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authornfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org>2025-02-05 03:21:04 -0800
committernfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org>2025-02-05 03:21:04 -0800
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+
+<body>
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75293 ***</div>
+
+<div class="transnote section">
+<p class="center larger">Transcriber’s Note</p>
+
+<p>Larger versions of most illustrations may be seen by right-clicking them
+and selecting an option to view them separately, or by double-tapping and/or
+stretching them.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#Transcribers_Notes">Additional notes</a> will be found near the end of this ebook.</p>
+<div> </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="section">
+<figure id="coversmall" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 25em;">
+ <img src="images/coversmall.jpg" width="507" height="800" alt="">
+</figure>
+<div> </div>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_v">v</span></p>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<h1>
+THE WAR DRAMA<br>
+OF THE EAGLES
+</h1>
+<div> </div>
+</div>
+
+<div>
+<figure id="i_1" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 24em;">
+ <img src="images/i_001.jpg" width="1884" height="2762" alt="">
+ <figcaption class="caption">
+ <p>PORTE-AIGLE, IMPERIAL GUARD, AND GRENADIER SERGEANT IN PARADE UNIFORM.</p>
+ <p>From St. Hilaire’s <cite lang="fr">Histoire de la Garde Impériale</cite>.</p>
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+<div> </div>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter narrow">
+<div>
+<p class="center wspace larger">
+<span class="xlarge">THE WAR DRAMA<br>
+OF THE EAGLES</span><br><br>
+
+NAPOLEON’S STANDARD-BEARERS ON THE
+BATTLEFIELD IN VICTORY AND DEFEAT
+FROM AUSTERLITZ TO WATERLOO
+A RECORD OF HARD FIGHTING, HEROISM
+AND ADVENTURE</p>
+
+<p class="p2 center wspace"><span class="xlarge">BY EDWARD FRASER</span><br>
+
+<span class="smaller"><br>AUTHOR OF “THE ENEMY AT TRAFALGAR,” “FAMOUS
+FIGHTERS OF THE FLEET,” “THE ‘LONDONS,’” ETC.</span>
+</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<div class="smaller">
+<p class="p2">“These Eagles to you shall ever be your rallying-point. Swear to sacrifice
+your lives in their defence; to maintain them by your courage ever in the
+path of victory.”—<cite>On the Day of the Presentation on the Field of Mars.</cite></p>
+
+<p class="b0">“The soldier who loses his Eagle loses his Honour and his All!”</p>
+
+<p class="p0 right">
+<cite>Address to the 4th of the Line after Austerlitz.</cite>
+</p>
+
+<p class="b0">“The loss of an Eagle is an affront to the reputation of its regiment for which
+neither victory nor the glory acquired on a hundred fields can make amends.”</p>
+
+<p class="p0 right">
+<span style="margin-right: 2em;"><cite>55th Bulletin of the Grand Army</cite>: 1807.</span><br>
+<span class="smcap">Napoleon.</span>
+</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p class="p2 center">WITH ILLUSTRATIONS AND MAPS</p>
+
+<p class="p4 center large">
+LONDON<br>
+JOHN MURRAY, ALBEMARLE STREET, W.<br>
+<span class="small">1912</span>
+</p>
+<div> </div>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p class="p4 center wspace">
+<span class="smcap">All Rights Reserved</span>
+</p>
+<div> </div>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="PREFACE">PREFACE</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class="in0"><span class="firstword">This</span> book breaks fresh ground in a field of
+romantic and widespread interest; one that
+should prove attractive, associated as it is with
+the ever-fascinating subject of Napoleon. Incidentally,
+indeed, it may also help to throw
+a new sidelight on certain characteristics of
+Napoleon as a soldier.</p>
+
+<p>I venture to hope at the same time that it
+will arouse interest further as offering independent
+testimony to the valour of our own soldiers, the
+Old British Army which, under Wellington, defeated
+on the battlefield the veterans of the
+Eagles whose feats of heroism and hardihood
+are described in the book. Magnificent as were
+the acts of fine daring and heroic endurance of
+the men whom Wellington led to victory, no
+less stirring and deserving of admiration were
+the deeds of chivalrous valour and stern fortitude
+done for the honour of Napoleon’s Eagles by
+the gallant soldiers who faced them and proved
+indeed foemen worthy of their steel. All who
+hold in regard cool, self-sacrificing bravery
+and steadfast courage in adversity and peril<span class="pagenum" id="Page_vi">vi</span>
+will find no lack of instances in the stories of
+what the warriors of the Eagles dared and underwent
+for the name and fame of the Great Captain.</p>
+
+<p>The record of Napoleon’s Eagles in war has
+never before been set forth, and the centenary
+year of Badajoz and Salamanca and the Moscow
+Campaign seems to offer a befitting occasion
+for its appearance.</p>
+
+<p>The world, indeed, is in the midst of a cycle
+of Napoleonic centenaries. Our own centenary
+memories of Talavera—the victory of which
+Wellington said, in later years, that if his Allies
+had done their part, “it would have been as
+great a battle as Waterloo”—of Busaco ridge
+and Torres Vedras, of heroic Barrosa and desperate
+Albuhera,—these are only just behind us.
+Immediately ahead lie the centenaries of yet
+greater events. In less than a twelvemonth
+hence England will mark the centenary of
+Vittoria, Wellington’s decisive day in Spain,
+the crowning triumph of the Peninsular War;
+and yet more than that in its import and sequel
+for Europe. It was the news of Vittoria that,
+in July 1813, decided Napoleon’s father-in-law
+to throw Austria’s sword into the balance against
+the Man of Destiny, compelling Napoleon, with
+what remained of the Grand Army, to stand at
+bay for the “Battle of the Nations” on the
+Marchfeldt before Leipsic. Within six months
+from then, the world, in like manner, will recall
+the Farewell of Fontainebleau, and Elba; and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_vii">vii</span>
+finally, in the year after that, the British Empire
+will commemorate the epoch-making centenary
+of the greatest of all British triumphs in arms
+on <span class="locked">land—</span></p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indentq">“Of that fierce field where last the Eagles swooped,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Where our Great Master wielded Britain’s sword,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">And the Dark Soul the world could not subdue,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Bowed to thy fortune, Prince of Waterloo!”</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p class="in0">—the triple-event, indeed, of Waterloo, the
+<i>Bellerophon</i>, St. Helena.</p>
+
+<p>The stories told here exist indeed, even in
+France, only in more or less fragmentary form,
+scattered broadcast amongst the memoirs left
+by the men of the Napoleonic time. They have
+not before been brought together within the
+covers of a book.</p>
+
+<p>I have utilised, in addition to the personal
+memoirs of Napoleon’s officers, French regimental
+records, bulletins, and despatches
+(noted in my List of Authorities), other official
+military documents, contemporary newspapers,
+both British and foreign, and information kindly
+placed at my disposal by the authorities of
+Chelsea Royal Hospital and the Royal United
+Service Institution, and by friends abroad.</p>
+
+<p class="right">
+<span class="smcap">Edward Fraser.</span>
+</p>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_ix">ix</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CONTENTS">CONTENTS</h2>
+</div>
+
+<table id="toc">
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdr xsmall" colspan="2">PAGE</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">List of Authorities</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><span class="allsmcap"><a href="#LIST_OF_AUTHORITIES">XV</a></span></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdc chap" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Napoleon adopts the Eagle of Caesar</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_I">1</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdc chap" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Day of the Presentation on the Field of Mars</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_II">16</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdc chap" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl" colspan="2"><span class="smcap">In the First Campaign</span>:</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl insec"><span class="allsmcap">UNDER FIRE WITH MARSHAL NEY</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_60">60</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl insec"><span class="allsmcap">THE MIDNIGHT BATTLE BY THE DANUBE</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_80">80</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdc chap" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">On the Field of Austerlitz</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_IV">96</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdc chap" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl" colspan="2"><span class="smcap">In the Second Campaign</span>:</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl insec"><span class="allsmcap">JENA AND THE TRIUMPH OF BERLIN</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_123">123</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl insec"><span class="allsmcap">THE TWELVE LOST EAGLES OF EYLAU</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_150">150</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_x">x</span></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdc chap" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl" colspan="2"><span class="smcap">Preparing for the Future</span>:</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl insec"><span class="allsmcap">THE “EAGLE-GUARD”</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_181">181</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdc chap" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Before the Enemy at Aspern and Wagram</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_VII">197</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdc chap" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">“The Eagle with the Golden Wreath” in London</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_VIII">214</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdc chap" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Other Eagles in England from Battlefields Of Spain</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_IX">240</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdc chap" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl" colspan="2"><span class="smcap">In the Hour of Darkest Disaster</span>:</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl insec"><span class="allsmcap">AFTER MOSCOW: HOW THE EAGLES FACED THEIR FATE</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_263">263</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl insec"><span class="allsmcap">AT BAY IN NORTHERN GERMANY—1813</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_291">291</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdc chap" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">That Terrible Midnight at the Invalides</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XI">316</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_xi">xi</span></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdc chap" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_XII">CHAPTER XII</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Eagles of the Last Army</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XII">345</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdc chap" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIII">CHAPTER XIII</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl" colspan="2"><span class="smcap">At Waterloo</span>:</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl insec">“<span class="allsmcap">AVE CAESAR! MORITURI TE SALUTANT!</span>”</td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_375">375</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl insec"><span class="allsmcap">HOW WELLINGTON’S TROPHIES WERE WON</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_388">388</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl insec"><span class="allsmcap">THE LAST ATTACK AND AFTER: THE EAGLES OF THE GUARD</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_405">405</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl insec"><span class="allsmcap">THE EAGLES ANNOUNCE VICTORY TO LONDON</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_424">424</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdc chap" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIV">CHAPTER XIV</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">After the Downfall</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIV">432</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr class="p2">
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Index</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#INDEX">437</a></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_xiii">xiii</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="ILLUSTRATIONS_AND_MAPS">ILLUSTRATIONS AND MAPS</h2>
+</div>
+
+<h3>ILLUSTRATIONS</h3>
+
+<table id="loi">
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Porte-Aigle, Imperial Guard, and Grenadier Sergeant in Parade Uniform</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><i><a href="#i_1">Frontispiece</a></i></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl sub">From St. Hilaire’s <cite lang="fr">Histoire de la Garde Impériale</cite></td>
+ <td></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdr xsmall" colspan="2">FACING PAGE</td>
+</tr>
+<tr class="notpad">
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Marshal Mortier</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#i_90">90</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Marshal Soult</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#i_104">104</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl sub">In the uniform of Colonel-in-Chief of the Chasseurs of the Guard</td>
+ <td></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Marshal Davout</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#i_134">134</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Marshal Ney with the Rearguard in the Retreat from Moscow</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#i_282">282</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl sub">From a picture by A. Ivon, at Versailles</td>
+ <td></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl sub">Photo by Alinari</td>
+ <td></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Napoleon and the “Sacred Squadron” on the way to the Beresina</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#i_288">288</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl sub">From the picture by H. Bellangé</td>
+ <td></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Napoleon’s Farewell to the Old Guard at Fontainebleau</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#i_312">312</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl sub">From a print after H. Vernet, kindly lent by Messrs. T.&nbsp;H. Parker, 45, Whitcomb Street</td>
+ <td></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Fight for the Standard</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#i_396">396</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl sub">Sergeant Ewart of the Scots Greys taking the Eagle of the 45th at Waterloo</td>
+ <td></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl sub">From the picture by R. Andsell, A.R.A., at Royal Hospital, Chelsea<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xiv">xiv</span></td>
+ <td></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Square of the Old Guard at Bay after Waterloo</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#i_412">412</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl sub">From the picture by H. Bellangé</td>
+ <td></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">La Revue des Morts</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#i_434">434</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl sub">From a picture by R. Demoraine</td>
+ <td></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<h3>MAPS</h3>
+
+<table id="maps">
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Outline Map of Napoleon’s Concentration in rear of Ulm, September 27 to October 18, 1805</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#i_82">82</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Sketch Plan of the Positions of the Armies at the opening of the Battle of Austerlitz</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#i_98">98</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Sketch Plan of the Battlefield of Eylau</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#i_154">154</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">plan of the Battle of Barrosa</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#i_222">222</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Waterloo. The Charge of the Union Brigade</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#i_394">394</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Waterloo—the Final Phase. Sketch Plan to show the attack and the defeat of the columns of the Guard</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#i_410">410</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">General Map</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#i_436">436</a></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_xv">xv</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="LIST_OF_AUTHORITIES">LIST OF AUTHORITIES</h2>
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot hang">
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Alison</span>: History of Europe.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Avrillon</span>, <span class="smcap">Pion des Loches</span>, <span class="smcap">Pelet</span>, <span class="smcap">Combes</span>, <span class="smcap">Du Roure de
+Paulin</span>, <span class="smcap">Vionnet</span>, <span class="smcap">Bertin</span>, <span class="smcap">Thirion</span>, <span class="smcap">Noel</span>, <span class="smcap">Dupuy</span>,
+ <span class="smcap">Blaze</span>,
+<span class="smcap">St. Chamans</span>, <span class="smcap">Vigée-Lebrun</span>, <span class="allsmcap">ETC.</span>: Souvenirs.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Barboux, General</span>: War Services.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Bardin</span>: Dictionnaire de l’Armée.
