc">do.</td>
-<td class="tdl">Ferey</td>
-<td class="tdr">5,547</td>
-<td class="tdr">” &#160;</td>
-<td class="tdr">12</td>
-<td class="tdr">” &#160;</td>
-<td class="tdr">926</td>
-<td class="tdr">6,485</td>
-<td class="tdr">” &#160;</td>
-<td class="tdr">” &#160;</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">4th</td>
-<td class="tdc">do.</td>
-<td class="tdl">Sarrut</td>
-<td class="tdr">5,056</td>
-<td class="tdr">” &#160;</td>
-<td class="tdr">214</td>
-<td class="tdr">” &#160;</td>
-<td class="tdr">862</td>
-<td class="tdr">6,132</td>
-<td class="tdr">” &#160;</td>
-<td class="tdr">” &#160;</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">5th</td>
-<td class="tdc">do.</td>
-<td class="tdl">Maucune</td>
-<td class="tdr">5,269</td>
-<td class="tdr">” &#160;</td>
-<td class="tdr">588</td>
-<td class="tdr">” &#160;</td>
-<td class="tdr">1,513</td>
-<td class="tdr">7,370</td>
-<td class="tdr">” &#160;</td>
-<td class="tdr">” &#160;</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">6th</td>
-<td class="tdc">do.</td>
-<td class="tdl">Brennier</td>
-<td class="tdr">5,021</td>
-<td class="tdr">” &#160;</td>
-<td class="tdr">124</td>
-<td class="tdr">” &#160;</td>
-<td class="tdr">720</td>
-<td class="tdr">5,865</td>
-<td class="tdr">” &#160;</td>
-<td class="tdr">” &#160;</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">7th</td>
-<td class="tdc">do.</td>
-<td class="tdl">Thomieres</td>
-<td class="tdr">6,352</td>
-<td class="tdr">61</td>
-<td class="tdr">” &#160;</td>
-<td class="tdr">” &#160;</td>
-<td class="tdr">1,905</td>
-<td class="tdr">8,257</td>
-<td class="tdr">61</td>
-<td class="tdr">” &#160;</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">8th</td>
-<td class="tdc">do.</td>
-<td class="tdl">Bonnet</td>
-<td class="tdr">6,681</td>
-<td class="tdr">139</td>
-<td class="tdr">66</td>
-<td class="tdr">” &#160;</td>
-<td class="tdr">685</td>
-<td class="tdr">7,432</td>
-<td class="tdr">139</td>
-<td class="tdr">” &#160;</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl" colspan="2">Light&#160;Cavalry, 3 escadrons</td>
-<td class="tdl">Curto</td>
-<td class="tdr">1,386</td>
-<td class="tdr">1,398</td>
-<td class="tdr">1,073</td>
-<td class="tdr">324</td>
-<td class="tdr">246</td>
-<td class="tdr">2,705</td>
-<td class="tdr">1,722</td>
-<td class="tdr">” &#160;</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl" colspan="2">Dragoons</td>
-<td class="tdl">Boyer</td>
-<td class="tdr">1,389</td>
-<td class="tdr">1,378</td>
-<td class="tdr">479</td>
-<td class="tdr">358</td>
-<td class="tdr">86</td>
-<td class="tdr">1,954</td>
-<td class="tdr">1,736</td>
-<td class="tdr">” &#160;</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl" colspan="3">Artillery</td>
-<td class="tdr">3,612</td>
-<td class="tdr">2,339</td>
-<td class="tdr">513</td>
-<td class="tdr">258</td>
-<td class="tdr">220</td>
-<td class="tdr">4,345</td>
-<td class="tdr">347</td>
-<td class="tdr">2,148</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl" colspan="3">Genie</td>
-<td class="tdr">414</td>
-<td class="tdr">9</td>
-<td class="tdr">67</td>
-<td class="tdr">7</td>
-<td class="tdr">84</td>
-<td class="tdr">565</td>
-<td class="tdr">” &#160;</td>
-<td class="tdr">12</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl" colspan="3">Equipage</td>
-<td class="tdr">955</td>
-<td class="tdr">1,107</td>
-<td class="tdr">51</td>
-<td class="tdr">44</td>
-<td class="tdr">242</td>
-<td class="tdr">1,251</td>
-<td class="tdr">” &#160;</td>
-<td class="tdr">1,084</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl" colspan="2">Gendarmes&#160;et Infirmerie</td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdr">325</td>
-<td class="tdr">75</td>
-<td class="tdr">” &#160;</td>
-<td class="tdr">” &#160;</td>
-<td class="tdr">15</td>
-<td class="tdr">340</td>
-<td class="tdr">54</td>
-<td class="tdr">” &#160;</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl" colspan="3"></td>
-<td class="bb" colspan="8"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl pad3" colspan="3">Total</td>
-<td class="tdr">54,550</td>
-<td class="tdr">6,506</td>
-<td class="tdr">4,184</td>
-<td class="tdr">991</td>
-<td class="tdr">8,633</td>
-<td class="tdr">67,370</td>
-<td class="tdr">4,059</td>
-<td class="tdr">3,244</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl" colspan="3"></td>
-<td class="bb" colspan="8"></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="p1 fs90">From these 54,550 men, present under arms, must be deducted the
-artillery, engineers, equipages, and garrisons, the officers and sergeants,
-and the losses sustained between the siege of the forts and the battle of
-Salamanca, the result will be about 42,000 sabres and bayonets in the
-battle.</p>
-
-<table class="p2 autotable fs80">
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">Reinforcements en marche de l’armée du nord</td>
-<td class="tdr">1,370</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl pad4">Do. <span class="pad4">de Bayonne</span></td>
-<td class="tdr"><span class="pad4">&#160;</span>12,676</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="p1 fs90"><em>Note.</em>—These troops did not join before the battle of Salamanca.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2 pfs90">Artillery of the army of <ins class="corr" id="tn-619" title="Transcriber’s Note—Original text: 'Portugal, Jnne 15'">
-Portugal, June 15</ins>, 1812, Materiel.</p>
-
-<table class="autotable fs70">
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdc">{</td>
-<td class="tdl wd40">Poid et calibre.</td>
-<td class="tdr">Nombre.</td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdc">{</td>
-<td class="tdl">Canon de 12 lbs.</td>
-<td class="tdr">2</td>
-<td class="tdc">}</td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">Bouches</td>
-<td class="tdc">{</td>
-<td class="tdl pad6">8 do.</td>
-<td class="tdr">20</td>
-<td class="tdc">}</td>
-<td class="tdl">Total&#160;des</td>
-<td class="tdr">60</td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">a feu</td>
-<td class="tdc">{</td>
-<td class="tdl pad6">4 do.</td>
-<td class="tdr">33</td>
-<td class="tdc">}</td>
-<td class="tdl pad3">canons</td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdc">{</td>
-<td class="tdl pad6">3 do.</td>
-<td class="tdr">5</td>
-<td class="tdl">}</td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdc">{</td>
-<td class="tdl">Obusiers de 6 pouces</td>
-<td class="tdr">11</td>
-<td class="tdl">&#160; }</td>
-<td class="tdl">Total&#160;des</td>
-<td class="tdr">14</td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdc">{</td>
-<td class="tdl">Ditto de 4 pouces 3 lignes</td>
-<td class="tdr">3</td>
-<td class="tdl">&#160; }</td>
-<td class="tdl pad3">obusiers</td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr><td colspan="9">&#160;</td></tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl pad6">Total</td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdr bt">74</td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl" colspan="4"><span class="pad2">Venant de l’armée du nord</span><br />
-<span class="fs80">( These guns arrived after the battle. )</span></td>
-<td class="tdr bb">8</td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdr bb">82</td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_620"></a>[620]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="r20" />
-
-<p class="p2 pfs90">Total loss of the army of Portugal from 10th July to 10th of August,
-1812, including the battle of Salamanca. Extracted from the Imperial
-Muster-rolls.</p>
-
-<table class="p1 autotable fs70">
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdc"></td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdc">Tués.</td>
-<td class="tdc">Blessés.</td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdc">{</td>
-<td class="tdl">Duke de Raguse</td>
-<td class="tdc">”</td>
-<td class="tdc">1</td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdc">{</td>
-<td class="tdl">General Clauzel</td>
-<td class="tdc">”</td>
-<td class="tdc">1</td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">Officiers superieurs</td>
-<td class="tdc">{</td>
-<td class="tdl">General Bonnet</td>
-<td class="tdc">”</td>
-<td class="tdc">1</td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdc">{</td>
-<td class="tdl">General Ferrey</td>
-<td class="tdc">1</td>
-<td class="tdc">”</td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdc">{</td>
-<td class="tdl">General Thomieres</td>
-<td class="tdc">1</td>
-<td class="tdc">”</td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdc">{</td>
-<td class="tdl">General&#160;Desgravier&#160;Bertholet</td>
-<td class="tdc">1</td>
-<td class="tdc">”</td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdc"></td>
-<td class="tdl">General Carrie</td>
-<td class="tdc">”</td>
-<td class="tdc">1</td>
-<td class="tdl"><ins class="corr" id="tn-620" title="Transcriber’s Note—Original text: 'Prisoner'">
-Prisonnier</ins>.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdc"></td>
-<td class="tdl">General Menne</td>
-<td class="tdc">”</td>
-<td class="tdc">1</td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">Aide-de-camp du duc de Raguse</td>
-<td class="tdc"></td>
-<td class="tdl">Colonel Richemont</td>
-<td class="tdc">”</td>
-<td class="tdc">1</td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdc"></td>
-<td class="tdl">Le Clerc de Montpree</td>
-<td class="tdc">1</td>
-<td class="tdc">”</td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdc"></td>
-<td class="tdl">Darel</td>
-<td class="tdc">”</td>
-<td class="tdc">1</td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdc"></td>
-<td class="tdl pad4">Total</td>
-<td class="tdc bt bb">Tués&#160;4</td>
-<td class="tdl bt bb" colspan="2">&#160; Blessés&#160;7</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<table class="p2 autotable fs70">
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">Officiers inferieurs et soldats.</td>
-<td class="tdr">Tués ou Pris.</td>
-<td class="tdr">Blessés.</td>
-<td class="tdr">Traineurs.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl pad3">Officiers</td>
-<td class="tdrp wd20">162</td>
-<td class="tdrp wd20">232</td>
-<td class="tdrp wd20">” &#160;</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl pad3">Soldats</td>
-<td class="tdrp">3,867</td>
-<td class="tdrp">7,529</td>
-<td class="tdrp">645</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl pad4">Grande Total</td>
-<td class="tdrp bt bb">4,029</td>
-<td class="tdrp bt bb">7,761</td>
-<td class="tdrp bt bb">645</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<table class="p2 autotable fs70">
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl wd50">Officiers et Soldats</td>
-<td class="tdr">12,435</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">Chevaux</td>
-<td class="tdr">1,190</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">Canons</td>
-<td class="tdr">12</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl" colspan="2">Deux aigles de 22eme et 101eme Regt. de ligne.</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="r20" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<h3 id="NO_XX">No. XX.</h3>
-
-<p class="pfs90">Strength of the Anglo-Portuguese army under Lord Viscount Wellington,
-on the morning of the 22d of July, 1812. Extracted from the original
-morning state.</p>
-
-<p class="fs80"><em>Note.</em>—The numbers are exclusive of officers, sergeants, trumpeters,
-artillery-men, and staff, shewing merely the sabres and bayonets in the
-field.</p>
-
-<table class="p2 autotable fs70">
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">British cavalry, one division,</td>
-<td class="tdc">present under arms</td>
-<td class="tdr">3,314</td>
-<td class="tdl">men</td>
-<td class="tdl">3,388</td>
-<td class="tdl">horses.</td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">British infantry, seven divisions</td>
-<td class="tdc">do.</td>
-<td class="tdr">22,067</td>
-<td class="tdc">”</td>
-<td class="tdc">”</td>
-<td class="tdc">”</td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl">Total British</td>
-<td class="tdr bt"></td>
-<td class="tdl bt"></td>
-<td class="tdl bt"></td>
-<td class="tdl bt"></td>
-<td class="tdr">25,381</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl" colspan="2">D’Urban’s Portuguese cavalry, three<br />regiments, about</td>
-<td class="tdr">1,500</td>
-<td class="tdl" colspan="4">These troops not in the state</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl" colspan="2">Portuguese infantry, seven divisions,<br />and two independent brigades</td>
-<td class="tdr bb">16,017</td>
-<td class="tdr bb"></td>
-<td class="tdr bb"></td>
-<td class="tdr bb"></td>
-<td class="tdr"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdr"></td>
-<td class="tdr"></td>
-<td class="tdr"></td>
-<td class="tdr"></td>
-<td class="tdr"></td>
-<td class="tdr bb">17,517</td>
-</tr>
-<tr><td colspan="7">&#160;</td></tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdr"></td>
-<td class="tdl" colspan="4">Total Anglo-Portuguese</td>
-<td class="tdr">42,898</td>
-</tr>
-<tr><td colspan="7">&#160;</td></tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl" colspan="2">Carlos d’Espana’s Spanish division, about</td>
-<td class="tdr">3,000</td>
-<td class="tdr"></td>
-<td class="tdr"></td>
-<td class="tdr"></td>
-<td class="tdr"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl" colspan="2">Julian Sanchez’ cavalry</td>
-<td class="tdr bb">500</td>
-<td class="tdr bb"></td>
-<td class="tdr bb"></td>
-<td class="tdr bb"></td>
-<td class="tdr"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdr"></td>
-<td class="tdr"></td>
-<td class="tdr"></td>
-<td class="tdr"></td>
-<td class="tdr"></td>
-<td class="tdr bb">3,500</td>
-</tr>
-<tr><td colspan="7">&#160;</td></tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdr"></td>
-<td class="tdl pad3" colspan="4">Sabres and bayonets</td>
-<td class="tdr bb">46,398</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_621"></a>[621]</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="p3 pfs90">No. of British, German, Portuguese, and Spanish guns at the battle of
-Salamanca.</p>
-
-<table class="p1 autotable fs70">
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdr" colspan="2">Weight of calibre.</td>
-<td class="tdr" colspan="2">Number of guns.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">British horse artillery</td>
-<td class="tdr">6 lbs.</td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdr">&#160; &#160; &#160; 18</td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl pad4">Foot <span class="pad2">do.</span></td>
-<td class="tdr">9 lbs.</td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdr">12</td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl pad4">Do. <span class="pad2">do.</span></td>
-<td class="tdr">12 lbs.</td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdr">12</td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">German <span class="pad3">do.</span></td>
-<td class="tdr">9 lbs.</td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdr">6</td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">Portuguese and British brigaded together</td>
-<td class="tdr" colspan="3">24 lb. howitzers &#160; &#160; &#160; 6</td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdr"></td>
-<td class="tdr bt">54</td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">One Spanish battery</td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdr"></td>
-<td class="tdr bb">6</td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl pad10" colspan="2">General total</td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdr bb">60</td>
-<td class="tdl">pieces.</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-
-<hr class="r20" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<h3 id="NO_XXI">No. XXI.</h3>
-
-<p class="p2 pfs90">Official report of the loss of the allies on the Trabancos and Guarena
-rivers, 18th July, 1812.</p>
-
-<table class="p1 autotable fs70">
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="2">Officers.</td>
-<td class="tdr">Sergeants.</td>
-<td class="tdr">Rank and file.</td>
-<td class="tdr">Horses.</td>
-<td class="tdr"></td>
-<td class="tdr"></td>
-<td class="tdl">Men.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdc">{</td>
-<td class="tdrp">3</td>
-<td class="tdrp">3</td>
-<td class="tdrp">56</td>
-<td class="tdrp">59</td>
-<td class="tdl">Killed</td>
-<td class="tdc">}</td>
-<td class="tdrp"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">British</td>
-<td class="tdc">{</td>
-<td class="tdrp">16</td>
-<td class="tdrp">7</td>
-<td class="tdrp">274</td>
-<td class="tdrp">65</td>
-<td class="tdl">Wounded</td>
-<td class="tdc">}</td>
-<td class="tdrp"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdc">{</td>
-<td class="tdrp">”</td>
-<td class="tdrp">”</td>
-<td class="tdrp">27</td>
-<td class="tdrp">21</td>
-<td class="tdl">Missing</td>
-<td class="tdc">}</td>
-<td class="tdrp"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl" colspan="7"></td>
-<td class="tdc">}</td>
-<td class="tdl">&#160; 543</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdc">{</td>
-<td class="tdrp">1</td>
-<td class="tdrp">2</td>
-<td class="tdrp">31</td>
-<td class="tdrp">”</td>
-<td class="tdl">Killed</td>
-<td class="tdc">}</td>
-<td class="tdrp"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">Portuguese</td>