+<span class="smcap">Bardin</span>: Memorial de l’Officier.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Beamish</span>: The King’s German Legion.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Beauvais</span>: Victoires des Français, 1792–1815.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Berthezéne, General</span>: Souvenirs Militaires.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Bignon</span>: Memoirs of Napoleon’s Campaigns.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Bouillé</span>: Les Drapeaux Français.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Bourrienne</span>: Memoirs of Napoleon Bonaparte.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Bugeaud, Marshal</span>: Memoirs.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Byrne, Miles</span>: Memoirs.</p>
+
+<p>Catalogue:—Heeres Museum—Wien.</p>
+
+<p>Catalogue:—Real Armeria—Madrid.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Cathcart, Hon. Sir C.</span>: Commentaries—1812–13.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Caulaincourt</span>: Recollections.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Chambray</span>: History of the Russian Expedition.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Champeaux</span>: Honneur et Patrie.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Charbouclière</span>: Dictionnaire de l’Armée.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Charras</span>: Campagne de 1815.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Chichester</span> and <span class="smcap">Short</span>: Records and Badges of the British
+Army.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Colborn</span>: United Service Journal (<i lang="la">passim</i>): Regimental Histories
+(British and French), etc.</p>
+
+<p>Correspondance Militaire de Napoléon.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Cotton</span>: A Voice from Waterloo.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Dalton</span>: The Waterloo Roll Call.</p>
+
+<p>Das Zeughaus zu Berlin.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Davout, Marshal</span>: Memoirs.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">De Gonneville</span>: Souvenirs Militaires.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Demmin</span>: Weapons of War.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_xvi">xvi</span></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Desjardins</span>: Recherches sur les Drapeaux.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">De Suzanne, General</span>: L’Infanterie Française.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">De Suzanne, General</span>: La Cavalerie Française.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Ducasse</span>: Visite à l’Hôtel des Invalides.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Ducor</span>: Aventures d’un Marin de la Garde.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Dumas, M.</span>: Souvenirs Militaires.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Dumas, M.</span>: Précis des Evènemens Militaires.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Fantin des Odoards, General</span>: Journal.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Fézensac</span>: Journal of the Russian Campaign—1812–13.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Fézensac</span>: Souvenirs Militaires.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Foy, General</span>: History of the War in Spain.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Gardner, Darsey</span>: Quatre Bras, Ligny, Waterloo.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Gleig</span>: Narrative of the Battle of Leipsic.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Gourgaud</span>: Napoleon and the Grand Army in Russia.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Grose</span>: Military Antiquities.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Home</span>: Précis of Modern Tactics.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Hooper</span>: Waterloo: The Downfall of the First Napoleon.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Houssaye</span>: Napoléon, Homme de Guerre.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Houssaye</span>: Waterloo.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Jeanneney</span>: Le Glorieux Passé d’un Régiment.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Jomini</span>: L’Art de Guerre.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Jomini</span>: Life of Napoleon I.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Junot, Marshal</span>: Memoirs.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Jurien de la Gravière</span>: Guerres Maritimes.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Labaume</span>: History of the Campaign in Russia.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Lacroix, D.</span>: Les Maréchaux de Napoléon.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Lacroix, D.</span>: Histoire Anecdotique du Drapeau Français.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Lallemand</span>: Les Drapeaux des Invalides—1814.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Lamartine</span>: History of the Restoration.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Lanfrey</span>: History of Napoleon I.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">La Valette</span>: Memoirs.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Lejeune</span>: Memoirs.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Lemonnier-Delafosse</span>: Campagnes de 1810–15.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Lyden</span>: Nos 144 Régiments de Ligne.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Macdonald, Marshal</span>: Recollections.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">MacGeorge</span>: Flags and their History.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Marbot</span>: Memoirs.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Marbot</span> et <span class="smcap">De Noirmont</span>: Costumes Militaires Françaises.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Marmont, Marshal</span>: The Spirit of Military Institutions.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Masson</span>: Cavaliers de Napoléon.
+<span class="smcap">Masson</span>: Livre du Sacre de l’Empereur.
+<span class="smcap">Masson</span>: Souvenirs et Recits des Soldats.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Maxwell, Sir H.</span>: Life of Wellington.
+<span class="smcap">Maxwell, Sir H.</span>: Victories of the British Armies.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_xvii">xvii</span></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Maxwell, W.&nbsp;H.</span>: Peninsular War Sketches.</p>
+
+<p>Memoirs of Sergeant Bourgogne.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Menéval</span>: Memoirs.</p>
+
+<p>Military Costumes of Europe—1812.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Milne</span>: Standards and Colours.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Morvan</span>: Le Soldat Impérial.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Napier</span>: History of the Peninsular War.</p>
+
+<p>Narrative of Captain Coignet.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Ney, Marshal</span>: Memoirs.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Niox, General</span>: Drapeaux et Trophées.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Odeleben</span>: Napoleon’s Campaign in Saxony, 1813.</p>
+
+<p>[Officially Published] Historiques des Régiments de l’Armée.</p>
+
+<p>[Officially Published] Publications de la Réunion des Officiers.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Oudinot, Marshal</span>: Memoirs.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Parquin</span>: Campagnes d’un Vieux Soldat.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Pattison</span>: Napoleon’s Marshals.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Penguilly l’Haridon</span>: Catalogue Musée d’Artillerie.</p>
+
+<p>Potsdam und seine Umgebung.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Rapp, General</span>: Memoirs.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Rey</span>: Histoire du Drapeau.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Robert, Colonel</span>: Catalogue, Musée d’Artillerie.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Rose</span>: Life of Napoleon I.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">St. Hilaire</span>: Histoire de la Garde Impériale.
+<span class="smcap">St. Hilaire</span>: Histoire Populaire de Napoléon I.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Savary</span>: Memoirs.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Ségur</span>: Au Drapeau.
+<span class="smcap">Ségur</span>: History of the Expedition to Russia.
+<span class="smcap">Ségur</span>: Memoirs.
+<span class="smcap">Ségur</span>: Procès Verbal de la Couronnement de Napoléon.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Seruzier</span>: Memoirs.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Shaw Kennedy, Sir John</span>: Notes on Waterloo.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Sherer, Moyle</span>: Tales of the Wars.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Shoberl</span>: Narrative of the Battle of Leipsic.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Siborne</span>: Campaign of Waterloo.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Siborne</span>: Waterloo Letters.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Sloane</span>: Life of Napoleon I.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Soult, Marshal</span>: Memoirs.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Southey</span>: History of the Peninsular War.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Stendhal</span>: Journal and Correspondence.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Stocqueler</span>: The British Soldier.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Taylor, Sir Herbert</span>: Waterloo.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Thiébault, Baron</span>: Memoirs.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Thiers</span>: Consulate and Empire.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Wellington</span>: Despatches.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_xviii">xviii</span></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Wilson, Sir R.</span>: Narrative of Events in Russia, 1812.
+<span class="smcap">Wilson, Sir R.</span>: Private Journal of the Russian Campaign.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Wood, Sir Evelyn</span>: Cavalry in the Waterloo Campaign.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+
+<p>(<span class="smcap">Note.</span>—This list is approximately complete, representing
+about 90 per cent. of the total of authorities consulted
+and laid under contribution.)</p>
+</div>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_1">1</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="THE_WAR_DRAMA_OF"><span class="larger">THE WAR DRAMA OF
+THE EAGLES</span></h2>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I<br>
+
+<span class="subhead">NAPOLEON ADOPTS THE EAGLE OF CAESAR</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class="in0"><span class="firstword">Napoleon Bonaparte</span> became Emperor, “by
+Divine Will and the Constitution of the French
+Republic”—Imperator and hereditary Caesar
+of the Republic—on Friday, May 18, 1804.
+Three weeks later it was publicly announced
+in the <i>Moniteur</i> that the Eagle had been adopted
+as the heraldic cognisance of the new <i lang="fr">régime</i>
+in France.</p>
+
+<p>Its selection for the State armorial bearing
+of the Empire was one of Napoleon’s first acts.
+That the Roman lictor’s axe and fasces surmounted
+by the red Phrygian cap, with its
+traditions of revolution, which had supplanted
+the Fleur-de-Lis of the Monarchy, and had
+served as the official badge on the standards
+of the Republic and the Consulate, should
+continue under the Imperial <i lang="fr">régime</i>, was
+obviously impossible. But what distinctive
+emblem should be adopted in its stead?</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_2">2</span></p>
+
+<p>Napoleon had the question debated in his
+presence at the first <i lang="fr">séance</i> of the Imperial
+Council of State. He had, it would seem, not
+made up his mind in regard to it. At any
+rate, a few days before the meeting of the
+Council, he had directed a Committee to draw
+up a statement and offer suggestions.</p>
+
+<p>The matter was brought forward at the first
+meeting of the Imperial Council, held at the
+Château of Saint-Cloud on Tuesday, June 12,
+1804, after a preliminary discussion on the
+arrangements for the Coronation, when and
+where it should be held, and what was to be
+the form of ceremonial. The Coronation, all
+agreed at the outset, must take place in the
+current year. Rheims, Aix-la-Chapelle, and
+Paris, in turn, were suggested as suitable places
+for the ceremony, Paris being finally decided
+on; the scene of the event to be the Champ de
+Mars. Napoleon himself proposed the Champs
+de Mars, with a threefold ceremony there—the
+taking of the constitutional oath, the actual
+coronation, the presentation of the Emperor
+to the assembled people. A brief discussion
+followed on the form of the coronation ceremony,
+whether it should be accompanied by
+religious rites. It was put forward that, as
+Charlemagne had received his authority from
+the Pope, might not the Pope now be induced
+to visit Paris and personally crown the Emperor?
+Napoleon, intervening in the discussion,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_3">3</span>
+made a strong point of the necessity of some
+kind of religious service on the occasion. He
+did not care much, he cynically remarked, what
+religion was selected; only it must be in
+accordance with the views of the majority of
+the nation. It would be impossible to do
+without some sort of religious observance. In
+all nations, said he, Ceremonies of State were
+accompanied by religious services. As to
+asking the Pope to take part, from his point of
+view, at the moment, the attendance of a Papal
+legate would be preferable. If the Pope himself
+came to Paris, his presence would assuredly
+tend to relegate the Emperor to a secondary
+position: “Tout le monde me laisserait pour
+courir voir le Pape!” The matter, however,
+as the discussion proceeded, seemed to present
+so many difficulties, that the Council, after
+declaring themselves generally against having
+any religious ceremony at all, decided to leave
+the question for further consideration.</p>
+
+<p>On that the Council turned to deal with the
+selection of the heraldic insignia and official
+badge of the Empire.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE GALLIC COCK PROPOSED</div>
+
+<p>Senator Crétet, on behalf of the special
+Committee appointed by Napoleon to prepare
+a statement for the Council, presented his
+report. The Committee, he said, had decided
+unanimously to recommend the Cock, the
+historic national emblem of Ancient Gaul,
+as the most fitting cognisance for Imperial<span class="pagenum" id="Page_4">4</span>
+France. Should that not find favour with the
+Council, either the Eagle, the Lion, or the
+Elephant, in the opinion of the Committee,
+might well be adopted. Individual members
+of the Committee, added Crétet, had further
+suggested the Aegis of Minerva, or some flower
+like the Fleur-de-Lis, an Oak-tree, or an Ear
+of Corn.</p>
+
+<p>Miot, one of the members of the Council,
+rose as Crétet sat down, and protested against
+the re-introduction of the Fleur-de-Lis. That,
+he said, was imbecility. He proposed a figure
+of the Emperor seated on his throne as the
+best possible badge for the French Empire.</p>
+
+<p>He was not seconded, however, and Napoleon
+interposed abruptly to set aside the Committee’s
+suggestion of reviving the Gallic Cock.
+He dismissed that notion with a contemptuous
+sneer. “Bah,” he exclaimed, “the Cock
+belongs to the farmyard! It is far too feeble
+a creature!” (“Le Coq est de basse cour.
+C’est un animal trop faible!”) Napoleon spoke
+rapidly and vivaciously. He had not yet, in
+those early days, acquired the impressive Imperial
+style that he afterwards affected. “His
+language at these earlier Council meetings was
+still impregnated with his original Jacobin
+style; he spoke frequently, spontaneously,
+familiarly; monologued at the top of his voice
+(avec des éclats de voix); apostrophised frequently,
+appearing at times as though overcome<span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">5</span>
+with nervousness, now almost in tears, now
+breaking out in a frenzy of passion, unrestrainedly
+emphasising his personal likes and
+dislikes.”</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE LION—THE ELEPHANT—THE BEE</div>
+
+<p>Count Ségur, Imperial Grand Master of the
+Ceremonies, suggested the Lion as the most
+suitable emblem: “parcequ’il vaincra le
+Léopard,” he explained.</p>
+
+<p>Councillor Laumond proposed the adoption
+of the Elephant instead; with for a motto
+“<i lang="fr">Mole et Mente</i>.” The Elephant had a great
+vogue at that day among European heraldic
+authorities as being pre-eminently a royal
+beast. There was a widely prevalent belief,
+on the authority of old writers on natural
+history, that an Elephant could not be made
+to bow its knees. Further, too, the elephant
+typified resistless strength as well as magnanimity.
+And had not Caesar himself once
+placed the effigy of the Elephant on the Roman
+coinage? Nobody else at the Council, however,
+seemed to care for the Elephant.</p>
+
+<p>Councillor Simon objected to Ségur’s proposition,
+on the score that the Lion was essentially
+an aggressive beast.</p>
+
+<p>Cambacérès, ex-Consul and Arch-Chancellor
+of the Empire, suggested a swarm of Bees
+as the most suitable national emblem. It would
+represent the actual situation of France, he
+explained—a republic with a presiding chief.</p>
+
+<p>Councillor Lacuèe supported Cambacérès. The<span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">6</span>
+Bee, he added, was the more suitable, in that
+it possessed a sting as well as being a maker of
+honey.</p>
+
+<p>Cambacérès remarked that he favoured the
+idea of the Bee as typifying peaceful industry
+rather than offensive power.</p>
+
+<p>The other members took no interest in the
+idea of the Bee, and after some discursive
+talk the Council fell back on the Committee’s
+original suggestion of the historic Gallic Cock.
+The general voice favoured the adoption of
+the Cock, and they unanimously voted for it.</p>
+
+<p>That, however, would not do for Napoleon.
+He sharply refused once more to hear of the
+Cock in any circumstances. He had for some
+minutes sat silent, listening to the discussion
+until the vote was taken. On that he rose
+and banned the Cock absolutely and finally.</p>
+
+<p>“The Cock is quite too weak a creature,”
+he exclaimed. “A thing like that cannot
+possibly be the cognisance of an Empire such
+as France. You must make your choice between
+the Eagle, the Elephant, and the Lion!”</p>
+
+<p>The Eagle, however, did not commend itself
+to the Council. That emblem, it was pointed
+out by several members, had been already
+adopted by other European nations. For
+France, such being the case, the Eagle would
+not be sufficiently distinctive. The German
+Empire had the Eagle for its cognisance. So
+had Austria. So had Prussia. So had Poland<span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">7</span>
+even—the White Eagle of the Jagellons. The
+Council was plainly not attracted by the Eagle.</p>
+
+<p>Lebrun, the other ex-Consul, Arch-Treasurer
+of the Empire, now put in a word again for
+the Fleur-de-Lis. It had been, he said, the
+national emblem of France under all the previous
+dynasties. The Fleur-de-Lis, declared Lebrun,
+was the real historic emblem of France, and
+he proposed that it should be adopted for
+the Empire.</p>
+
+<p>Nobody, though, supported him, one member,
+Councillor Regnaud, condemning the idea of
+the Fleur-de-Lis as utterly out of date. “The
+nation,” added Regnaud, with a sneer, “will
+neither go back to the cult of the Lilies nor to
+the religion of Rome!”</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">“YOU MUST CHOOSE THE LION!”</div>
+
+<p>At that point Napoleon lost patience. Interposing
+to close the discussion, he curtly bade
+the Council to cease from wasting time. They
+must decide on the Lion for the Imperial
+Emblem. His preference was for the figure of
+a Lion, lying over the map of France, with one
+paw stretched out across the Rhine: “Il faut
+prendre un Lion, s’étendu sur la carte de France,
+la patte prête à dépasser le Rhin.” Napoleon
+proposed in addition, by way of motto, beneath
+the Lion-figure, these defiant words: “<i lang="fr">Malheur
+à qui me cherche!</i>”</p>
+
+<p>No more was said on the subject after that.