-<td class="tdc">{</td>
-<td class="tdrp">6</td>
-<td class="tdrp">3</td>
-<td class="tdrp">87</td>
-<td class="tdrp">”</td>
-<td class="tdl">Wounded</td>
-<td class="tdc">}</td>
-<td class="tdrp"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdc">{</td>
-<td class="tdrp">”</td>
-<td class="tdrp">”</td>
-<td class="tdrp">27</td>
-<td class="tdrp">”</td>
-<td class="tdl">Missing</td>
-<td class="tdc">}</td>
-<td class="tdrp"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl pad3">Total</td>
-<td class="tdc"></td>
-<td class="tdrp bt bb">26</td>
-<td class="tdrp bt bb">15</td>
-<td class="tdrp bt bb">502</td>
-<td class="tdrp bt bb">145</td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdc"></td>
-<td class="tdrp"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr><td colspan="9">&#160;</td></tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc fs120" colspan="9">Loss of the allies in the battle of Salamanca.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr><td colspan="9">&#160;</td></tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdc">{</td>
-<td class="tdrp">28</td>
-<td class="tdrp">24</td>
-<td class="tdrp">336</td>
-<td class="tdrp">96</td>
-<td class="tdl">Killed</td>
-<td class="tdc">}</td>
-<td class="tdrp"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">British</td>
-<td class="tdc">{</td>
-<td class="tdrp">188</td>
-<td class="tdrp">136</td>
-<td class="tdrp">2,400</td>
-<td class="tdrp">120</td>
-<td class="tdl">Wounded</td>
-<td class="tdc">}</td>
-<td class="tdrp"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdc">{</td>
-<td class="tdrp">”</td>
-<td class="tdrp">”</td>
-<td class="tdrp">74</td>
-<td class="tdrp">37</td>
-<td class="tdl">Missing</td>
-<td class="tdc">}</td>
-<td class="tdrp"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl" colspan="7"></td>
-<td class="tdc">}</td>
-<td class="tdl">5,224</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdc">{</td>
-<td class="tdrp">13</td>
-<td class="tdrp">4</td>
-<td class="tdrp">287</td>
-<td class="tdrp">18</td>
-<td class="tdl">Killed</td>
-<td class="tdc">}</td>
-<td class="tdrp"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">Portuguese</td>
-<td class="tdc">{</td>
-<td class="tdrp">74</td>
-<td class="tdrp">42</td>
-<td class="tdrp">1,436</td>
-<td class="tdrp">13</td>
-<td class="tdl">Wounded</td>
-<td class="tdc">}</td>
-<td class="tdrp"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdc">{</td>
-<td class="tdrp">1</td>
-<td class="tdrp">1</td>
-<td class="tdrp">180</td>
-<td class="tdrp">7</td>
-<td class="tdl">Missing</td>
-<td class="tdc">}</td>
-<td class="tdrp"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl pad3">Total</td>
-<td class="tdc"></td>
-<td class="tdrp bt bb">304</td>
-<td class="tdrp bt bb">207</td>
-<td class="tdrp bt bb">4,713</td>
-<td class="tdrp bt bb">291</td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdc"></td>
-<td class="tdrp"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr><td colspan="9">&#160;</td></tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc fs120" colspan="9">Loss of the German cavalry on the Almar Stream, July 23.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr><td colspan="9">&#160;</td></tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="2">Men and Officers.</td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdr">Horses.</td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdrp" colspan="2">117</td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdrp">117</td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl">&#160; 117</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="p2 pfs90">The British loss by infantry divisions and cavalry brigades.</p>
-
-<table class="p1 autotable fs70">
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl pad3" colspan="3">{ Le Marchant’s brigade,</td>
-<td class="tdc">lost</td>
-<td class="tdc">&#160; Men and officers</td>
-<td class="tdr">105</td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">Cavalry</td>
-<td class="tdl pad3" colspan="3">{ Anson’s <span class="pad4">do.</span></td>
-<td class="tdc">do.</td>
-<td class="tdc">do.</td>
-<td class="tdr">5</td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl pad3" colspan="3">{ Vr. Alten’s <span class="pad3">do.</span></td>
-<td class="tdl">do.</td>
-<td class="tdc">do.</td>
-<td class="tdr">31</td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr><td colspan="8">&#160;</td></tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl" colspan="2">{ 1st Division</td>
-<td class="tdl">General Campbell</td>
-<td class="tdc">lost</td>
-<td class="tdc">&#160; Men and officers</td>
-<td class="tdr">69</td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl">{ 3d</td>
-<td class="tdl">do.</td>
-<td class="tdl">General Pakenham</td>
-<td class="tdl">do.</td>
-<td class="tdc">do.</td>
-<td class="tdr">456</td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl">{ 4th</td>
-<td class="tdl">do.</td>
-<td class="tdl">General Cole</td>
-<td class="tdl">do.</td>
-<td class="tdc">do.</td>
-<td class="tdr">537</td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">Infantry</td>
-<td class="tdl">{ 5th</td>
-<td class="tdl">do.</td>
-<td class="tdl">General Leith</td>
-<td class="tdl">do.</td>
-<td class="tdc">do.</td>
-<td class="tdr">464</td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl">{ 6th</td>
-<td class="tdl">do.</td>
-<td class="tdl">General Clinton</td>
-<td class="tdl">do.</td>
-<td class="tdc">do.</td>
-<td class="tdr">1,198</td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl">{ 7th</td>
-<td class="tdl">do.</td>
-<td class="tdl">General S. Hope</td>
-<td class="tdl">do.</td>
-<td class="tdc">do.</td>
-<td class="tdr">119</td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl">{ Light</td>
-<td class="tdl">do.</td>
-<td class="tdl">General C. Alten</td>
-<td class="tdl">do.</td>
-<td class="tdc">do.</td>
-<td class="tdr">29</td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl pad3" colspan="2">Artillery</td>
-<td class="tdl">General Framingham</td>
-<td class="tdl">do.</td>
-<td class="tdc">do.</td>
-<td class="tdr">14</td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl" colspan="7"></td>
-<td class="tdl bt bb">3,027</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_622"></a>[622]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="r20" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<h3 id="NO_XXII">No. XXII.</h3>
-
-<p class="p1 pfs90">Strength of the Anglo-Portuguese army at Vittoria. Extracted from the
-morning state of the 19th June, 1813.</p>
-
-<table class="p1 autotable fs70">
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdr"></td>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="2">Total.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdc">Present under arms.</td>
-<td class="tdc">On command.</td>
-<td class="tdc">Present.</td>
-<td class="tdc">On command.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">British Cavalry</td>
-<td class="tdrqq">7,791</td>
-<td class="tdrq">851</td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">Portuguese do.</td>
-<td class="tdrqq">1,452</td>
-<td class="tdrq">225</td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl pad3">Total cavalry</td>
-<td class="tdl bt"></td>
-<td class="tdl bt"></td>
-<td class="tdrp">9,243</td>
-<td class="tdrp">1,076</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">British infantry</td>
-<td class="tdrqq">33,658</td>
-<td class="tdrq">1,771</td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">Portuguese do.</td>
-<td class="tdrqq">23,905</td>
-<td class="tdrq">1,038</td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl pad3">Total infantry</td>
-<td class="tdl bt"></td>
-<td class="tdl bt"></td>
-<td class="tdrp">57,563</td>
-<td class="tdrp">2,809</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl pad6" colspan="2">Sabres and bayonets</td>
-<td class="tdrp bt">66,806</td>
-<td class="tdrp bt">3,885</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl pad3" colspan="3">Deduct the 6th division left at Medina de Pomar</td>
-<td class="tdrp">6,320</td>
-<td class="tdrp"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl pad6" colspan="2">Sabres and bayonets</td>
-<td class="tdrp bt">60,486</td>
-<td class="tdrp bt"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr><td colspan="5">&#160;</td></tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl pad3">Spanish&#160;Auxiliaries.</td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl">{ Morillo’s division</td>
-<td class="tdr">about 3,000</td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">Infantry</td>
-<td class="tdl">{ Giron’s &#160; &#160; do.</td>
-<td class="tdr">do. 12,000</td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl">{ Carlos d’Espagna’s &#160;do.</td>
-<td class="tdr">do. &#160; 3,000</td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl">{ Longa’s &#160;&#160; do.</td>
-<td class="tdr">do. &#160; 3,300</td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">Cavalry</td>
-<td class="tdl">Penne Villemur</td>
-<td class="tdr">do. &#160; 1,000</td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl">Julian Sanchez</td>
-<td class="tdr">do. &#160; 1,000</td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdr"></td>
-<td class="tdrp">23,000</td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdr">Grand Total</td>
-<td class="tdr"></td>
-<td class="tdrp bt bb">83,486</td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-
-<p class="p3 pfs90">No. of Anglo-Portuguese guns at the battle of Vittoria.</p>
-
-<p class="p1 pfs90"><span class="smcap">Colonel A. Dickson</span> commanding.</p>
-
-<table class="p1 autotable fs70">
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="2">British horse artillery</td>
-<td class="tdl">9 lbs.</td>
-<td class="tdr">45</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc">Do.</td>
-<td class="tdc">do.</td>
-<td class="tdl">6 lbs.</td>
-<td class="tdr">30</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc">Do.</td>
-<td class="tdc">do.</td>
-<td class="tdl">5½ inch howitzers</td>
-<td class="tdr">15</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc"></td>
-<td class="tdc"></td>
-<td class="tdl pad2">Total</td>
-<td class="tdr bt bb">90</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="4">No Spanish guns set down in the return. Number unknown.</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<p class="p4 pfs80">END OF VOL. V.</p>
-
-<p class="p4 pfs70">MARCHANT, PRINTER, INGRAM-COURT, FENCHURCH-STREET.</p>
-
-
-<div class="footnotes"><h2>FOOTNOTES:</h2>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1" href="#FNanchor_1" class="label">[1]</a> In a recent number of the “Quarterly Review,” the writer of an article
-upon the correspondence of Louis the XVIII. quotes me as saying that Massena
-had <em>one hundred and thirty-five thousand men</em> under his orders, as if he had invaded
-Portugal with an army of that amount, whereas I have expressly said
-that he invaded Portugal with <em>sixty-five thousand</em>, the rest being extended as far
-as Biscay. The assertion of the Reviewer is therefore essentially false with the
-appearance of truth. The same writer, while rebuking the Editor of the Correspondence
-for ignorance, asserts, that the battle of Busaco was fought between
-the 9th of October and the 5th of November! It was fought on the 27th of
-September.</p>
-
-<p>Another writer in the same No. treating of Professor Drumann’s work,
-speaks of “<em>following</em> an impulse which is from <em>behind</em>,” a figure of speech
-which must appear singularly felicitous to those who have watched a puppy dog
-chasing his own tail; but your Quarterly Reviewers are your only men for accuracy
-of fact and expression!</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_2" href="#FNanchor_2" class="label">[2]</a> These numbers are somewhat below those I have assigned to the French
-army; my calculation was made from the imperial muster-rolls, but the difference
-may be easily accounted for by the length of time which elapsed when
-marshal Jourdan wrote this letter. His numbers are evidently from memory, and
-probably he did not mean to include the king’s guards and Spaniards.</p>
-
-</div>
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<p class="center">
-<span class="pfs70">PUBLISHED BY</span><br />
-<span class="pfs120 lsp2 smcap">T. and W. BOONE</span>,<br />
-<span class="pfs80">29, <em>New Bond-street</em>.</span><br />
-</p>
-
-<hr class="r30" />
-
-<p class="center">
-<span class="pfs90 lsp2">A REPLY TO</span><br />
-<span class="pfs120">LORD STRANGFORD’S “OBSERVATIONS”</span><br />
-<span class="pfs60">ON SOME PASSAGES IN</span><br />
-<span class="pfs70">COLONEL NAPIER’S HISTORY OF THE WAR</span><br />
-<span class="pfs70 lsp2">IN THE PENINSULA.</span><br />
-<span class="pfs100">BY COLONEL NAPIER, C.B.</span><br />
-<span class="pfs80">Second Edition, 8vo. price 1s.</span><br />
-</p>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<p class="center">
-<span class="pfs100">A REPLY TO VARIOUS OPPONENTS,</span><br />
-<span class="pfs60">PARTICULARLY TO</span><br />
-<span class="pfs70">“<em>STRICTURES ON COLONEL NAPIER’S HISTORY OF THE</em></span><br />
-<span class="pfs70"><em>WAR IN THE PENINSULA</em>:”</span><br />
-<span class="pfs70">Together with</span><br />
-<span class="pfs60">OBSERVATIONS ILLUSTRATING SIR JOHN MOORE’S CAMPAIGNS.</span><br />
-<span class="pfs80">BY COLONEL NAPIER, C.B.</span><br />
-<span class="pfs70">8vo. price 2s.</span><br />
-</p>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<p class="center">
-<span class="pfs100">COL. NAPIER’S JUSTIFICATION OF HIS</span><br />
-<span class="pfs100">THIRD VOLUME,</span><br />
-<span class="pfs60">FORMING A</span><br />
-<span class="pfs90">SEQUEL TO HIS REPLY TO VARIOUS OPPONENTS,</span><br />
-<span class="pfs60">AND CONTAINING SOME</span><br />
-<span class="pfs70"><em>NEW AND CURIOUS FACTS RELATIVE TO</em></span><br />
-<span class="pfs80">THE BATTLE OF ALBUERA.</span><br />
-<span class="pfs70">8vo. price 1s. 6d.</span><br />
-</p>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<p class="center">
-<span class="pfs90">A LETTER TO</span><br />
-<span class="pfs100">GENERAL LORD VISCOUNT BERESFORD,</span><br />
-<span class="pfs60">BEING AN ANSWER TO</span><br />
-<span class="pfs90">HIS LORDSHIP’S ASSUMED REFUTATION OF</span><br />
-<span class="pfs70"><em>COLONEL NAPIER’S JUSTIFICATION OF HIS THIRD VOLUME</em>.</span><br />
-<span class="pfs70">BY COLONEL NAPIER, C.B.</span><br />
-<span class="pfs70">In 8vo. price 1s. 6d.</span><br />
-</p>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<p class="center">
-<span class="pfs100">COUNTER-REMARKS TO</span><br />
-<span class="pfs90 lsp2">MR. DUDLEY MONTAGU PERCEVAL’S</span><br />
-<span class="pfs120 lsp2">REMARKS</span><br />
-<span class="pfs70">UPON SOME PASSAGES IN COLONEL NAPIER’S FOURTH VOLUME</span><br />
-<span class="pfs70">OF HIS HISTORY OF THE PENINSULAR WAR.</span><br />
-<span class="pfs70">In 8vo. price 1s. 6d.</span><br />
-</p>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<p class="center">
-<span class="pfs70">In the Press, in one vol. 8vo.</span><br />
-<span class="pfs100">REMARKS ON MILITARY LAW</span><br />
-<span class="pfs60">AND THE</span><br />
-<span class="pfs90 lsp3">PUNISHMENT OF FLOGGING.</span><br />
-<span class="pfs60">BY</span><br />
-<span class="pfs80">COLONEL CHARLES JAMES NAPIER, C.B.</span><br />
-</p>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<p class="center">
-<span class="pfs120 lsp2">COLONIZATION;</span><br />
-<span class="pfs60">PARTICULARLY</span><br />
-<span class="pfs100 lsp2">IN SOUTHERN AUSTRALIA:</span><br />
-<span class="pfs60">WITH SOME REMARKS ON</span><br />
-<span class="pfs80">SMALL FARMS AND OVER POPULATION.</span><br />
-<span class="pfs90 smcap">By COLONEL CHARLES JAMES NAPIER, C.B.</span><br />
-<span class="pfs70">Author of “The Colonies; particularly the Ionian Islands.”</span><br />
-<span class="pfs70">In One vol. 8vo. price 9<em>s.</em> boards.</span><br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="fs70">“We earnestly recommend the book to all who feel an interest in the
-welfare of the people.”—<cite>Sun.</cite></p>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<p class="center">
-<span class="pfs70">In One Volume, post 8vo. price 10<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></span><br />
-<span class="pfs135 lsp3">RANDOM SHOTS</span><br />
-<span class="pfs120 lsp">FROM A RIFLEMAN.</span><br />
-<span class="pfs60">BY</span><br />
-<span class="pfs100">CAPTAIN JOHN KINCAID, <span class="smcap">First Battalion</span>,</span><br />
-<span class="pfs70"><cite>Author of “Adventures in the Rifle Brigade.”</cite></span><br />
-</p>
-
-<div class="fs70">
-<p>“It is one of the most pithy, witty, soldier-like, and pleasant books
-in existence.”—<cite>United Service Journal.</cite></p>
-
-<p>“The present volume is to the full as pleasant, and, what is still more
-strange, as original as the last. Criticism would become a sinecure if
-many such volumes were written: all left for us is to admire and recommend.”—<cite>New
-Monthly Magazine.</cite></p>
-
-<p>“If you have military adventures to relate, take pen in hand, and
-relate them in the pleasant, cheerful, and agreeable manner, in which
-John Kincaid, the prince of adjutants and good fellows, relates his.