+The Council submitted forthwith to Napoleon’s
+dictation, and, as it would appear, without<span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">8</span>
+taking any formal vote, passed to the remaining
+business of the day: the inscription on the
+new coinage and certain amendments to the
+Criminal Code.</p>
+
+<p>But even then, as it befell, the decision as
+to the national emblem was not conclusive.
+Napoleon changed his mind about the Lion
+shortly after the Council had broken up. The
+Lion as the designated cognisance of the French
+Empire did not last twenty-four hours. Napoleon
+himself, on the report of the Council
+meeting being presented for his signature,
+definitely rejected the Lion. He cancelled his
+own proposition with a stroke of his pen. With
+his own hand the Emperor struck out the
+words “Lion couchant,” with the reference
+to the map of France and the Rhine, writing
+over the erasure, “Un Aigle éploye”—an
+Eagle with extended wings. So Napoleon independently
+settled the matter.</p>
+
+<p>Napoleon, as it would appear, in making
+his ultimate choice of the Eagle, had this in his
+mind. Charlemagne was ever in his thoughts
+at that time as his own destined exemplar.
+The Eagle of Charlemagne, it was now borne
+in upon his mind irresistibly, had a pre-eminent
+claim to be recalled and become the national
+heraldic badge for the new Frankish Empire
+of the West, as having been the traditional
+emblem of Imperial authority in the ancient
+Frankish Empire, the prototype and historic<span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">9</span>
+predecessor of the Empire of which he was
+head. Said Napoleon, indeed, in justifying his
+final adoption of the Eagle: “Elle affirme la
+dignité Impériale et rappelait Charlemagne.”</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">WHERE THE ARTIST GOT HIS DESIGN</div>
+
+<p>A commission to design the new Imperial
+Eagle “after that of Charlemagne” was forthwith
+given to Isabey (the elder Isabey—Jean
+Baptiste), “Peintre et Dessinateur du Cabinet
+de l’Empereur,” whose reputation was at that
+moment at its zenith. The artist, however,
+had no Carlovingian model to draw from,
+and nobody, it would appear, could give him
+any advice. He had to depict “Un Aigle
+éployé”—a Spread-Eagle. Discarding heraldic
+conventionalism, he produced the Napoleonic
+Eagle of history; an Eagle <i lang="fr">au naturel</i>, shown
+in the act of taking wing. The idea of it Isabey
+took from a sketch he himself had made nine
+years before, in the Monastery of the Certosa
+of Milan, of an eagle sculptured on one of the
+tombs of the Visconti.</p>
+
+<p>Following on his adoption of the Eagle for
+the cognisance of the Empire at large, Napoleon
+announced that the Eagle would in future
+be the battle-standard of the Army. He had,
+though, as to that Eagle, yet another thought
+in his mind. For his soldiers he desired the
+French Eagle to represent the military standard
+of Ancient Rome, the historic emblem of
+Caesar’s legionaries, with its resplendent traditions
+of world-wide victory. That intention,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">10</span>
+furthermore, Napoleon went out of his way
+to emphasise significantly through the place
+and moment that he chose for the promulgation
+of the Army Order appointing the Eagle of
+the Caesars as the battle-standard of the French
+Empire. The Imperial rescript was dated from
+the Camp of the “Army of the Ocean” at
+Boulogne; from amidst the vast array of
+soldiers mustered there for the threatened invasion
+of England.</p>
+
+<p>At the same time Isabey’s design for one
+Eagle would suffice as a model for the other.
+It sufficiently suggested the Roman type. Like
+Charlemagne, had not Napoleon led his army
+across the Alps? like Caesar, was he not about
+to lead it across the Straits?</p>
+
+<p>“The Eagle with wings outspread, as on the
+Imperial Seal, will be at the head of the standard-staves,
+as was the practice in the Roman army—(<i lang="fr">placée
+au sommet du bâton, telle que la portaient
+les Romains</i>). The flag will be attached at the
+same distance beneath the Eagle, as was the
+Labarum.” So Napoleon wrote in his preliminary
+instructions from Boulogne to Marshal
+Berthier, Head of the Etat-Major of the “Army
+of England,” at that moment on duty at the
+War Office in Paris.</p>
+
+<p>The Eagle, Napoleon directed, was of itself
+to constitute the standard: “<i lang="fr">Essentiellement
+constituer l’étendard</i>,” were Napoleon’s words.
+He set a secondary value on the flag which the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">11</span>
+Eagle surmounted. The flag to Napoleon was
+a subsidiary adjunct.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE FLAG OF MINOR ACCOUNT</div>
+
+<p>Flags, of course, would come and go. They
+could be renewed, he wrote, as might be necessary,
+at any time; every two years, or oftener.
+The Eagle, on the other hand, was to be a
+permanency. It was to be for all time the
+standard of its corps: also, to add still further
+to its sacrosanct nature and <i lang="fr">éclat</i>, every Eagle
+would be received only from the hands of the
+Emperor.<a id="FNanchor_1" href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">1</a></p>
+
+<p>Every Battalion of Foot and Squadron of
+Horse was to have its Eagle, which, on parade
+and before the enemy under fire, would be in
+the special charge of the battalion or squadron
+sergeant-major, with an escort of picked veteran
+soldiers; “men who had distinguished themselves
+on the battlefield in at least two combats.”</p>
+
+<p>Exceptional care, Napoleon laid down, was
+to be taken by regimental commanders that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">12</span>
+no harm should befall the Eagle. In the event
+of accident happening to it, a special report
+was to be made direct to the Emperor. Should
+it unfortunately happen that the Eagle was
+lost in battle, the regiment concerned would
+have to prove to the Emperor’s satisfaction
+that there had been no default. No new
+Eagle would be granted in place of one lost
+until the regiment in question had atoned for
+the slur on its character by either achieving
+“<i lang="fr">éclatante</i>” distinction in the field, by some
+exceptionally brilliant feat of arms, or by
+presenting the Emperor with an enemy’s standard
+“taken by its own valour.”</p>
+
+<p>The silken tricolor flag, as has been said, was
+in the eyes of Napoleon of subordinate account.
+It was to be considered merely as a set-off to
+the Eagle, as merely “<i lang="fr">l’ornement de l’Aigle</i>.”
+The Eagle, and the Eagle only, must be the
+object of the soldier’s devotion. Napoleon paid
+little regard to the flag, beyond as being of use
+for displaying the record of a regiment’s war
+career. He would have liked indeed, as it
+would seem, to substitute another flag altogether,
+and went so far as to have designs for a green
+regimental flag submitted to him.<a id="FNanchor_2" href="#Footnote_2" class="fnanchor">2</a> Prudence,
+however, forbade its introduction, and directions
+were issued that the general pattern of tricolor<span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">13</span>
+standard in use under the Consulate should be
+retained, with minor alterations of detail in
+the design rendered necessary in consequence
+of the new constitution of the State.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE LEGEND ON THE FLAG</div>
+
+<p>The regimental flags would consist of a white
+diamond-shaped centre, with the corners of
+the flag alternately red and blue; according
+to the pattern authorised two years previously
+by Napoleon as First Consul. Thus the national
+colours would continue to be represented. For
+the Infantry, in the centre of each flag would
+be, on one side, the words “Empire Français,”
+with the legend, inscribed in letters of gold,
+“L’Empereur des Français au —<sup>e</sup> Régiment
+d’Infanterie de Ligne,” which would take the
+place of the Republican inscription hitherto
+borne there; the number of each corps being
+inscribed in the blank space and in a laurel
+chaplet embroidered at each corner of the flag.
+For Cavalry the inscription ran: “L’Empereur
+des Français au —<sup>e</sup> Cuirassiers,” or “au —<sup>e</sup>
+Chasseurs”; and so on for other corps,
+Artillery, Dragoons, and Hussars.</p>
+
+<p>On the reverse, for corps of all arms, with the
+exception of the Guard, was emblazoned the
+motto “Valeur et Discipline,” and beneath it
+the number of the battalion or squadron in
+each regiment.</p>
+
+<p>Below the numbers was added any Inscription
+of Honour which had been granted to the
+corps, such as, in the case of one regiment,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">14</span>
+“Le 15<sup>e</sup> est couvert de la Gloire”; in the
+case of another, “Le Terrible 57<sup>e</sup> qui rien
+n’arrête”; with others, “Le Bon et Brave 28<sup>e</sup>”;
+“Le 75<sup>e</sup> arrive et bât l’Ennemi”; “J’étais
+tranquille, le brave 32<sup>e</sup> était là”; “Il n’est pas
+possible d’être plus brave que le 63<sup>e</sup>”;
+“Brave 18<sup>e</sup>, je vous connais. L’Ennemi ne
+tiendra pas devant vous”; and so on. These
+were mostly quotations from “mentions in despatches”
+made by Napoleon in regard to regiments
+in his famous “Army of Italy,” authorised by
+him, at first of his own initiative, and later as
+First Consul, to be recorded as Inscriptions of
+Honour on the regimental colours. The flags
+of other corps bore names of victories of note
+in which the regiments had taken part; as,
+for instance, “Rivoli,” “Lodi,” “Marengo.”<a id="FNanchor_3" href="#Footnote_3" class="fnanchor">3</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">15</span></p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">PROPOSED FOR CORONATION DAY</div>
+
+<p>Napoleon overlooked nothing that might add
+to the prestige of his Eagles. Not only would
+he himself personally present its Eagle to
+each regiment, but, further, there would be at
+the outset a general presentation of Eagles in
+Paris to the whole Army, which would be made
+a State event of significance, and form an integral
+part of the ceremony of his Coronation. On
+that Napoleon had insisted, in reply to a technical
+legal objection raised at one of the meetings of
+the Council of State. It was not to be a Parisian
+popular show. He was ready, indeed, he said,
+to transfer the ceremony to Boulogne. “Je
+rassemblerais deux cent mille hommes au camp.
+Là j’aurais une population couverte des blessures
+dont je serais sûr!” He gave directions that
+the Presentation of the Eagles should take
+place on the Field of Mars in front of the
+Military School, on the same day as the Coronation,
+and should follow immediately after the
+religious service and his actual crowning and
+consecration by the Pope in Notre Dame.<a id="FNanchor_4" href="#Footnote_4" class="fnanchor">4</a></p>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">16</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II<br>
+
+<span class="subhead">THE DAY OF THE PRESENTATION ON THE FIELD OF MARS</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE DAY FINALLY FIXED</div>
+
+<p class="in0"><span class="firstword">The</span> Coronation, Napoleon first proposed, should
+take place in the Chapel of the Invalides, on the
+historic day of the 18th Brumaire (November 9).
+Directly after it he would proceed in Imperial
+State, wearing his crown and robes, to the Field
+of Mars—the Champ de Mars, in front of the
+Military School, a stone’s-throw away—there
+to administer the Military Oath of Allegiance
+to the Army and distribute the Eagles at a
+grand review to be attended by representative
+deputations from every regiment of the Army
+from all over the Empire, assembled in Paris for
+the occasion. It was found preferable, however,
+that the Coronation service should take place
+in the Cathedral of Notre Dame instead of at
+the Invalides; and at a later date. Still, however,
+Napoleon held to his first idea of proceeding
+direct from the Coronation ceremony to the
+Field of Mars. He insisted that the presentation
+of the Eagles should follow as a joint ceremony
+immediately after his own consecration service.
+But there was Josephine to be considered. She<span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">17</span>
+was to accompany Napoleon throughout. The
+Empress, for her part, on hearing what was
+intended, declared herself physically incapable
+of bearing the strain of the double ceremony,
+and, in the result, Napoleon changed his original
+purpose at the eleventh hour. He consented
+to put off the presentation of the Eagles until
+the following morning. That plan, in turn, had
+to be altered. On the very afternoon of the
+Coronation, on his return to the Tuileries from
+Notre Dame, Napoleon found himself compelled,
+in consequence of the Empress’s state of nervous
+prostration after the fatiguing Cathedral service,
+again to defer the ceremony of the presentation
+of the Eagles. The Emperor now fixed the
+following Wednesday, December 5, for the
+“<i lang="fr">Fête des Aigles</i>,” as the Army spoke of it—three
+days from then. There was no further
+putting off after that.</p>
+
+<p>The plans for the muster were drawn up on
+a grandiose and elaborate scale. They provided
+for an immense attendance under arms of,
+according to one account, eighty thousand men;
+to comprise the Imperial Guard, and the garrison
+of Paris, together with special detachments
+sent to Paris as representative deputations by
+every regiment and corps of the Army, from all
+over the Empire. Over a thousand Eagles
+altogether were to be presented: two hundred
+and eighty to cavalry regiments; six hundred
+odd to infantry, artillery, and special corps;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">18</span>
+between forty and fifty to the Navy (one for
+the crew of every ship of the Line in commission);
+besides a hundred and eight to the departmental
+legions of the National Guard, the constitutional
+militia of Revolutionary France, which
+Napoleon, for reasons of policy, could not pass
+over. Every infantry battalion and cavalry
+squadron, and brigade (or battery) of artillery
+was to have its Eagle.</p>
+
+<p>Each infantry deputation, from both the
+Imperial Guard and the Line, would comprise
+the colonel or regimental commander, four other
+officers, and ten sous-officiers and men from each
+of the three battalions that at that period made
+up a French regiment of Foot. In all, in addition
+to the regiments of the Imperial Guard,
+one hundred and twelve regiments of the Line
+were to be represented, together with thirty-one
+of Light Infantry, twelve of Grenadiers, and
+one of foreign infantry. A deputation of fifteen
+officers and men was to represent each of the
+hundred and odd cavalry regiments of the
+Guard and Line; and smaller individual detachments
+would represent the various other
+arms and branches of the service appointed to
+receive Eagles. They would all pass before the
+Emperor and receive their Eagles from him
+personally, on behalf of their absent comrades,
+the six hundred thousand men who at that
+moment constituted the active field army of
+France. From every French ship of the Line in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">19</span>
+commission there would in like manner attend
+ten officers and men.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE WHOLE ARMY REPRESENTED</div>
+
+<p>From far and near the detachments of soldiers
+and sailors converged on the capital, marching
+some of them hundreds of miles from the most
+distant frontier garrisons of the Empire, and
+being several weeks on the road. The deputations
+of the First Army Corps, for instance, part
+of which was stationed in Hanover, set off early
+in October; some of its soldiers, quartered
+by the Elbe, and with from four to five hundred
+miles of road before them, started in the last
+week of September. The detachments from
+Italy and the Venetian frontier, for another
+instance, the deputations from the 1st of the
+Line, the 10th, the 52nd, and 101st of the Verona
+garrison, had over eight hundred miles to go,
+and started early in September. Quite an army,
+indeed, was on the move along the highways
+of France during October and November; all
+heading for Paris, marching by day and being
+billeted in the towns and villages by night.