-Read his <cite>Random Shots</cite>, in order to give you an idea of such matters,
-for few there are who have seen more shots fired than the gallant captain
-of the rifles.”—<cite>Fraser’s Magazine.</cite></p>
-
-<p>“The present volume is likely to add to his reputation. It is a useful
-appendix to the larger works of Napier and other military commentators.
-It is never dull, tedious, technical, or intricate.”—<cite>Times.</cite></p>
-
-<p>“Those who have read Captain Kincaid’s Adventures in the Rifle
-Brigade will seize this volume with avidity, and having dashed through
-it, will lay it down with only one feeling of regret—that it is not longer.”—<cite>News.</cite></p>
-
-<p>“His book is full of genuine humour, without one particle of the
-trickery sometimes resorted to for the purpose of supplying the place of
-wit.”—<cite>Sun.</cite></p>
-
-<p>“This is a most racy, spiritedly sketchy performance.”—<cite>Court Journal.</cite></p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<p class="center">
-<span class="pfs70">In Two Volumes, post 8vo. price 21<em>s.</em></span><br />
-<span class="pfs100 lsp3">ADMIRAL NAPIER’S</span><br />
-<span class="pfs60">ACCOUNT OF THE</span><br />
-<span class="pfs120 lsp2">WAR IN PORTUGAL</span><br />
-<span class="pfs60">BETWEEN</span><br />
-<span class="pfs90 lsp2">DON PEDRO AND DON MIGUEL,</span><br />
-<span class="pfs60">WITH PLANS OF HIS ACTION OFF</span><br />
-<span class="pfs80">CAPE ST. VINCENT.</span><br />
-</p>
-
-<div class="fs70">
-<p>“An excellent and spirit-stirring book—plain, honest, and straightforward—the
-very stuff of which the web of history alone should be
-composed. This is indeed an honest, fair, and impartial history.”—<cite>Morning
-Chronicle.</cite></p>
-
-<p>“In spirit and in keeping, from beginning to end, Admiral Napier’s
-‘War in Portugal’ is the happiest picture we could conceive of the hero
-of the battle off Cape St. Vincent—its especial excellence consisting in a
-regardless bluntness of manner and language that is quite admirable and
-delightful.”—<cite>Monthly Review.</cite></p>
-
-<p>“His work will create a fresh interest in events, which, before reading,
-we thought impossible.”—<cite>Naval and Military Gazette.</cite></p>
-
-<p>“It is Cæsar’s Commentaries in the first person.”—<cite>Spectator.</cite></p>
-
-<p>“Candid to a degree, and sincere as a sailor’s will. This is the very
-stuff of which history should be composed.”—<cite>Bell’s Messenger.</cite></p>
-
-<p>“If Admiral Napier be not distinguished by the common-place facilities
-of authorship, he possesses the higher qualities of truth, discretion,
-and clear-sightedness, in no slight degree.”—<cite>Atlas.</cite></p>
-
-<p>“In speaking of himself and his deeds, he has hit the just and
-difficult medium—shewing his real feelings, yet steering clear of affected
-modesty on the one hand, and of overweening modesty on the other.”—<cite>Tait’s
-Magazine.</cite></p>
-
-<p>“This is a very graphic account of the affairs in which the gallant
-author figured so nobly, and added fresh lustre to the name of Napier.”—<cite>News.</cite></p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<p class="center">
-<span class="pfs70">In foolscap 8vo. price 1<em>s.</em></span><br />
-<span class="pfs120">THE NURSERY GOVERNESS;</span><br />
-<span class="pfs90 lht"><span class="smcap">By ELIZABETH NAPIER</span>,</span><br />
-<span class="pfs70">Published after her Death by her Husband, Col. C. J. Napier, C.B.</span><br />
-</p>
-
-<div class="fs70">
-<p>“Hear the instructions of thy father, and forsake not the law of thy
-mother.”—<em>Proverbs</em>, ch. i. v. 8.</p>
-
-<p>“This is an admirable little book.”—<cite>True Sun.</cite></p>
-
-<p>“The excellent instructions laid down by Mrs. Napier will, we have
-no doubt, prove a ‘rich legacy’ not only to her own children, but to those
-in many a nursery.”—<cite>Liverpool Chronicle.</cite></p>
-
-<p>“Not only the nursery-governess, but the mother and daughter,
-especially in the higher walks of life, may read it with advantage.”—<cite>Atlas.</cite></p>
-
-<p>“We are so convinced of its utility, that we would strongly recommend
-it to the diligent study of every female who has the care of a family,
-either as a mother or governess.”—<cite>Sun.</cite></p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<p class="center">
-<span class="pfs70">In One Volume, post 8vo. price 10<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em> boards,</span><br />
-<span class="pfs90 lht">NARRATIVE OF</span><br />
-<span class="pfs90 lht">EVENTS IN THE SOUTH OF FRANCE,</span><br />
-<span class="pfs80 lht">And of the ATTACK ON NEW ORLEANS, in 1814 &amp; 1815.</span><br />
-<span class="pfs90 lht">By CAPT. I. H. COOKE, 43d Regt.</span><br />
-</p>
-
-<div class="fs70">
-<p>“This clever and fearless account of the attack on New Orleans is
-penned by one of the ‘occupation;’ whose soldier-like view and keen
-observation during the period of the stirring events he so well relates,
-has enabled him to bring before the public the ablest account that has
-yet been given of that ill-fated and disgraceful expedition, and also to
-rescue the troops who were employed on it from those degrading reflections
-which have hitherto unjustly been insinuated against them.”—<cite>Gentleman’s
-Magazine.</cite></p>
-
-<p>“We wish earnestly to call the attention of military men to the campaign
-before New Orleans. It is fraught with a fearful interest, and
-fixes upon the mind reflections of almost every hue. Captain Cooke’s
-relation is vivid; every evolution is made as clear to the eye as if we
-had been present, and the remarks, we think, are eminently judicious.
-The book must be generally read,” &amp;c.—<cite>Metropolitan.</cite></p>
-
-<p>“It is full of good feeling, and it abounds with sketches of the service.”—<cite>Sunday
-Herald.</cite></p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<p class="center">
-<span class="pfs120 lsp3">SKETCHES IN SPAIN,</span><br />
-<span class="pfs70 lht">During the Years 1829-30-31 and 32;</span><br />
-<span class="pfs70">Containing Notices of some Districts very little known; of the Manners of
-the People, Government, Recent Changes, Commerce, Fine Arts,
-and Natural History.</span><br />
-<span class="pfs90 lht">BY CAPTAIN S. E. COOK, R.N. K.T.S. F.G.S.</span><br />
-<span class="pfs70">Two vol. 8vo. price 21<em>s.</em></span><br />
-</p>
-
-<div class="fs70">
-<p>“Volumes of great value and attraction; we would say, in a word,
-they afford us the most complete account of Spain in every respect which
-has issued from the press.”—<cite>Literary Gazette.</cite></p>
-
-<p>“The value of the book is in its matter and its facts. If written upon
-any country it would have been useful, but treating of one like Spain,
-about which we know almost nothing, but of which it is desirable to
-know so much, Captain Cook’s Sketches must be considered an acquisition
-to the library.”—<cite>Spectator.</cite></p>
-
-<p>“These volumes comprise every point worthy of notice, and the whole
-is so interspersed with lively adventure and description; so imbued with
-a kindly spirit of good-nature, courting and acknowledging attention, as
-to render it attractive reading.”—<cite>United Service Gazette.</cite></p>
-
-<p>“No one could either pretend to write or converse upon this country
-without preparing himself by a previous perusal of this instructive
-work.”—<cite>Metropolitan.</cite></p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<p class="center">
-<span class="pfs70">Just Published, in post 8vo. price 5s.</span><br />
-<span class="pfs90">RECOLLECTIONS AND REFLECTIONS</span><br />
-<span class="pfs70">Relative of the Duties of Troops composing the advanced Corps of the Army,</span><br />
-<span class="pfs80"><span class="smcap">By LIEUTENANT-COLONEL I. LEACH</span>, C.B.</span><br />
-<span class="pfs70">Late of the Rifle Brigade.</span><br />
-<span class="pfs70">Author of “Rough Sketches of the Life of an Old Soldier.”</span><br />
-</p>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<p class="center">
-<span class="pfs90">THE HISTORY</span><br />
-<span class="pfs60">OF THE</span><br />
-<span class="pfs120 lsp2">KING’S GERMAN LEGION,</span><br />
-<span class="pfs60">FROM THE PERIOD OF ITS ORGANIZATION IN 1803, TO THAT OF ITS
-DISSOLUTION IN 1816.</span><br />
-<span class="pfs70"><em>Compiled from Manuscript Documents.</em></span><br />
-<span class="pfs80">By N. LUDLOW BEAMISH, <span class="smcap">Esq.</span> F.R.S. late Major unattached.</span><br />
-<span class="pfs70">Vol. I. 8vo. with coloured plates; price 20<em>s.</em> boards; to be completed in
-two volumes.</span><br />
-</p>
-
-<div class="fs70">
-<p>“The work is not like others we could name—a mere compilation
-from newspapers and magazines. Major Beamish has left no source of
-information unexplored; and the access he obtained to manuscript journals
-has enabled him to intersperse his general narrative with interesting
-personal anecdotes, that render this volume as delightful for those who
-read for amusement, as those who read for profit.”—<cite>Athenæum.</cite></p>
-
-<p>“We are altogether much pleased with the volume, and heartily recommend
-it to the British public.”—<cite>Literary Gazette.</cite></p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<p class="center">
-<span class="pfs80">MEMOIR</span><br />
-<span class="pfs60">BY</span><br />
-<span class="pfs80 lsp2">GENERAL SIR HEW DALRYMPLE, BART.</span><br />
-<span class="pfs60">OF HIS<br />
-PROCEEDINGS AS CONNECTED WITH THE AFFAIRS OF SPAIN,<br />
-AND THE</span><br />
-<span class="pfs80 lsp2">COMMENCEMENT OF THE PENINSULAR WAR.</span><br />
-<span class="pfs70">In one vol. 8vo. price 9<em>s.</em> boards.</span><br />
-</p>
-
-<div class="fs70">
-<p>“These volumes, the work of a gentleman of high and varied accomplishments,
-whose opportunities of observation have been unusually
-extensive and well-improved, will command and repay attention. They
-contain by far the best account of Spain which has yet issued from the
-press.”—<cite>United Service Gazette.</cite></p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<p class="center">
-<span class="pfs90">AN ESSAY ON THE</span><br />
-<span class="pfs80 lht">PRINCIPLES AND CONSTRUCTION OF</span><br />
-<span class="pfs100 lsp2 lht">MILITARY BRIDGES,</span><br />
-<span class="pfs60">AND THE PASSAGE OF RIVERS IN MILITARY OPERATIONS.</span><br />
-<span class="pfs80 lht">BY MAJOR-GENERAL SIR HOWARD DOUGLAS, BART.</span><br />
-<span class="pfs60">K.S.C., D.C.L., F.R.S., &amp;c. &amp;c.</span><br />
-<span class="pfs70">The Second Edition, containing much additional Matter and Plates,<br />
-8vo. price 20<em>s.</em> boards.</span><br />
-</p>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<p class="center">
-<span class="pfs70">In 8vo. price 2<em>s.</em></span><br />
-<span class="pfs120 lht">PRUSSIA IN 1833;</span><br />
-<span class="pfs60">ORGANIZATION OF THE ARMY OF PRUSSIA, AND HER CIVIL INSTITUTIONS.</span><br />
-<span class="pfs70">Translated from the French by M. de Chambray. With an Appendix by<br />
-General de Caraman.</span><br />
-</p>
-
-<div class="fs70">
-<p>“We would recommend to military readers in general, and especially
-to the authorities who have the destiny of the army in their hands, an
-attentive perusal of this work. The public will learn from it that the
-army in Prussia, hitherto supposed to be the worst paid force, is, in fact,
-better dealt with than is the case ‘<em>with the best paid army in Europe</em>.’”—<cite>United
-Service Journal.</cite></p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<p class="center">
-<span class="pfs70"><em>In the Press</em>,</span><br />
-<span class="pfs100 lht">THE CAMPAIGNS OF DON PEDRO</span><br />
-<span class="pfs90 lht">IN PORTUGAL,</span><br />
-<span class="pfs70">From the Landing of the Constitutional Army to the Convention of<br />
-Evora Monte, and subsequent Disbanding of the Armies.</span><br />
-<span class="pfs90 smcap lht">By GENERAL ANTHONY BACON.</span><br />
-</p>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<p class="center">
-<span class="pfs70">Immediately will be Published, in one vol. 8vo.</span><br />
-<span class="pfs90 lht">THE ADVENTURES OF</span><br />
-<span class="pfs120 lsp2 lht">CAPTAIN JOHN PATTERSON,</span><br />
-<span class="pfs70">OF THE 50th, OR QUEEN’S OWN REGIMENT.</span><br />
-<span class="pfs70"><em>With Notices of the Officers and of the Regiment from 1807 to 1821.</em></span><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<div class="p4 transnote">
-<a id="TN"></a>
-<p><strong>TRANSCRIBER’S NOTE</strong></p>
-
-<p>Obvious typographical errors and punctuation errors have been
-corrected after careful comparison with other occurrences within
-the text and consultation of external sources.</p>
-
-<p>Some hyphens in words have been silently removed, some added,
-when a predominant preference was found in the original book.</p>
-
-<p>Some occurrences of upper-case titles (such as Lord, Sir, General)
-have been made lower-case for consistency.</p>
-
-<p>To save space in the wide tables in Appendix Notes XVIII and XIX,
-the headings ‘Hospital.’ ‘Cavalry.’ and ‘Artillery.’ have been
-abbreviated to ‘Hosp.’ ‘Cav.’ and ‘Art.’.</p>
-
-<p>To save space in a table in Note XIX the sentence ‘These guns arrived after the battle.’