+A huge series of detachments came from the
+camp of the “Army of the Ocean” at Boulogne
+assembled for the invasion of England. Marshal
+Soult, the Commander-in-Chief at Boulogne,
+with Marshals Davout and Ney, preceded them,
+Admiral Bruix, in charge of the Boulogne
+“Invasion Flotilla” of gunboats and transports,
+accompanying Soult. The troops in Holland;
+the garrisons of the Rhine fortresses, such as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">20</span>
+Mayence and Strasburg, and of Metz; that of
+Bayonne on the Spanish frontier; troops at every
+place of arms and cantonment and regimental
+dépôt all over France—all sent their deputations;
+also every outlying camp, every naval
+port along the coast, from the Texel and Antwerp,
+Brest, Rochfort, and L’Orient round to Toulon,
+in the south.</p>
+
+<p>Orders were given in every case that the
+detachments were each to bring the existing regimental
+colours, which, it was understood, were to
+be given up on parade in exchange for the Eagles.</p>
+
+<p>A roomy expanse of level ground several acres
+in extent, an oblong-shaped area nearly three-quarters
+of a mile in length and six hundred
+yards across, the Field of Mars offered an ideal
+place for a showy military spectacle. Thousands
+of people could look on comfortably at the display
+from the turfed slopes of the twenty-feet-high
+embankment which skirted the Field of
+Mars on three sides, and had been fitted up by
+the municipality with rows of seats in closely
+set tiers. As many as three hundred thousand
+spectators, indeed, could on occasion be accommodated
+there. The fourth side of the
+Champ de Mars was bounded by the <i lang="fr">façade</i> of
+the Ecole Militaire—three great domed blocks
+of buildings connected together and affording
+a grand view of the scene for hundreds of privileged
+guests. The entire frontage of the
+Military School to the height of the first-floor<span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">21</span>
+windows was taken up for the Day of the Eagles
+parade by an immense grand-stand, constructed
+to form a series of pavilions for the accommodation
+of the great official personages invited; with,
+in the centre, in front of the lofty colonnaded
+portico, a magnificently decorated Imperial
+Pavilion, whence Napoleon and Josephine seated
+on their thrones would look on and receive
+the homage of the Army.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE WEATHER ON THAT MORNING</div>
+
+<p>The only thing that was unpropitious was the
+weather. It proved, as far as the weather went,
+an unfortunate change of date. The day of the
+Coronation, December 2—it was, by the way,
+Advent Sunday—had been cold and trying,
+with lowering clouds overhead, but dry. On the
+Monday, Napoleon’s second choice, it was much
+the same out of doors; and on the Tuesday
+the weather kept fair. Then, however, it
+changed. During Tuesday afternoon the glass
+began to go down ominously and a chilly wind
+from the south-east set in. Towards ten at
+night rain and sleet in incessant showers began
+to fall—typical Frimaire weather, in keeping
+with the character of the “sleety month.”
+“When it did not rain,” says somebody, “it
+snowed, and between whiles it rained and snowed
+at the same time.” That was what the weather
+was like when Wednesday morning broke; but
+in spite of it the Imperial programme was to
+be carried out in its entirety, and hundreds of
+thousands of intending spectators braved the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">22</span>
+discomfort and started early to get a good place
+for witnessing the historic display.</p>
+
+<p>All Paris turned out early, prepared to sit
+out the day from eight in the morning until
+probably after four in the afternoon, packed in
+dense masses round the Champ de Mars.</p>
+
+<p>The heavy firing of salvos of artillery soon
+after dawn, from a dozen points all over Paris,
+ushered in the day’s doings. The whole city
+was already, as has been said, astir and in the
+streets, making its way to the Champ de Mars.
+Everywhere dark columns of cloaked soldiers,
+horse and foot, artillerymen without their guns,
+were tramping along through the slush and mud
+for their posts; some to take part on the route
+of the procession, which was to start from the
+Tuileries; most of them bound for the Field of
+Mars. Along the streets to be passed by the
+Imperial procession the houses were gaily decked
+out with festoons and branches of evergreens,
+or with coloured hangings and drapings.
+Oriental rugs of gorgeous hues and patterns,
+hired or borrowed for the Coronation week,
+hung from most of the windows; they were the
+favourite form of decoration. Here and there
+flags were seen, but it was not the fashion in
+Paris at that day to fly flags largely on days of
+public rejoicing.</p>
+
+<p>At ten o’clock the cannon again thundered
+out an Imperial salute—a hundred and one guns.
+All knew what that was for, and there was a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">23</span>
+hush of expectation all over Paris. The guns
+meant that the Emperor had started; that the
+Imperial State procession had left the Tuileries.
+At that moment the chilly drizzle of sleet was
+still coming down, but the universal enthusiasm
+rose superior to the wet and cold. No weather
+could damp the anticipations of the excited
+Parisians over the Imperial spectacle.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">MURAT COMMANDS THE PARADE</div>
+
+<p>On the Champ de Mars, as the guns began to
+fire, the soldiers—all long since in their places
+drawn up in closely massed columns, that ranged
+right round the parade ground on three sides—stripped
+off and rolled up their soaked cloaks,
+fixed bayonets, and stood to arms. Murat,
+Governor of Paris, Commander-in-Chief on the
+parade, took post in front of the Imperial
+Pavilion before the Ecole Militaire: a gorgeous
+figure in a bright blue velvet uniform coat,
+resplendently embroidered with gold, a lilac
+sash with crimson stripes round his waist; in
+scarlet breeches braided with gold, purple leather
+Hessians, trimmed and tasselled with gold, with
+gleaming gold spurs and sabre-scabbard; wearing
+a Marshal’s cocked hat with crimson ostrich-plumes,
+and mounted on a no less splendidly
+caparisoned charger, with leopard-skin and
+crimson and gold saddle-trappings. A brilliant
+<i lang="fr">entourage</i> of staff officers and dandy aides de
+camp, daintily attired in pearl-grey uniforms,
+with silver lace, or in crimson and green and
+gold, clustered in rear of their chief.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">24</span></p>
+
+<p>Simultaneously, the massed bands of the
+Imperial Guard, who had been playing national
+airs and popular music at times during the past
+hour, formed to the front near by.</p>
+
+<p>For the time being, until after the Emperor
+should arrive and take his seat on the throne,
+the troops on parade, comprising the Army
+deputations to receive the Eagles, remained
+as they had been marshalled on arrival; arranged
+in a vast fan-shaped formation round
+three sides of the Champ de Mars. The entire
+Imperial Army of Napoleon stood represented
+within that space: Imperial Guard, and Line,
+Cavalry and Artillery; the sailors of the Navy;
+the National Guard,—the <i lang="fr">mise en scène</i> presenting
+a tremendous impression of martial power, as
+all stood formed up in close order, in their full-dress
+review-uniforms, muskets held stiffly at the
+support, bayonets fixed.</p>
+
+<p>The Imperial procession set off in full State,
+accompanied by much the same display of
+martial pomp that had attended the great
+Coronation progress to Notre Dame of three
+days before. It moved off in a pelting squall
+of sleet; but, almost immediately afterwards,
+as though Heaven would fain spare the show,
+within a few minutes of the start, the sleet and
+rain ceased and the weather unexpectedly improved.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE MAMELUKES LEAD THE WAY</div>
+
+<p>Foremost of all, the mounted Mamelukes of
+the Guard came prancing by, radiant in Oriental<span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">25</span>
+garb, their curved scimitars drawn and gleaming;
+a hundred swarthy figures in scarlet calpacks
+swathed round with white turbans, garbed in
+vivid green burnous-cloaks well thrown back to
+display gold-embroidered scarlet jackets, bright
+straw-coloured sashes, and baggy scarlet trousers.
+Their famous Horse-tail Standard headed the
+squadron. Eight hundred stalwart troopers of
+Napoleon’s pet regiment, the corps whose
+uniform he always wore in camp, the Chasseurs
+of the Guard, followed immediately after the
+Mamelukes. An ideal <i lang="fr">corps d’élite</i> they looked
+as they rode by, in their bristling busbies of
+dark fur topped with waving crimson and green
+plumes, dark green double-breasted jackets, and
+crimson breeches; with crimson pelisses hanging
+at the shoulder, fur-trimmed and barred with
+yellow braid in hussar style. These two corps
+led the van of the procession.</p>
+
+<p>The first set of Imperial coaches, with six
+horses each and outriders, thereupon came by.
+They carried mostly State magnificos and
+grandees of exalted position at Court. Coach
+after coach went slowly past at a dignified pace:
+eight—nine—ten—eleven—conveyances, all spick
+and span with new gilding and varnish. The
+twelfth coach, beside which rode a bevy of
+smart equerries, held the Princesses of the
+Bonaparte family: five grown-up ladies and the
+little daughter of Princess Louis. It was
+rather a tight squeeze, for the five Imperial<span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">26</span>
+Highnesses were plump and bulky persons, and
+had to be wedged closely; they brought with
+them too, each lady, several yards of train,
+brocaded stuff with stiff edging of gilt-gimp,
+and thick purple and emerald green velvet
+mantling, which had all to be got in and kept
+from crumpling as much as possible! What
+they said to one another has not been recorded—they
+were usually free-spoken women with
+comments for most things ready to their tongues,
+like other daughters of the Revolution. At any
+rate this is known. They were in white silk
+dresses, low necked, and, in spite of their close
+packing, shivered with the cold, which they felt
+bitterly. “We were all,” related a Lady of
+Honour elsewhere in the procession, “thinly
+dressed, as for a heated ball-room, and had only
+thin Cashmere shawls to keep our shoulders
+warm with.”</p>
+
+<p>Then came more soldiers. The immediate
+escort of the Emperor now appeared. Sitting
+erect and stiff in their saddles, the Carabiniers
+rode up—the senior cavalry regiment of France—eight
+hundred picked horsemen uniformed in
+Imperial blue and crimson and gold, with helmets
+of burnished brass, over which nodded thick
+tufted crests of crimson wool. The officers,
+superb beings adorned with breastplates of
+gleaming brass, led the regiment. The Carabiniers
+claimed to be the only corps of the
+Napoleonic Army which could prove continuity<span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">27</span>
+with the Old Royal Army, if not indeed with
+the historic “Maison du Roi” itself, the Household
+Brigade of the Monarchy, owing to a
+curious oversight at the Revolution through
+which the regiment had escaped dispersal.</p>
+
+<p>Then came the Man of the Hour.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE IMPERIAL COACH APPEARS</div>
+
+<p>Napoleon now appeared, in his brand-new
+Imperial State coach. Eight noble bays drew
+it—with harness and trappings of red morocco
+leather studded with golden bees. A marvellous
+vehicle to look at was Napoleon’s coach, gleaming
+all over with gilded carved work; its roof
+topped by a great golden crown, modelled “after
+that of Charlemagne,” as people told one another,
+upheld by four glistening gilded eagles. The
+State coach sparkled all over, looking as if
+encrusted with gold; a gleaming mass of carved
+and gilded decorations, representing allegorical
+emblems, heraldic designs, and coats of arms in
+colour.</p>
+
+<p>Napoleon’s head coachman of the Consulate
+days, César, sat on the box, his fat form embedded
+in the centre of a luxurious hammer-cloth
+of scarlet velvet, spangled over with
+golden bees. Outriders in green and gold and
+walking footmen beside the horses added their
+part; also half a score of Pages of Honour, hanging
+on all round at the sides and back of the coach,
+in green velvet coats, gold laced down the seams,
+with green silk shoulder-knots, scarlet silk
+breeches and stockings, and white ostrich-plumes<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">28</span>
+in their jaunty black velvet hats: most of the
+lads future officers of the Guard. At either
+side rode Equerries and <i lang="fr">Officiers d’Ordonnance</i>,
+in white and gold or pale blue and silver.</p>
+
+<p>To the crowds that lined the streets the State
+coach was a sight of the day—the coach, for
+some, as much as the Emperor. All Paris,
+of course, had not been able to find room round
+the Field of Mars, spacious as the accommodation
+there was. The pavements all along the streets
+from the Tuileries were packed with a dense
+crowd, which pressed everywhere close up behind
+the double rows of Gendarmes and Imperial
+Guardsmen keeping the processional route.</p>
+
+<p>They shouted “Vive l’Empereur!” lustily,
+for all had a good view of Napoleon through the
+great glass windows of the coach; seated inside
+on the right, wearing his ostrich-feathered cap
+of semi-State, a gold embroidered purple velvet
+mantle, and the Grand Master’s collar of the
+Legion of Honour, sparkling with costly gems.</p>
+
+<p>Josephine, a slender figure in ermine cloak
+and white silk dress, sat on Napoleon’s left, and
+on the front seats sat Joseph and Louis, side
+by side—the elder brother sleek and smiling,
+wrapped up in a poppy-red cloak as Grand
+Elector of the Empire; Louis Bonaparte wearing
+his blue velvet Constable’s mantle over the
+brass breastplate of the Colonel-in-Chief of the
+Carabiniers, to which rank Napoleon had specially
+promoted Louis, with the idea of maintaining<span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">29</span>
+an old tradition of the Monarchy that the titular
+Commander of the Carabiniers should always
+be a Prince of the Blood, “<i lang="fr">Frère du Roi</i>.”</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">CHIEFS OF THE “MAISON MILITAIRE”</div>
+
+<p>Napoleon’s Imperial Standard was borne
+immediately after the State coach; a crowned
+eagle heading the staff; the flag a silken tricolor,
+richly fringed with gold and bespangled with
+golden bees.</p>
+
+<p>Four of the Marshals, readily recognised by
+their scarlet ostrich-plumes and gold-tipped
+bâtons of command, attended the Standard, and,
+as Colonels-General of the Imperial Guard, led
+the Imperial Military Household, the “Maison
+Militaire de l’Empereur.” The four were:
+Davout, titular chief of the Grenadiers of the
+Guard; Soult, Colonel-General of the Chasseurs;
+Bessières, of the Heavy Cavalry; Mortier, of
+the Guard Artillery. Close behind them four
+other gorgeously brilliant officers of rank rode
+abreast, the Colonels-General of the Cavalry
+of the Army: St. Cyr, of the Cuirassiers, disdainful
+and sardonic of mien; stern Baraguay
+d’Hilliers, of the Dragoons; good-looking Junot,
+Colonel-General of the Hussars; and Napoleon’s
+son-in-law, the chivalrous Eugène Beauharnais,
+Colonel-General of Chasseurs. A brilliant
+cavalcade of little less resplendent cavaliers,
+the Emperor’s aides de camp, all of them Generals
+of Division or Brigadiers, rounded up the
+group.</p>
+
+<p>Another eye-surfeit of gleaming varnish, gilded<span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">30</span>
+carvings, and green liveries continued the
+pageant: twelve other State coaches, six-horsed
+like those in advance; carrying the personal
+suites of Napoleon and Josephine and the
+Princesses, Court Chamberlains and similar gold-embroidered
+functionaries, Ladies of the Palace
+and “Officers of the Crown.” The procession
+ended after them; the rear being brought up
+by the Mounted Grenadiers of the Guard,
+strapping troopers in huge bear-skins—soldiers
+picked for their height and bearing from the
+Cavalry of the Line—and the Gendarmerie
+d’Elite, who formed the Imperial palace-guard.</p>
+
+<p>More than half the Imperial Guard—numbering,
+in 1804, ten thousand officers and men—lined
+the streets under arms; detachments of Grenadiers
+and Vélites, Foot-Chasseurs, Veterans of
+the Guard, Marines of the Guard. Through
+double rows of these, all standing with presented
+arms, the procession took its way, passing from
+the Tuileries Gardens, across the Place de Concorde
+and over the bridge there, to the Esplanade
+des Invalides. Yet another thundering Imperial
+salute from the twenty old cannons of the Batterie
+Triomphale greeted Napoleon at that point;
+while rows of old soldiers, the maimed veterans
+of Arcola and Rivoli and Marengo, shouted
+themselves hoarse, standing ranged in front of
+the Outer Court beside Napoleon’s Venetian
+trophy, kept there temporarily, the Lion of St.