-has been moved from the right of the number ‘8’ to the left of it.</p>
-
-<p>In those sections of the Appendix that are French documents,
-incorrect grammar, spelling and accents have been left unchanged.</p>
-
-<p>In notes XVIII-XXII of the Appendix some of the printed totals
-are incorrect; these have been left as printed.</p>
-
-<p>Except for those changes noted below, all misspellings in the text,
-and inconsistent or archaic usage, have been retained.</p>
-
-<p>
-<a href="#tn-iii">Pg iii:</a> The anchor for the first Footnote was missing; it has been
-placed at the end of the paragraph “... shall now learn.”<br />
-<a href="#tn-vii">Pg vii:</a> ‘2º.’ inserted in front of ‘<em>Battle of Busaco.</em>’.<br />
-<a href="#tn-xlii">Pg xlii:</a> ‘have been mistated’ replaced by ‘have been misstated’.<br />
-<a href="#tn-lxiv">Pg lxiv:</a> ‘for tho letter’ replaced by ‘for the letter’.<br />
-<a href="#tn-lxxiv">Pg lxxiv:</a> ‘be here meaned’ replaced by ‘be here meant’.<br />
-<a href="#tn-lxxv">Pg lxxv:</a> ‘Holland combated’ replaced by ‘Holland combatted’.<br />
-<a href="#tn-lxxvii">Pg lxxvii:</a> ‘in underminig those’ replaced by ‘in undermining those’.<br />
-<a href="#tn-20">Pg 20:</a> ‘Castello’ replaced by ‘Castelo’. Also on pg 338 and pg 521.<br />
-<a href="#tn-37">Pg 37:</a> ‘instead of faling’ replaced by ‘instead of falling’.<br />
-<a href="#tn-72">Pg 72:</a> ‘to war down’ replaced by ‘to wear down’.<br />
-<a href="#tn-100">Pg 100:</a> ‘Appendix No. 1, Section 1.’ replaced by ‘Appendix No. 18.’.<br />
-<a href="#tn-139">Pg 139:</a> ‘on the sea-bord’ replaced by ‘on the sea-board’.<br />
-<a href="#tn-165">Pg 165:</a> ‘Ciudad Rodigo road’ replaced by ‘Ciudad Rodrigo road’.<br />
-<a href="#tn-196">Pg 196:</a> ‘from Valladodid in’ replaced by ‘from Valladolid in’.<br />
-<a href="#tn-205">Pg 205:</a> ‘the disputes betwen’ replaced by ‘the disputes between’.<br />
-<a href="#tn-214">Pg 214:</a> ‘the aid-de-camp of’ replaced by ‘the aide-de-camp of’.<br />
-<a href="#tn-216">Pg 216:</a> In the Sidenote: ‘Sarsfield’ replaced by ‘Sarzfield’.<br />
-<a href="#tn-228">Pg 228:</a> In the Sidenote: ‘official re-’ replaced by ‘official report’.<br />
-<a href="#tn-238">Pg 238:</a> ‘the aid-du-camp of’ replaced by ‘the aide-de-camp of’.<br />
-<a href="#tn-267">Pg 267:</a> ‘and pallisaded work’ replaced by ‘and palisaded work’.<br />
-<a href="#tn-283">Pg 283:</a> ‘army of Porugal’ replaced by ‘army of Portugal’.<br />
-<a href="#tn-293">Pg 293:</a> ‘had place at’ replaced by ‘had taken place at’.<br />
-<a href="#tn-318">Pg 318:</a> ‘wanton villany’ replaced by ‘wanton villainy’.<br />
-<a href="#tn-340">Pg 340:</a> ‘the last compaign’ replaced by ‘the last campaign’.<br />
-<a href="#tn-398">Pg 398:</a> ‘the militaay chest’ replaced by ‘the military chest’.<br />
-<a href="#tn-399">Pg 399:</a> ‘the preceedings of’ replaced by ‘the proceedings of’.<br />
-<a href="#tn-405">Pg 405:</a> ‘partisans of the’ replaced by ‘partizans of the’.<br />
-<a href="#tn-418">Pg 418:</a> ‘the Englsh general’ replaced by ‘the English general’.<br />
-<a href="#tn-419">Pg 419:</a> ‘court-martials for’ replaced by ‘courts-martial for’.<br />
-<a href="#tn-426">Pg 426:</a> ‘the multidude, and’ replaced by ‘the multitude, and’.<br />
-<a href="#tn-499">Pg 499:</a> ‘Bilbao, immedately’ replaced by ‘Bilbao, immediately’.<br />
-<a href="#tn-564">Pg 564:</a> ‘retrogade movement’ replaced by ‘retrograde movement’.<br />
-<a href="#tn-575">Pg 575:</a> ‘defensive sytem is’ replaced by ‘defensive system is’.<br />
-<a href="#tn-619">Pg 619:</a> ‘Portugal, Jnne 15’ replaced by ‘Portugal, June 15’.<br />
-<a href="#tn-620">Pg 620:</a> ‘Prisoner’ replaced by ‘Prisonnier’.<br />
-</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HISTORY OF THE WAR IN THE PENINSULA AND IN THE SOUTH OF FRANCE FROM THE YEAR 1807 TO THE YEAR 1814, VOL. 5 OF 6 ***</div>
-<div style='text-align:left'>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Updated editions will replace the previous one&#8212;the old editions will
-be renamed.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
-law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works,
-so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United
-States without permission and without paying copyright
-royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part
-of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project
-Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG&#8482;
-concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark,
-and may not be used if you charge for an eBook, except by following
-the terms of the trademark license, including paying royalties for use
-of the Project Gutenberg trademark. If you do not charge anything for
-copies of this eBook, complying with the trademark license is very
-easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose such as creation
-of derivative works, reports, performances and research. Project
-Gutenberg eBooks may be modified and printed and given away&#8212;you may
-do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks not protected
-by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the trademark
-license, especially commercial redistribution.
-</div>
-
-<div style='margin-top:1em; font-size:1.1em; text-align:center'>START: FULL LICENSE</div>
-<div style='text-align:center;font-size:0.9em'>THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE</div>
-<div style='text-align:center;font-size:0.9em'>PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-To protect the Project Gutenberg&#8482; mission of promoting the free
-distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
-(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase &#8220;Project
-Gutenberg&#8221;), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full
-Project Gutenberg&#8482; License available with this file or online at
-www.gutenberg.org/license.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; font-size:1.1em; margin:1em 0; font-weight:bold'>
-Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg&#8482;
-electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
-and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
-(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
-the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or
-destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works in your
-possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a
-Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic work and you do not agree to be bound
-by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person
-or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.B. &#8220;Project Gutenberg&#8221; is a registered trademark. It may only be
-used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
-agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
-things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works
-even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
-paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
-Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works if you follow the terms of this
-agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg&#8482;
-electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation (&#8220;the
-Foundation&#8221; or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection
-of Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works. Nearly all the individual
-works in the collection are in the public domain in the United
-States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the
-United States and you are located in the United States, we do not
-claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing,
-displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as
-all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope
-that you will support the Project Gutenberg&#8482; mission of promoting
-free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg&#8482;
-works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the
-Project Gutenberg&#8482; name associated with the work. You can easily
-comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the
-same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg&#8482; License when
-you share it without charge with others.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
-what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are
-in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States,
-check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this
-agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing,
-distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any
-other Project Gutenberg&#8482; work. The Foundation makes no
-representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any
-country other than the United States.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other
-immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg&#8482; License must appear
-prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg&#8482; work (any work
-on which the phrase &#8220;Project Gutenberg&#8221; appears, or with which the
-phrase &#8220;Project Gutenberg&#8221; is associated) is accessed, displayed,
-performed, viewed, copied or distributed:
-</div>
-
-<blockquote>
- <div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
- 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 <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
- are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws
- of the country where you are located before using this eBook.
- </div>
-</blockquote>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic work is
-derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not
-contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the
-copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in
-the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are
-redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase &#8220;Project
-Gutenberg&#8221; associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply
-either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or
-obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg&#8482;
-trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic work is posted
-with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
-must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any
-additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms
-will be linked to the Project Gutenberg&#8482; License for all works
-posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the
-beginning of this work.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg&#8482;
-License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
-work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg&#8482;.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
-electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
-prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
-active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
-Gutenberg&#8482; License.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
-compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including
-any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access
-to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg&#8482; work in a format
-other than &#8220;Plain Vanilla ASCII&#8221; or other format used in the official
-version posted on the official Project Gutenberg&#8482; website
-(www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense
-to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means
-of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original &#8220;Plain
-Vanilla ASCII&#8221; or other form. Any alternate format must include the
-full Project Gutenberg&#8482; License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
-performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg&#8482; works
-unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
-access to or distributing Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works
-provided that:
-</div>
-
-<div style='margin-left:0.7em;'>
- <div style='text-indent:-0.7em'>
- &#8226; You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
- the use of Project Gutenberg&#8482; works calculated using the method
- you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed
- to the owner of the Project Gutenberg&#8482; trademark, but he has
- agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid
- within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are
- legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty
- payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in
- Section 4, &#8220;Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg
- Literary Archive Foundation.&#8221;
- </div>
-
- <div style='text-indent:-0.7em'>
- &#8226; You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
- you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
- does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg&#8482;
- License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all
- copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue
- all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg&#8482;
- works.
- </div>
-
- <div style='text-indent:-0.7em'>
- &#8226; You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of
- any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
- electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of
- receipt of the work.
- </div>
-
- <div style='text-indent:-0.7em'>
- &#8226; You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
- distribution of Project Gutenberg&#8482; works.
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project
-Gutenberg&#8482; electronic work or group of works on different terms than
-are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing
-from the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the manager of
-the Project Gutenberg&#8482; trademark. Contact the Foundation as set
-forth in Section 3 below.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.F.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
-effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
-works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project
-Gutenberg&#8482; collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg&#8482;
-electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may
-contain &#8220;Defects,&#8221; such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate
-or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
-intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or
-other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or
-cannot be read by your equipment.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the &#8220;Right
-of Replacement or Refund&#8221; described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
-Gutenberg&#8482; trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
-Gutenberg&#8482; electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
-liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
-fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
-LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
-PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
-TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
-LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
-INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
-DAMAGE.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
-defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
-receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
-written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
-received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium
-with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you
-with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in
-lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person
-or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second
-opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If
-the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing
-without further opportunities to fix the problem.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
-in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you &#8216;AS-IS&#8217;, WITH NO
-OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT
-LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
-warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of
-damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement
-violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the
-agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or
-limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or
-unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the
-remaining provisions.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
-trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
-providing copies of Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works in
-accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the
-production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg&#8482;
-electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses,
-including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of
-the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this
-or any Project Gutenberg&#8482; work, (b) alteration, modification, or
-additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg&#8482; work, and (c) any
-Defect you cause.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; font-size:1.1em; margin:1em 0; font-weight:bold'>
-Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg&#8482;
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Project Gutenberg&#8482; is synonymous with the free distribution of
-electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of
-computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It
-exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations
-from people in all walks of life.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
-assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg&#8482;&#8217;s
-goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg&#8482; collection will
-remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
-and permanent future for Project Gutenberg&#8482; and future
-generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see
-Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at www.gutenberg.org.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; font-size:1.1em; margin:1em 0; font-weight:bold'>
-Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non-profit
-501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
-state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
-Revenue Service. The Foundation&#8217;s EIN or federal tax identification
-number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by
-U.S. federal laws and your state&#8217;s laws.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-The Foundation&#8217;s business office is located at 809 North 1500 West,
-Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up
-to date contact information can be found at the Foundation&#8217;s website
-and official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; font-size:1.1em; margin:1em 0; font-weight:bold'>
-Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Project Gutenberg&#8482; depends upon and cannot survive without widespread
-public support and donations to carry out its mission of
-increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
-freely distributed in machine-readable form accessible by the widest
-array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
-($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
-status with the IRS.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
-charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
-States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
-considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
-with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
-where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND
-DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular state
-visit <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org/donate/">www.gutenberg.org/donate</a>.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
-have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
-against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
-approach us with offers to donate.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
-any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
-outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Please check the Project Gutenberg web pages for current donation
-methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
-ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To
-donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; font-size:1.1em; margin:1em 0; font-weight:bold'>
-Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project
-Gutenberg&#8482; concept of a library of electronic works that could be
-freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and
-distributed Project Gutenberg&#8482; eBooks with only a loose network of
-volunteer support.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Project Gutenberg&#8482; eBooks are often created from several printed
-editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in
-the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not
-necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper
-edition.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Most people start at our website which has the main PG search
-facility: <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This website includes information about Project Gutenberg&#8482;,
-including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
-subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
-</div>
-
-</div>
-</body>
-</html>
diff --git a/old/69220-h/images/cover.jpg b/old/69220-h/images/cover.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 137e626..0000000
--- a/old/69220-h/images/cover.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/69220-h/images/i_b_581fp_1-large.jpg b/old/69220-h/images/i_b_581fp_1-large.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index f3b6e2c..0000000
--- a/old/69220-h/images/i_b_581fp_1-large.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/69220-h/images/i_b_581fp_1.jpg b/old/69220-h/images/i_b_581fp_1.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 1854ca4..0000000
--- a/old/69220-h/images/i_b_581fp_1.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/69220-h/images/i_b_581fp_2-large.jpg b/old/69220-h/images/i_b_581fp_2-large.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index bf8fcda..0000000
--- a/old/69220-h/images/i_b_581fp_2-large.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/69220-h/images/i_b_581fp_2.jpg b/old/69220-h/images/i_b_581fp_2.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 8f62321..0000000
--- a/old/69220-h/images/i_b_581fp_2.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/69220-h/images/i_b_581fp_3-large.jpg b/old/69220-h/images/i_b_581fp_3-large.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index a662b1e..0000000
--- a/old/69220-h/images/i_b_581fp_3-large.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/69220-h/images/i_b_581fp_3.jpg b/old/69220-h/images/i_b_581fp_3.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index b089e82..0000000
--- a/old/69220-h/images/i_b_581fp_3.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/69220-h/images/i_b_581fp_4-large.jpg b/old/69220-h/images/i_b_581fp_4-large.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index f17cee8..0000000
--- a/old/69220-h/images/i_b_581fp_4-large.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/69220-h/images/i_b_581fp_4.jpg b/old/69220-h/images/i_b_581fp_4.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 8e137fb..0000000
--- a/old/69220-h/images/i_b_581fp_4.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/69220-h/images/i_b_581fp_5-large.jpg b/old/69220-h/images/i_b_581fp_5-large.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 911fb4a..0000000
--- a/old/69220-h/images/i_b_581fp_5-large.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/69220-h/images/i_b_581fp_5.jpg b/old/69220-h/images/i_b_581fp_5.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index e73e7a5..0000000
--- a/old/69220-h/images/i_b_581fp_5.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/69220-h/images/i_b_581fp_6-large.jpg b/old/69220-h/images/i_b_581fp_6-large.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 88dced8..0000000
--- a/old/69220-h/images/i_b_581fp_6-large.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/69220-h/images/i_b_581fp_6.jpg b/old/69220-h/images/i_b_581fp_6.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 87b1fbe..0000000
--- a/old/69220-h/images/i_b_581fp_6.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/69220-h/images/i_b_581fp_7-large.jpg b/old/69220-h/images/i_b_581fp_7-large.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 2c178ce..0000000
--- a/old/69220-h/images/i_b_581fp_7-large.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/69220-h/images/i_b_581fp_7.jpg b/old/69220-h/images/i_b_581fp_7.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index afeec50..0000000
--- a/old/69220-h/images/i_b_581fp_7.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/69220-h/images/i_b_581fp_8-large.jpg b/old/69220-h/images/i_b_581fp_8-large.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index f7aa601..0000000
--- a/old/69220-h/images/i_b_581fp_8-large.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/69220-h/images/i_b_581fp_8.jpg b/old/69220-h/images/i_b_581fp_8.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index ec20fb3..0000000
--- a/old/69220-h/images/i_b_581fp_8.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