+Mark.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">31</span></p>
+
+<p>From the Invalides, by way of the Rue de
+Grenelle, it was not far to the Military School.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">WITHIN THE MILITARY SCHOOL</div>
+
+<p>Withindoors at the Ecole Militaire a pause was
+made in the Governor’s apartments, which
+had been sumptuously furnished for the occasion
+from the Imperial storerooms of the <i lang="fr">Garde
+Meuble</i>. Napoleon here accepted a number of
+selected addresses from the military delegations.
+One of them was brought by the regimental
+deputation of the 4th Chasseurs stationed at
+Boulogne. It thanked the Emperor in advance
+for the new standard he was presenting to the
+corps, “trusting that the day is at hand when
+we shall be able to contribute towards consolidating
+the splendour of the Empire by planting
+our Eagle on the Tower of London.” The
+Emperor also received the congratulations of
+the Ambassadors and Diplomatic Corps. Ten
+hereditary German Princes of the Rhineland,
+visiting Paris for the Coronation, attended at
+the Military School to witness the Presentation
+of the Eagles; at their head the Prince-Bishop-Elector
+of Ratisbon, Arch-Chancellor of the
+German Empire, the Margrave of Baden, and the
+Princes of Hesse-Darmstadt and Hesse-Homburg.
+Napoleon and Josephine after that withdrew
+to assume their crowns and Imperial regalia
+and pass outside to the two thrones prepared
+for them and standing side by side in the grand
+central pavilion in front.</p>
+
+<p>The vast array of “guests of the Emperor,”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">32</span>
+seated outside, had of course been long since
+in their places, awaiting the advent of their
+Majesties amid surroundings designed on a
+scale of lavish magnificence regardless of cost.</p>
+
+<p>On either hand pavilions and galleries and
+platforms, canopied and carpeted, draped and
+curtained and hung in crimson and gold, decorated
+with festoons and banners, and fenced
+with gilded balustrading, covered the whole
+length of the <i lang="fr">façade</i> of the Ecole Militaire fronting
+the parade ground. In the centre stood the
+Imperial Pavilion, beneath a canopy of crimson
+silk supported by tall gilded columns. Side
+galleries draped, and under awnings led from it
+right and left to two other pavilions, at either
+end of the <i lang="fr">façade</i>, similarly adorned in lavish
+gorgeousness. Below the galleries extended
+long stands, sloping forward to the ground,
+draped in green and crimson, and packed with
+rows of seats five or six deep. Here, partly
+in the open, sat the provincial Coronation guests
+from the Departments: the local prefects and
+sub-prefects, procurators, magistrates and
+syndics, mayors and councillors, and other
+municipal functionaries, all in gala-day attire
+of every colour, plumes in their hats, and buttons
+and embroidery all over their coats. They
+made a many-hued show in the mass, seen from
+the parade ground. The higher State dignitaries
+had seats under the canopies of the
+galleries, and looked yet more decorative.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">33</span>
+Seated in the pavilions on cushioned chairs were
+the Ambassadors and Foreign Princes, the Senate,
+Corps Legislatif, and Tribunate, High Court
+Judges in flowing robes of flame-coloured silk,
+and velvet-clad “Grand Officers of the Empire,”
+in full-dress all. They looked imposing and
+magnificent, but most of them were shivering,
+with damp bodies and numbed fingers.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">IN THE IMPERIAL PAVILION</div>
+
+<p>The sleet had stopped for the time, but after
+the all-night’s downpour of rain and snow the
+seats everywhere were in a sad condition.
+Canopies and cushions, curtains, seats, carpets—everything
+had been drenched through and
+swamped during the night. The discomfort,
+however, was past helping and had to be borne.
+The Imperial Pavilion itself indeed had not
+escaped a wetting, and in parts it was in little
+better condition than the other places. “Only
+with the greatest diligence,” describes one of the
+suite, “had it been possible to keep the thrones
+dry.”</p>
+
+<p>Napoleon’s throne, with beside it the throne
+for Josephine, at a slightly lower elevation, stood
+at the front of the Imperial Pavilion. A gilt-framed
+crimson velvet Chair of State was
+provided for the Emperor, with a crowned eagle
+in gilt stucco perched on the back; made on the
+model of Dagobert’s chair on which Napoleon
+had sat during the ceremony of the distribution
+of the Crosses of the Legion of Honour at
+Boulogne. As on that day, so now, trophies of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">34</span>
+captured battle-flags adorned the back of the
+Imperial daïs, selected from the two hundred
+and odd standards taken in battle by the Armies
+of Italy and Egypt which Napoleon had led in
+person: trophies of Montenotte and Arcola, of
+Tagliamento and Lodi, of Rivoli and Castiglione;
+the red-and-white banner of the Knights of
+Malta; the green Horse-tail Standard of the
+Beys of Egypt; Austrian standards won by
+Napoleon at the crowning triumph of Marengo.</p>
+
+<p>To right and left of the Emperor, on richly
+decorated chairs of ceremony, Joseph and Louis
+Bonaparte and the Princesses were seated.
+The Imperial suites in attendance were grouped
+at the back together with a cluster of court
+grandees, filling most of the spacious platform
+behind the throne.</p>
+
+<p>In the forefront, at the Emperor’s right hand,
+stood a splendid galaxy of stalwart figures—the
+Marshals of the Empire. They stood forward
+prominently. For them that was the day
+of days. All must see on such a day the champion
+warriors of France, the renown of whose
+victories had filled the world! The whole
+eighteen were there—all except one. Marshal
+Brune alone was absent; on service out of
+France as Napoleon’s Ambassador at Constantinople.
+The group was completed by the four
+“Honorary Marshals”—the veteran Kellermann,
+the victor of Valmy; Perignon; Serrurier; and
+Lefebvre.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">35</span></p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE LIEUTENANTS OF THE WAR LORD</div>
+
+<p>Glance for one moment round the main group
+of thirteen, the chosen lieutenants of Napoleon
+the War Lord, as they stand beside their Chief,
+with, arrayed in front, the serried columns of
+the destined victors of Austerlitz. Next to the
+Emperor and the Eagles it is they who on this
+Day of the Eagles are the principal objects of
+interest to the general spectator.</p>
+
+<p>Let the reader for one moment imagine himself
+on the Imperial Pavilion, with at his side
+a convenient friend who knows everybody, to
+point the marshals out.</p>
+
+<p>That short, spare, low-browed, swarthy,
+Italian-faced man, with crafty, pitiless eyes, is
+Masséna—“L’Enfant chéri de la Victoire,”
+as Napoleon himself hailed him on the battlefield;
+the very ablest undoubtedly of all the
+Marshals. He knows it too. When the list of
+the Marshals first came out, a friend called on
+Masséna to know if it was true that he was one,
+and to congratulate him. “Oh yes, thank you,”
+replied Masséna in an icy tone, puckering up his
+dark face with a sour look, “I am one; <em>one of
+fourteen</em>!” He’s Italian in blood and breeding,
+and in his tricky ways; every point about him:
+but he’d give his soul to be a Frenchman!
+“Massène” is what he is always trying to get
+people to call him. And the airs and self-importance
+he assumes—though only like most
+of the others in that, indeed—ever since he
+became “Monseigneur le Maréchal” and has<span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">36</span>
+had the honour of being addressed as “Mon
+Cousin” by the Emperor! Just think of it!
+In the old days, behind the counter of that little
+olive-oil and dried-fruit shop up a narrow,
+smelly back street at Antibes, plain “Citoyen
+André” was good enough! Just look at that
+thin, pouting chest, gleaming all over with gold
+embroidery, with the broad crimson riband of
+the Legion of Honour slanting across it, and
+the aggressive tilt of his ostrich-plumed hat!
+Imagine all that being once upon a time just
+a cabin-boy on a Marseilles to Leghorn coaster,
+half-starved and sworn at and cuffed and kicked
+about by a curmudgeonly <i lang="it">padrone</i>! Then fancy
+it a sneaking smuggler, chevied about, and
+crouching along to keep out of carbine shot
+of the Nice <i lang="fr">douaniers</i>! After that Sergeant
+Masséna of the late King’s <i lang="it">Royal Italien</i> regiment
+of the Line! And so to the bâton.</p>
+
+<p>They are most of them rather <i lang="fr">tête montée</i>
+just now, with their exaltation spick and span
+on them, these demi-gods of war of ours! Just
+see them in the field, or on the march; away
+from the Emperor. They stalk ahead in solitary
+grandeur; each with his own <i lang="fr">pas seul</i>, keeping
+the lesser creation at arms’ length, wrapped up
+in his own dignified importance. Yet only six
+months since their lofty Excellencies were mere
+generals of division, “Citoyen Général” this or
+that, each one; just units among a hundred
+and twenty odd others! Nowadays, on the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">37</span>
+march, your Marshal rides by himself, forty
+yards ahead of everybody; his staff have to
+tail off well in rear and keep back! M. le
+Maréchal doesn’t deign to open his lips, except
+to give an order. He lives by himself: nobody
+now is good enough to ask to dinner, except
+perhaps another marshal! No off-duty pleasantries
+nowadays; no more <i lang="fr">bon camaraderie</i>;
+no more telling of Palais-Royal stories,
+as it used to be; no more cracking of jokes
+beside the bivouac fire. You might as well
+expect a bishop to have a game of marbles!
+Let a former brother-officer <i lang="fr">tutoyer</i> a marshal!
+Poor fellow! Let him try, if he wants to know
+what a paralysing, rasping, cold-blooded snub
+is, to get a flattening backhander he’ll remember
+as long as he wears the uniform.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">TWO FAMOUS HARD FIGHTERS</div>
+
+<p>That tall, bull-necked, heavy-featured man is
+Augereau; “gros comme un tambour-major”;
+absolutely fearless under fire, kind-hearted to
+those he takes a fancy to, they say, but ordinarily
+a coarse-tongued swashbuckler, with barrack-room
+manners. There too is Lannes, that
+keen-eyed, short man, holding his head as if
+he had a crick in his neck! He has one, a
+permanent one, the result of a bullet under
+the jaw from a British marine’s musket in the
+trenches at Acre. A hot-tempered, fiery, devil-may-care
+fellow is Lannes; but as cold as ice
+on the battlefield when things look like going
+wrong! Among friends, chivalrous and generous-hearted<span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">38</span>
+to a degree, his men worship Lannes;
+“the Roland of the Grand Army,” some call
+him. That is Moncey: and that very tall and
+erect, dry, rather dense-looking, hawk-nosed
+marshal with the shaggy eyebrows, Mortier.
+Mark Bernadotte there, that shifty-eyed Gascon
+with a sharp nose and thick hair; of medium
+height,—nobody really trusts him. An ingrained
+Jacobin—strip his arm and you will
+find tattooed on it, indelibly, for life, “Mort
+aux rois”—and a schemer, Napoleon named him
+a Marshal for political reasons mainly; although,
+no doubt, he has the same soldier-qualifications
+as the rest; has won a pitched battle or taken
+two fortresses. A cunning, plausible fellow is
+Bernadotte; with ready smile and a smooth
+tongue. He calls everybody “Mon ami” whether
+he is talking to a brigadier or a bugler. “Que
+diable fait il dans cette galère?” say a good
+many people of the Commander of the First
+Army Corps. Over yonder stands Bessières,
+Murat’s great friend; a gentlemanly enough
+fellow, but at times thick-headed, hardly of the
+mental calibre of his confrères. Yet Bessières
+is an ideal leader of Horse on the battlefield;
+as reckless as a lion at bay: you should see him
+head a charge sword in hand! One of Napoleon’s
+pets is he and the only man in the Army who
+sticks to his queue. Bessières flatly refused
+to cut it off when the order was given last June
+for everybody to copy “Le petit tondu” (“The<span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">39</span>
+little shorn one”), as the men call the Emperor,
+and it hangs halfway down his back.</p>
+
+<p>That dark, sleek-faced, heavy-eyed man is
+Jourdan, Commander-in-Chief once of the Army
+of the Revolution. “The Anvil,” some call
+him, he has been so often soundly beaten.
+But, all the same, he was too popular with the
+Army for Napoleon to pass him over. Jourdan
+it was who invented the conscription system.
+He started in life as a linen-draper at Grenoble.
+There is of course, too, Brune, who isn’t here
+to-day: but he doesn’t count for much. A
+minor-poet and a journalist was he once upon
+a time. He’s another of the clever-tongued
+Jacobins the Emperor gave the bâton to as a
+sop.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">NAPOLEON’S RIGHT-HAND MAN</div>
+
+<p>Look near the Emperor, at that neat athletic
+figure, of middle height: that is “Old Berthier.”
+He is from ten to fifteen years older than most
+of the other marshals; or, in fact, than the
+Emperor himself. Berthier, in fact, is old enough
+to have been a captain in the Army of the <i lang="fr">ancien
+régime</i>, and can remember how he first smelt
+powder fighting under Lafayette and Washington
+against the British in America. He was a staff
+officer when Napoleon first came to the Ecole
+Militaire here from Brienne, as a boy gentleman-cadet.
+A heaven-born Chief of the Staff
+is Marshal Berthier, and the Emperor without
+him in a campaign would be like a man
+without his right hand. Every detail goes like<span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">40</span>
+clockwork with Berthier at the head of the
+Etat-Major.</p>
+
+<p>You should see the two of them on campaign,
+working together in the Quartier-Général.
+Napoleon will be sprawling on his stomach at
+full length over a huge set of maps which cover,
+spread out, nearly the whole floor of the tent;
+an open pair of compasses in his hand, a box of
+pins with little paper flag-heads, red, blue, yellow,
+green, at one side, some of them already stuck
+over the map marking the positions of the
+different corps and of the enemy. He has the
+compasses set to scale, to mark off some
+seventeen to twenty miles, which means from
+twenty-two to twenty-five miles of road, taking
+into account the windings. To and fro he
+twists and turns the compasses like lightning
+and decides in an instant the marches for each
+column to arrive at the desired point, all timed
+exactly to the very day and hour with an astonishing
+certainty and precision. He calls out his
+instructions in half a dozen words or so, sharply
+snapped out, for Berthier, who all the time is
+standing near, bending down at Napoleon’s
+shoulder, notebook and pencil in hand, to take
+down. Old Berthier has a veritable instinct
+for understanding what the Emperor means.
+He can interpret the smallest grunt Napoleon
+makes. He can spin out three or four broken
+ejaculations into detailed orders for an Army
+Corps, all worked out with absolute clearness,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">41</span>
+in beautiful language. It is amazing how he
+does it, but he does do it. A staff officer, or
+else Bacler d’Albe, the Imperial Military Cartographer,
+the officer in charge of the maps, it
+may be, is all the while also kneeling by the
+pin-box, and has the pins of the right colour
+out and stuck in the maps as fast as the Emperor
+wants them. The instant the Emperor is satisfied,
+Berthier is off, and with the secretaries
+at work in his own quarters drafting the orders.
+Then, before you know well where you are, a
+dozen <i lang="fr">estafettes</i> are galloping all over the
+country with the orders—in the case of a very
+important order sometimes three or four staff
+officers each take a copy, to ride by different
+routes so as to minimise the risk of delay or
+capture. That is the working of Berthier’s
+system, and there is not often a miscarriage or
+serious hitch in the delivery.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">MARSHALL SOULT</div>
+
+<p>And mark Soult, the coming man of the Marshals
+when he gets his chance; a wary old
+dog-fox for an enemy to tackle. A sergeant
+of infantry in the old “Royal Regiment”
+of former days, the old 13th of the Line,
+then a drill-instructor of Volunteers, now he is
+at the head of the Army at Boulogne for the
+descent on England. Hardly even the Emperor
+knows more about tactics than Soult. Note how
+self-possessed and masterful he looks, so cold
+and impassive of demeanour. Those eyes that
+seem to pierce through you, those clear-cut<span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">42</span>
+aquiline features, that face like a mask of bronze,
+show the character of the man. You wouldn’t
+think though, to see his fine soldier-like figure
+as he stands there, a warrior born to look at,
+that Soult is not only lame from a fall from his
+horse years ago, but has limped from his birth,
+from a club-foot.</p>
+
+<p>That bald-headed marshal over there is
+Marshal Davout, a dashing subaltern of Dragoons
+once in the Old Royal Army. A fine
+tactician for a hot place is Davout; and when
+the fight has been won, no leader so harsh and
+pitiless to the vanquished enemy. He wears
+spectacles on service: he can hardly see ten
+yards in front of his big nose. The ladies are
+very fond of Davout; he waltzes so nicely.</p>
+
+<p>And that other there is Marshal Ney; “the
+Indefatigable” is the Army’s name for him. He
+never spares himself, nor the enemy, on the
+battlefield; but after the last shot there is no
+more generous victor than Marshal Ney. For
+sheer dogged pluck against odds, for simply
+marvellous intrepidity, the world cannot match
+Ney. Stalwart and square-shouldered, he carries
+himself with all the jaunty assurance of manner
+you would expect in perhaps the most dashing
+leader of hussars the Army of France has known.
+He is an Alsatian, born by the Rhine; a pleasant-faced
+man, with frank grey eyes, curly red hair
+over a broad open forehead. “Red Michael”
+is one of the soldiers’ names for Ney; and there<span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">43</span>
+is not one of the Marshals for whom his men
+would do more.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE EAGLES AWAIT NAPOLEON</div>
+
+<p>Such, if it may be permitted to describe them
+in this way, is something of what the Marshals
+of Napoleon looked like on the day of the
+Eagle presentation on the Field of Mars. All
+eyes were turned on the Marshals as they stood
+there beside Napoleon; a brilliant array of
+soldierly figures in their red ostrich-plumed
+cocked hats, richly laced uniforms, gleaming
+brass-bound sword-scabbards and high jack-boots
+with clanking brass spurs.</p>
+
+<p>From the foot of the throne a grand staircase
+led down to the parade ground, widening out
+with a curving sweep to either side at the foot.
+It terminated there with, flanking the lower
+steps, two gilded statues, designed to represent,
+the one, “France granting Peace,” the other,
+“France making War.” From top to bottom
+of the stairs and extending at the foot to right
+and left along either side, stood in rows the
+colonels of the regiments on parade, together
+with the senior officers of the National Guard,
+all awaiting the Emperor’s appearance on the
+throne. Each bore the new Eagle standard to
+be presented to his own corps. All were at
+their posts as the appointed moment neared,
+while at the same time Murat and his attendant
+cavalcade of brilliantly bedecked horsemen
+closed in and formed up in front, so as immediately
+to face Napoleon.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">44</span></p>
+
+<p>On either hand of Murat were ranked the
+massed bands of the Imperial Guard, flanked
+by two solid phalanxes of drummers, each a
+thousand strong. Near by these were drawn up
+on horseback, on one side the officers of the Head
+Quarters Staff at the War Office, on the other,
+the staff officers of the army corps of the Marshals.</p>
+
+<p>Napoleon and Josephine made their entry
+into the Grand Pavilion heralded by a procession,
+the bands of the Guard playing the Coronation
+March. Then, to the accompaniment of
+three successive shouts of “Vive l’Empereur!”
+from the soldiers—the formal greeting to
+Napoleon on parade, in accordance with Army
+regulation—the Emperor seated himself on
+the throne. He was in full Imperial garb, wearing
+his Imperial mantle of rich crimson velvet
+studded with golden bees, and the Imperial
+crown, a golden laurel chaplet “after Charlemagne.”
+In his right hand he bore the Imperial
+sceptre, a tall silver-gilt wand with an eagle
+surmounting it, also designed, as they said,
+“after Charlemagne.”</p>
+
+<p>Seating himself with Josephine at his side, in
+her State robes and with a magnificent crown
+of diamonds on her head, Napoleon gave the
+order for the proceedings to begin.</p>
+
+<p>Murat, as Governor of Paris, in immediate
+command of the parade, raised his glittering
+marshal’s bâton. The bands of the Guard
+ceased playing abruptly. The next moment<span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">45</span>
+the two thousand infantry drums began to beat.
+It was the appointed signal for the detachments
+to advance and form up in front of the
+throne.</p>
+
+<p>At once, at the first roll of the drums, the
+soldiers ranged round the ground began to
+move.</p>
+
+<p>Wheeling some, counter-marching others, here
+rapidly doubling, there marking time—looking,
+indeed, for the moment, at first, in the mass,
+to the untrained eye of the non-military spectator
+like a swarming ant-heap in motion and
+inextricably intermingled—like magic all suddenly
+appeared in order, a series of columns, the
+heads of which, arrayed at regular intervals,
+were in unison converging concentrically towards
+the foot of the grand staircase in front
+of the throne. A dozen paces in rear of where
+Murat stood all halted as one man. There was
+a quick movement of bayonets as arms were
+shouldered; the action making a glint of flashing
+steel in spite of the dull grey light overhead.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">NAPOLEON FACES THE PARADE</div>
+
+<p>Every sound was hushed as Napoleon rose to
+his feet. He faced the wide-spreading multitude
+and gazed silently over them for a moment;
+standing well forward where all might see him.
+Then he addressed the parade in strong vibrant
+tones which rang out clear and resonant over
+the whole assembly like a trumpet-note. In
+words that seemed to thrill with intensified
+energy he called on the soldiers before him, on<span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">46</span>
+behalf of themselves and their absent comrades,
+to take the oath of devotion to the Eagles.</p>
+
+<p>“Soldiers!” he began, his right arm outstretched
+with an impassioned gesture towards
+the Eagles, whose bearers held them stiffly
+erect, all glancing and gleaming like polished
+gold, the bright-hued silken flags unfurled,
+“behold your standards! These Eagles to you
+shall ever be your rallying-point. Wherever
+your Emperor shall deem it needful for the defence
+of his throne and his people, there shall they be
+seen!”</p>
+
+<p>He paused. Then raising his right hand in
+the air with a swift strenuous movement Napoleon
+pronounced the oath:</p>
+
+<p>“You swear to sacrifice your lives in their
+defence: to maintain them by your courage
+ever in the path of Victory! You swear it?”</p>
+
+<p>The vast gathering stood as though spellbound.
+For one instant all remained motionless
+and silent, held down as it were by overmastering
+emotion.</p>
+
+<p>Then, all together, with one accord, the soldiers
+found their voices. With a thundering shout
+that seemed to shake the air, the Army made
+its response, answering back in one deep chorus:</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">“WE SWEAR IT! WE SWEAR IT!”</div>
+
+<p>“<i lang="fr">Nous le jurons!</i>”—“We swear it!”</p>
+
+<p>One and all enthusiastically re-echoed the
+words; while the colonels excitedly brandished
+and waved aloft the Eagles. In a frenzy of
+martial ardour the entire assembly, at the top<span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">47</span>
+of their voices, again and again declaimed,
+“We swear it! We swear it!” A wild prolonged
+outburst of cheering followed, and
+exuberant shouts of “Vive l’Empereur!”</p>
+
+<p>Before the cheering had abated, the drums
+broke in again. The sharp clash and rattle
+recalled all to order instantly. Again a dead
+silence fell over the great host, standing now
+with recovered arms.</p>
+
+<p>Up once more went Murat’s marshal’s bâton.
+The next moment the dense-set columns were
+standing stock-still like rows of statues, with
+arms at the shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>Napoleon resumed his seat on the throne, and
+as he did so yet once more a wave of enthusiasm
+swept over the vast array. Redoubled shouts of
+“Vive l’Empereur!” burst wildly forth, the
+soldiers pulling off their hats or helmets, and
+hoisting them on the points of their bayonets,
+excitedly waving them, while they shouted
+themselves breathless.</p>
+
+<p>Again the drums rolled, and again order was
+restored. And now the supreme act of the
+drama opened—the formal presentation of each
+Eagle to its own regimental deputation.</p>
+
+<p>Forthwith the wide-fronted columns, breaking
+swiftly into quarter-column formation, began to
+move, section by section, in turn. Rapidly,
+and, as it almost seemed, automatically, they
+resumed their first formation, extending round
+the Field of Mars on three sides. From front<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">48</span>
+to rear the quarter-columns took up a full mile
+and three-quarters. Ranked in close order, the
+long-drawn-out array of troops on that set off,
+to a stately march from the bands of the Guard,
+to pass along the front of the Military School,
+before the flanking pavilion, and galleries and
+stands. So, in due course, all in turn came
+opposite to the foot of the great stairway ascending
+to the throne.</p>
+
+<p>Each section, as it came in front of the steps,
+made a pause. The Colonels at the same
+moment were passing in file before Napoleon.
+Each in turn inclined the Eagle that he bore towards
+the Emperor. He held the staff at an
+angle of forty-five degrees—the regulation method
+of salute, in accordance with an Imperial order
+issued in the previous July, when the adoption
+of the Eagle as the Army standard was first
+announced. Napoleon on his side, with his
+ungloved right hand, just touched each Eagle.
+The Colonels, then, saluting, turned, one after the
+other, to descend the stairs. At the foot of the
+stairway each delivered over the Eagle to the
+standard-bearer of his regiment, who, together
+with the deputation, was at the spot to receive it.<a id="FNanchor_5" href="#Footnote_5" class="fnanchor">5</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">49</span></p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE ONLY EXISTING NAVAL EAGLE</div>
+
+<p>With the Eagles in their charge the regimental
+parties moved on. Passing in front of the
+stands and pavilions beyond, all wheeled there,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">50</span>
+to pass again round the arena of the Field of
+Mars, until they had reached their former
+stations, and halted, all ranged in the order in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">51</span>
+which they had taken post at their first
+arrival.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE EAGLE OF THE IRISH LEGION</div>
+
+<p>There remained after that the grand <i lang="fr">finale</i>.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">52</span>
+The March Past of the Eagle detachments before
+Napoleon now came on, designed as the consummation
+of the day’s doings.</p>
+
+<p>In connection with that, however, there was
+an unfortunate incident. On the Field of Mars
+were displayed also the old Army colours of the
+Consulate, which, as has been said, had been
+brought to Paris at the order of the War Minister
+by the regimental deputations. Paraded together
+with the new Eagles they helped to
+render the scene the more striking; but their
+presence led to an unforeseen complication,
+and in the end a deplorable <i lang="fr">contretemps</i>.</p>
+
+<p>The standard-bearers who had received the
+Eagles were each, in addition, still carrying the
+old regimental flag. They had to carry both.
+No instructions had been given out—by oversight,
+most probably—as to the giving up of the
+old flags, or what was to be done with them.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">ALL DID NOT WANT THE EAGLES</div>
+
+<p>It may have been that Napoleon desired that
+the standards of the Consulate and the Eagles
+of the Empire should be displayed together
+on that day. None knew better than he the
+deep attachment of the older men in the ranks
+for their former battle-flags. Some of the old
+soldiers, indeed, even there on the Field of Mars,
+as we are told, were unable to restrain their
+feelings at the idea of having to part that day
+from their old colours. “More than one tear
+was shed,” relates an officer, “amidst all the
+cheering and shouts of ‘Vive l’Empereur!’”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">53</span>
+Enthusiastically as most of the soldiers might
+welcome the new Eagles in the presence of the
+Emperor, all did not desire to part with colours
+which had led through the battle-smoke on many
+a victorious field of the past, even in exchange
+for the glittering “Cou-cous,” as barrack-room
+slang had already dubbed Napoleon’s Eagles,
+giving them in advance a soldier’s nickname
+that stuck to them as long as the Army of the
+Empire lasted.</p>
+
+<p>Both sets of standards were carried in the
+march past, which proceeded without incident
+to a certain point.</p>
+
+<p>It was an effective display of the lusty manhood
+of France, of the pick of the Grand Army in its
+prime; not yet made <i lang="fr">chair au canon</i> to gratify
+the ambition of one man. A curious commingling,
+too, of fighting costumes did the review
+present for the general spectators; those of
+yesterday side by side with those of the coming
+time. Three-fourths of the soldiers went by
+wearing the stiff Republican garb of the expiring
+<i lang="fr">régime</i>, as adopted hastily at the outset of the
+Revolution: the long-skirted coat, cut after the
+old Royal Army fashion, but blue in colour
+instead of white, and with white lapels and
+turn-backs; long-flapped white waistcoats,
+white breeches, and high black-cloth gaiters
+above the knee, such as their ancestors had worn
+in the days of Marshal Saxe; the old-style big
+cocked hat, worn cross-wise, or “en bataille,”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">54</span>
+as the soldiers called it, with a flaunting tricolor
+cockade in front. The new Napoleonic style
+was represented by the Imperial Guard and
+Oudinot’s Grenadier Division from Arras and
+the Light Infantry battalions, whose turn out
+in smartly cut coatees faced with red and green,
+with the tall broad-topped shakos pictures of
+the time make us familiar with as the normal
+presentment of the soldiers of the Empire,
+attracted special attention.<a id="FNanchor_6" href="#Footnote_6" class="fnanchor">6</a></p>
+
+<p>During the March Past, Frimaire suddenly
+reasserted itself, and brought about the regrettable
+incident that was to wind up the day.</p>
+
+<p>The parade was three parts through, when, all
+of a sudden, a tremendous downpour of cold
+rain set in, discomfiting and scattering all
+who were looking on. With the drenching
+effect of a shower-bath the rain commenced to
+pour down in torrents, causing an immediate
+stampede among the general public. The rearmost
+columns of the soldiers had to pass before
+empty benches, tramping along stolidly through<span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">55</span>
+the mud, “splashing ankle-deep through a sea
+of mud,” as an officer put it.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE SPECTATORS DISAPPEAR</div>
+
+<p>The spectators one and all disappeared. The
+immense crowd of sightseers left the benches on
+the embankment round the Champ de Mars,
+and fled home <i lang="fr">en masse</i>. The seat-holders on
+the open stands in front of the Ecole Militaire
+scurried off in like manner. The occupants of
+the pavilions and galleries, half drowned by the
+water that streamed down on them through the
+awnings, quitted their places in haste to seek
+shelter within the building. The downpour
+saturated the canopy of the Imperial Pavilion
+and dripped through. It compelled Josephine
+to get up from her throne and hurry indoors.
+The Princesses promptly followed the Empress’s
+example, all except one—Napoleon’s youngest
+sister, Caroline Murat. Caroline sat the March
+Past out to the end, together, of course, with
+Napoleon himself and the Marshals, and those
+Court officials who had to stay where they were.
+Soaked through, she smilingly remarked that
+she was “accustoming herself to endure the
+inconveniences inseparable from a throne!”</p>
+
+<p>Then, at the close of the review, came the
+<i lang="fr">contretemps</i>.</p>
+
+<p>After the last Eagle had gone past the throne,
+when Napoleon had left on his way back to the
+Tuileries, as the troops were moving off the
+ground to return to their quarters, unanticipated
+trouble suddenly arose in connection with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">56</span>
+the old flags. What happened may best,
+perhaps, be described in the words of an eye-witness,
+a General present on the Field of Mars,
+Baron Thiébault:</p>
+
+<p>“Immediately after the Emperor had gone
+and the seats all round were empty, finding it
+tiresome to be loaded with the double set of
+standards, all the more so, no doubt, as it was
+raining, the standard-bearers apparently could
+think of nothing better than to rid themselves
+of the superseded flags. They began everywhere
+to throw them down, that is, to drop them where
+they stood in the mud. There they were trampled
+under foot by the soldiers as they passed
+along on their way back to quarters.”</p>
+
+<p>The outrage scandalised the older soldiers,
+and very nearly brought about a mutiny among
+some of them.</p>
+
+<p>“Indignant,” to continue in General Thiébault’s
+words, “at such an outrage to national
+emblems which the Army had been honouring
+and defending for thirteen years past, many of
+the men in the regiments began to grumble and
+make angry protestations. Presently oaths and
+violent imprecations burst out on all sides;
+and then some of the grenadiers became mutinous
+and defiant. They declared that they would
+go back, regardless of the consequences, and
+forcibly recover possession of the old colours.”</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE SITUATION JUST SAVED</div>
+
+<p>The situation speedily became so threatening
+that General Thiébault hastened off to warn<span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">57</span>
+Murat of what was happening. As he went he
+came across one of the adjutants of the Commandant
+of the Military School. On the spur
+of the moment he gave him orders to get
+together what men he could of the party who
+had been keeping the parade ground. Of
+these Thiébault took personal charge and sent
+them round at once to collect the thrown-down
+colours and carry them inside the Ecole
+Militaire.</p>
+
+<p>Apparently that satisfied the soldiers—anxious,
+most of them, to get out of the wet as soon
+as possible.</p>
+
+<p>General Thiébault tried after that to find
+Murat, intending to report to him; but Murat
+had by then left the Field of Mars. In the end
+the General decided, as perhaps the wisest
+course, to refrain from saying anything; not
+to take official notice of what had happened.
+After all he was not on duty at the parade; he
+was only in Paris as an invited guest at the
+Coronation festivities. Nobody, as a fact, said
+a word of the affair. By the authorities all
+reference to it seems purposely to have been
+hushed up. Not a hint of anything of the sort
+appeared in the <i lang="fr">Moniteur</i>, which published a
+fairly full report of the day’s proceedings; not
+a word in any of the other Parisian papers.</p>
+
+<p>For the soldiers a dinner of double rations at
+the Emperor’s expense wound up the Day of the
+Eagles; for the great personages there was “a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">58</span>
+banquet at the Tuileries, at which the Pope and
+the Emperor sat side by side at the same table,
+arrayed in their Pontifical and Imperial insignia
+and waited upon by the Grand Officers of the
+Crown.” Afterwards, without delaying in the
+capital, the deputations set off on their return
+to rejoin their regiments. Their arrival at their
+various destinations was celebrated everywhere,
+by Imperial order, by a full-dress parade and
+State reception of the Eagle by each corps;
+the occasion being further treated as a fête-day
+and opportunity for a general carousal in
+camp or garrison. At Boulogne the regiments
+of the “Army of England” took over their
+Eagles at a grand review on December 23,
+Marshal Soult presiding over the ceremony.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE CLOSE OF THE DAY</div>
+
+<p>The old standards of the Consulate, some
+bearing on them the battle-scars of Marengo and
+Hohenlinden, remained where General Thiébault’s
+assistants had left them stacked, leaning
+up against the wall in one of the corridors of
+the Military School, until they were carted off
+in artillery tumbrils to the central dépôt at
+Vincennes. There, on New Year’s Day of 1805,
+they were officially made away with; burned
+to ashes in the presence of an ordnance department
+official told off to certify to their complete
+destruction. That was the authorised method
+in France of disposing of the standards of a
+discredited <i lang="fr">régime</i>; but all the same it was
+a hard fate for national emblems that had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">59</span>
+waved victoriously over so many a hard-fought
+field.</p>
+
+<p>Such were the principal scenes and incidents
+of the Day of the Field of Mars when Napoleon
+presented the Eagles of the Empire to the
+Soldiers of the Grand Army.</p>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">60</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III<br>
+
+<span class="subhead">IN THE FIRST <span class="locked">CAMPAIGN:—</span></span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<h3 id="toclink_60"><span class="smcap">Under Fire with Marshal Ney</span></h3>
+
+<p class="in0"><span class="firstword">The</span> Eagles made their <i lang="fr">début</i> on the battlefield
+amid a blaze of glory. Within a twelvemonth
+of the Field of Mars they had swooped irresistibly
+across half the Continent, leading forward
+victoriously through the cannon-smoke in combat
+after combat, to achieve the crowning
+triumphs of Ulm and Austerlitz. Within the
+twelvemonth they witnessed the overwhelming
+defeat of more than 200,000 foes, the capture
+of 500 cannon, while 120 standards had been
+paraded before them as spoils of victory.</p>
+
+<p>In the first fortnight of September 1805,
+Austria and Russia, as the protagonists in
+Pitt’s great European Coalition against Napoleon,
+declared war on France, and an army of
+80,000 Austrians traversed Bavaria in hot
+haste, to take post at Ulm by the Danube,
+on the frontiers of Würtemberg. There they
+proposed to hold Napoleon in check, until their
+Russian allies, whose advance by forced marches
+through Poland had already begun, could join<span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">61</span>
+hands with them. After that they would press
+forward in resistless force to cross the Rhine
+and invade France.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">NAPOLEON’S OPENING MOVE</div>
+
+<p>But Napoleon was beforehand with them from
+the outset. Within twenty-four hours of the
+ultimatum reaching his hands he had made
+the opening move in the campaign: the lion,
+whose skin had been sold, had crouched for
+the fatal spring.</p>
+
+<p>General Mack, the Austrian Commander-in-chief,
+entered Bavaria on September 8. On
+September 1 Napoleon’s “Army of the Ocean”
+had struck its tents in Boulogne camp and
+started on its way, with plans laid that ensured
+Mack’s overthrow. A hundred and eighty thousand
+soldiers were hastening along every high-road
+through Hanover, Holland, and Flanders,
+and in eastern France, towards the great plain
+of central Bavaria, to deal the Austrians the
+heaviest and most resounding blow ever yet
+dealt to a modern army.</p>
+
+<p>Napoleon, screening his movement by means
+of Murat’s cavalry, sent ahead on a wide front
+to occupy the attention of the Austrian outposts,
+made a bold sweep right round Mack’s
+right flank. Before the Austrian general had
+any suspicion that there was a single Frenchman
+on that side of him, the entire French army had
+passed the Danube in his rear, and had blocked
+the great highway from Vienna. Napoleon at
+the first move had cut the Austrian line of communication<span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">62</span>
+with their base. He had barred
+the only route by which the Russians could
+approach to Mack’s assistance.</p>
+
+<p>That done, swiftly and successfully, while
+Mack, startled and utterly staggered at the
+sudden appearance of the enemy in his rear,
+was hurriedly facing about in confusion, to try
+to hold his ground, Napoleon struck at him
+hard. He hurled attack after attack in force
+on the Austrian flanking divisions, on both
+wings of Mack’s army, and broke them up.
+Taking thousands of prisoners and many guns,
+he drove the wreck, a disorganised mass of
+scared and helpless battalions, in rout to the
+walls of Ulm itself. Penned in there, ringed
+round by 100,000 French bayonets, with the
+French artillery pouring shot and shell into
+the doomed fortress from commanding heights
+within short range, General Mack, left now
+with barely 30,000 men, after a despairing
+interview with Napoleon, was terrorised into
+immediate surrender at discretion.</p>
+
+<p>Amid such scenes did the Eagles of the Field
+of Mars undergo their baptism of fire. Ever
+in the forefront under fire, brilliantly, time and
+again, did those who bore them do their duty.</p>
+
+<p>It was round the Eagles of Marshal Ney’s
+corps, “the Fighting Sixth,” that the fiercest
+contests of the campaign centred; and on every
+occasion they gained honour.</p>
+
+<p>In the sharp brush at the bridge across the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">63</span>
+Danube at Reisenburg, near the small town of
+Günsburg, on October 8, one of the opening
+encounters of the campaign, the Eagle of the
+59th of the Line showed the way to victory. The
+Austrians, whom Ney surprised on the south
+side or right bank, retreating as the French
+approached, had partially broken down the
+bridge before Ney’s men could reach the place.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">AT THE BRIDGE OF GÜNSBURG</div>
+
+<p>The Danube flows wide and deep at Reisenburg,
+and there was no other means of getting
+over.</p>
+
+<p>Ney had explicit orders from Napoleon to
+cross over and occupy Günsburg, and to hold
+the river passage. As the 59th, who led the
+attack, got to the bridge, a long and narrow
+wooden structure, the Austrian sappers were
+hard at work destroying it; covered by a rearguard
+brigade of infantry and artillery. The
+planking had been ripped away, but most of the
+bridge framework and supporting beams still
+stood. The 59th came up and opened fire,
+compelling the sappers to withdraw. Then a
+hasty effort was made by the pioneers of the
+regiment under fire to repair part of the bridge.
+They made a way across with planks wide
+enough for a few men to scramble over together.
+“In places only one man could get across at a
+time.”</p>
+
+<p>At once the 59th rushed forward cheering,
+but the concentrated Austrian fire from the
+other side was too hot to face. They were<span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">64</span>
+beaten back three times, the dead and wounded
+falling into the rushing stream below. But
+were they not the 59th? No other of the regiments
+following them in rear should have
+the honour of being the first to make the passage!
+The Eagle-bearer of the 59th, weaving the Eagle
+aloft, headed a fourth attack; with Colonel
+Gerard Lacuée, the colonel of the regiment,
+a distinguished officer and an Honorary A.D.C.
+to the Emperor, beside him. The two led out
+in front, regardless of the storm of bullets round
+them. Colonel Lacuée fell mortally wounded.
+An officer ran forward and carried the Colonel
+back to die on the river-bank, but the Eagle-bearer
+went on. “Soldiers,” the brave fellow
+stopped for an instant to turn round and shout
+back to his comrades, “your Eagle goes forward!
+I shall carry it across alone!” The men of the
+59th, thrown into a frenzy at the sight of their
+Eagle’s peril, rallied instantly to follow. The
+four leading companies held on bravely and got
+across. Then they charged the Austrians at
+the point of the bayonet and drove them back
+into the village. That, though, was not all.
+Fresh Austrians had turned back to help their
+rearguard troops. Firing from the river-bank
+on either side of the village, for a time they
+stopped the other French regiments from crossing
+the bridge after the 59th. Austrian dragoons
+and infantry at the same time charged the
+gallant regiment, entirely isolated now on that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">65</span>
+side of the river. But they could not break the
+59th. Forming square, the two battalions, with
+their Eagles held on high as rallying-centres,
+kept a host of foes at bay. Three fierce Austrian
+charges did they beat off—and then help
+arrived. A second regiment, the 50th, had by
+then managed to get across the bridge. The
+two regiments maintained themselves there all
+the afternoon until nightfall and then bivouacked
+on the ground they had won until morning,
+“passing an anxious time, under arms, unable
+to light a fire. Fortunately, in the dark the
+Austrians did not realise our small numbers.
+They were more anxious to cover their own
+retreat.” Before daylight the Austrians fell
+back and the passage of the Danube was won.</p>
+
+<p>There was another morning’s work on
+October 11.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE EAGLES AT HASLACH</div>
+
+<p>At Haslach, on the north bank of the Danube,
+not far from Ulm, a brigade of Dupont’s Division
+of Ney’s corps, advancing on that side on its
+own account, was suddenly set on by five times
+its number of Austrians. The brigade was made
+up of three regiments: the 9me Légère (or
+9th Light Infantry), the 32nd, and the 69th. They
+stumbled, as it were, suddenly on the Austrians,
+whereupon General Dupont, who was riding
+with the brigade, on the opposite side of the
+river from the rest of his troops, “judging that
+if he fell back it would betray his weakness,”
+made a dash at the enemy. His daring deceived<span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">66</span>
+the Austrians, who believed that he was the
+advanced guard of a large force close behind.
+They held back at first and awaited attack.
+Throwing the 32nd into Haslach to hold the
+village, Dupont boldly charged with the two
+other regiments, and at the first onset made
+1,500 prisoners, numbers equal to a quarter of
+his total force. The Austrians, however, rallied
+and returned to the fight. They brought up
+reinforcements and entrenched themselves in
+the village of Jüningen, near by, where again
+Dupont attacked them. Five times did the
+9th Light Infantry take and retake Jüningen
+at the point of the bayonet, their two battalion
+Eagles heading the attack each time. No fewer
+than six officers, bearing the Eagles in turn, fell
+in the fight. “Ces corps ne devaient étonner
+de rien,” commented Napoleon in praising
+Dupont and his men.</p>
+
+<p>At Elchingen, a village in the immediate
+neighbourhood of Ulm, the scene of the brilliant
+victory by which Marshal Ney won his title of
+Due d’Elchingen, the Eagles of two regiments
+won distinction, through the individual heroism
+of the officers who, holding them on high,—“En
+haut l’Aigle!” was the charging cry—led
+the onset that stormed the place.<a id="FNanchor_7" href="#Footnote_7" class="fnanchor">7</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">67</span></p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE EAGLES STORM ELCHINGEN</div>
+
+<p>Ney headed the 6th Light Infantry personally,
+“in full uniform and ablaze with decorations,
+offering a splendid target to the enemy.” Ney
+led the 6th with the Eagle of the First Battalion
+carried close at his side. Fifteen thousand
+Austrians with forty guns held Elchingen, and the
+post is described as being “one of the strongest
+positions that could be imagined.” The village
+itself, a large place, consisted of “successive piles
+of stone houses, intersected at right angles by
+streets, rising in the form of an amphitheatre
+from the banks of the Danube to a large convent
+which crowns the summit of the ascent. All the
+exposed points on heights were lined with
+artillery; all the windows filled with musketeers.”
+The village was on the north bank, and
+the river had to be crossed to get to it.</p>
+
+<p>First the gallant 6th Light Infantry stormed
+the bridge. It had been partly destroyed by<span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">68</span>
+the Austrians on the day before, and its tottering
+arches were now swept by cannon-balls,
+plunging down from batteries on the heights in
+rear, and a tornado of bullets from sharpshooters
+in the houses near the river-side. Fighting their
+way forward step by step, the 6me Légère went
+on. Their Eagle headed the advance. Its
+bearer was wounded, but he proudly brandished
+on high the standard; its silken flag torn to
+tatters by bullets, and with one wing of the
+Eagle broken by a shot. With the 6th fought
+the 69th of the Line. The two regiments forced
+their way along the steep crooked main street
+up hill, fired down on furiously meanwhile
+from the windows. Parties of men at times
+entered the houses at the sides and fought the
+enemy inside bayonet to bayonet, from floor
+to floor. The 6th and the 69th pressed forward,
+broke down the enemy’s resistance, and carried
+Elchingen. The Austrians finally, after a gallant
+attempt to hold out in the convent on the
+hilltop, abandoned it as fresh French troops
+came up from across the river.</p>
+
+<p>On the battlefield, when the fight was over,
+Napoleon, with the Imperial staff round him,
+publicly congratulated Marshal Ney (he named
+him later “Duc D’Elchingen”) in the presence
+of the 6th Light Infantry and the 69th, specially
+paraded at the spot for the occasion.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE EAGLES AT ULM</div>
+
+<p>The Eagles of Ney, again, were foremost at
+the winning of the final fight at Ulm. They<span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">69</span>
+led the furious onrush that stormed the steep
+heights of Michelsberg and Les Tuileries, the
+key of the last Austrian position. Thence Napoleon
+looked down directly into the fortress; and
+within an hour of Ney’s brilliant final feat the
+French shells, from batteries, quickly galloped up
+to the heights, were bursting in Ulm, carrying
+terror and death into every quarter of the city.</p>
+
+<p>On that came the surrender of General Mack.
+The curtain next rises on the intensely dramatic
+Fifth Act of the tragedy, the march out of the
+Austrians to lay down their arms.</p>
+
+<p>In that display the Eagles had their allotted
+place. Before them, brought forward and prominently
+paraded, each Eagle in advance of its
+own corps in line, with the whole Grand Army
+ranged in battle order as spectators of the
+scene, the standards of the vanquished foe defiled
+out of the gates of Ulm, and were laid down on
+the ground in formal token of surrender.</p>
+
+<p>Napoleon proved himself at Ulm a born
+stage-manager.</p>
+
+<p>Hardly ever before, never in modern war,
+had such a spectacle been witnessed as that
+presented on that chill and cheerless October
+Sunday forenoon, October 20, 1805, in the
+heart of central Germany, beside the banks of
+the rushing Danube, roaring past, a yellow
+foaming torrent after weeks of autumn rain,
+amid pine-clad summits extending far and wide
+on either hand.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">70</span></p>
+
+<p>Along the lower slopes of the high ground to
+the north and east of Ulm, drawn up in lines
+and columns over a wide semi-circle, stood the
+victorious army; massed round, as it were, in
+a vast amphitheatre. They formed up by
+army corps, and took post grim and silent,
+drawn up in battle array, with muskets loaded
+and bayonets fixed. The Cavalry with sabres
+drawn were on one side; the Infantry on the
+other, facing them and leaving a space between,
+along which the Austrians were to pass. Fifty
+loaded cannon, in line along one ridge, pointed
+down on the city. In front, towards the river,
+there rose a small knoll, an outlying spur of
+rock. On that Napoleon took his station
+beside a blazing watchfire which marked the
+spot from far. Accompanying him were most
+of the marshals and the assembled Etat-Major
+of the Grand Army, a numerous and brilliant
+gathering. Immediately in rear stood massed
+the 10,000 men of the Imperial Guard.</p>
+
+<p>Two army corps, a little way from the rest,
+had a special post of honour. They were drawn
+up at the end of the wide semi-circle of the main
+army nearest the Augsburg gate of Ulm; immediately
+where the defilading column of captives
+would present themselves before passing
+Napoleon to lay down their arms and standards.
+The two corps were: that on the right, Ney’s,
+the Sixth Army Corps, the heroes of the day <i lang="fr">par
+excellence</i>; on the left, the Second Corps, Marmont’s,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">71</span>
+who had been doing notable work elsewhere
+in the neighbourhood of Ulm. Ney, with
+his personal staff beside him, was on horseback
+in front of the centre of his corps; Marmont had
+his post in like manner in front of his men. As
+his personal reward for the leading part Ney
+and the Sixth Corps had had in bringing about
+the triumph, that marshal had the special honour
+of being designated to superintend the surrender.</p>
+
+<p>A few minutes before ten o’clock the French
+drums began to beat, and the regimental bands
+to play. Immediately after that the long-drawn-out
+procession of sullen and woebegone-looking
+Austrian captives began silently to
+trail its way out of the Stuttgart gate of the
+fortress. “Suddenly we saw an endless column
+file out of the town and march up in front of
+the Emperor, on the plain at the foot of a
+mountain.”</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">MACK SURRENDERS HIS SWORD</div>
+
+<p>General Mack himself headed it, wan-faced
+and pale as the white uniform coat he wore,
+his eyes filled with tears, his head bowed, a
+pitiful and abject figure to behold. After him
+followed eighteen Austrian generals—a surprising
+number—most of them as wretched and
+downcast-looking as their chief. “Behold,
+Sire, the unfortunate Mack!” was the ill fated
+leader’s address to Napoleon, as he formally
+presented his sword. Napoleon, in a mood—as
+well he might be—in that hour of unparalleled
+triumph, to show courtesy to the fallen<span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">72</span>
+foe, desired Mack to keep his sword and remain
+at his side. He said the same to the eighteen
+other generals as, one by one, they came up in
+turn to tender him their swords. He returned
+each his sword and bade them all place themselves
+near their chief. When all the swords
+had been presented and returned, Napoleon made
+the Austrian generals collectively a short harangue.
+“Gentlemen,” he began, “war has its
+chances! Often victorious, you must expect
+sometimes to be vanquished!” He did not
+really know, Napoleon went on, why they were
+fighting. Their master had begun against him
+an unjust war. “I want nothing on the Continent,”
+said Napoleon in conclusion, “only ships,
+colonies, and commerce!” It was on the day
+before Trafalgar that these memorable words
+were spoken. The Austrian generals stared at
+Napoleon blankly, but not one uttered a word.
+“They were all very dull; it was the Emperor
+alone who kept up the conversation.” Then
+they took their stand beside their conqueror
+and looked on at the bitterly humiliating scene
+of the defilade of their fellow soldiers.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE PARADE OF THE VANQUISHED</div>
+
+<p>In an almost incessant throng the columns of
+the Austrian army streamed by: white-clad
+cuirassiers; hussars in red and blue and grey;
+battery after battery of cocked-hatted, brown-garbed
+artillerymen, riding with or on their
+rumbling dull-yellow wheeled guns; battalion
+after battalion of white-coated linesmen; dark-green<span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">73</span>
+coated jägers; Hungarian grenadiers,
+and so on. Twenty-seven thousand officers and
+men and sixty field-guns in all defiled past the
+Eagles, proudly arrayed there above them, in
+front of the serried lines of glittering French
+bayonets along the hillsides. For five hours on
+end the host of captives plodded on before the
+rocky brow from which Napoleon surveyed the
+spectacle; tramping by, their muskets without
+bayonets and unloaded, their cartridge-boxes
+emptied. In several regiments the men maintained
+a fair semblance of discipline and military
+order; but the ranks of all were sadly bedraggled-looking,
+the white uniforms torn and soiled
+and besmirched with powder-smoke, with many
+of the men hatless, or limping from wounds, or
+with bound-up heads, and their arms in bloodstained
+slings. As had been ordered by Napoleon,
+they carried with them their standards;
+no fewer than forty silken battle-flags—for the
+most part cased, but here and there was to be
+seen one not furled, displaying, as though in
+futile defiance, its flaunting yellow folds with the
+double-headed Black Eagle.</p>
+
+<p>As the Austrian linesmen came abreast of
+where Napoleon stood, the pace of the men
+slackened. Every eye was turned to look at
+“him”; at the small grey-coated figure on
+foot beside the watchfire, standing near the
+crestfallen group of their own generals, a few
+paces from the bright and brilliant-hued cavalcade<span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">74</span>
+of French marshals and the staff. All
+stared at Napoleon, gazing as if under a spell.
+Then, in the midst of it all, this happened.
+Suddenly, as they passed Napoleon, a shout rose
+from among the ranks of the defeated army: “Es
+lebe der Kaiser!” (“Long live the Emperor!”)
+The cry burst forth with startling effect. It was
+repeated, and then several men took it up. But
+what did it mean? “Es lebe der Kaiser!” was
+the national German greeting in salute to their
+own Austrian sovereign as Head of the Empire,
+to the Kaiser at Vienna, the Emperor of Germany.
+Did the soldiers who first raised the cry
+intend it for that, or to hail Napoleon, as his
+own men did, with a “Vive l’Empereur!”? The
+words bore the same meaning. Or did the men
+fling the words at Napoleon in a sort of bravado,
+as a show of defiance? Some of the Austrians
+assuredly did mean them so; to relieve the
+breaking strain, the terrible tension of the ordeal.
+At least some of the French officers near Napoleon
+took that view of it. “As they passed by,”
+describes one, “the prisoners, seized with wonder,
+with admiration, slowed down in their march
+to gaze at their conqueror, and some cried out
+‘Long live the Emperor!’ but no doubt under
+very different emotions; some with evident
+mortification.”</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">GIVING UP THE GUNS AND HORSES</div>
+
+<p>From the presence of Napoleon the captive
+army passed to the scene of the act of final
+humiliation: to the place where, midway between<span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">75</span>
+the lines of bayonets of the troops of
+Ney and Marmont, they were to lay down their
+colours and ground their arms.</p>
+
+<p>The colours were first surrendered, a French
+General, Andréossi, formerly Napoleon’s Ambassador
+in London, receiving them, with half
+a dozen staff officers and orderlies, who deposited
+the flags one by one in two commissariat wagons
+drawn up close by.</p>
+
+<p>It was a moment of the deepest and keenest
+anguish for proud and gallant soldiers. All
+round them on the hillsides most of the French,
+overcome by excitement over the unprecedented
+and amazing spectacle, were by that time almost
+beside themselves, rending the air with exulting
+shouts and cheers. Under the cruel stress of
+the ordeal, as the supreme moment came on,
+the self-possession of some of the Austrians,
+tried beyond endurance, gave way.</p>
+
+<p>The men of the Cavalry and Artillery bore
+themselves throughout with well-disciplined
+steadiness. As they came to the appointed place
+where groups of French cavalry troopers and
+gunners, told off to take over their horses and
+guns, were standing near the roadside awaiting
+them, they dismounted at the word of command
+from their own commanders and stood back.
+With hardly a murmur from the ranks the
+Austrian troopers unbuckled their swords and
+carbines and pistols, and dropped them in heaps
+at the places pointed out to them. With quiet<span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">76</span>
+dignity the officers relinquished their gold-embroidered
+banners into the enemy’s hands.
+In grim silence they saw the victors—who there
+at any rate behaved with courtesy and soldierly
+consideration for the feeling of the vanquished—step
+forward to take possession of their horses
+and their cannon. Many of the Austrians had
+tears running down their cheeks; some stood
+trembling with suppressed passion;—but all
+preserved order and behaved with complete
+decorum as became disciplined soldiers.</p>
+
+<p>With others unfortunately, with some of the
+infantry corps, it was otherwise. At the very
+last, before arriving at the place where they
+were to give up their weapons, a number of
+the men in some of the marching regiments
+broke down under the fearful strain of the moment
+and lost their heads. In many regiments,
+no doubt, the soldiers obeyed mechanically,
+acting like men half stunned after a violent
+shock; they did as they were told, and passively
+grounded their arms to order. But in others
+the final scene was attended by acts of wild
+frenzy, pitiful to behold. In, as it were, a
+paroxysm of exasperation at the disgrace that
+had befallen them, the rank and file of these
+broke out recklessly, and got at once beyond all
+efforts of their officers to control. With one
+accord they began smashing the locks and butts
+of their muskets on the ground with savage
+curses, flinging away their arms all round, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">77</span>
+stripping off their accoutrements and stamping
+on them, trampling them down in the mud.
+These, though, as has been said, were only some
+of the men; and in certain regiments. The
+majority of the Austrians bore themselves with
+fortitude and calmness.</p>
+
+<p>At the end of the afternoon the Imperial
+Guard, headed by their Eagle and band, marched
+into Ulm and through the city, as we are told,
+“amid the shouts of the whole populace.”</p>
+
+<p>So terminated the tragedy of Ulm, in the
+presence of the Eagles on their first triumphant
+battlefield.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE ULM TROPHIES FOR PARIS</div>
+
+<p>The spoils of the Eagles at all points, as announced
+by Napoleon in the Ulm Bulletin of the
+Grand Army, were 60,000 prisoners, 200 pieces
+of cannon, and, in all, 90 flags. The 40
+standards surrendered at Ulm itself Napoleon
+sent to Paris forthwith—after a grand parade
+of the trophies at Augsburg, in which ninety
+sergeants of the Imperial Guard bore in procession
+the Austrian flags. The Ulm trophies were
+made an Imperial gift for the Senate. “It is a
+homage,” wrote Napoleon, “which I and my
+Army pay to the Sages of the Empire.” They
+were the flags, it may be added, which were
+displayed at the head of Napoleon’s coffin on the
+occasion of his State funeral in 1840: they form
+four-fifths of the trophies now grouped round
+Napoleon’s tomb. Alone of the trophies of the
+Ulm campaign, and also of the Austerlitz campaign<span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">78</span>
+which followed it, they escaped destruction
+in the holocaust of Napoleon’s trophies that took
+place at the Invalides in March 1814, on the
+night of the surrender of Paris to the Allies.
+How that came to pass will be told later.</p>
+
+<p>There was a very interesting sequel to the
+Ulm campaign for one of Ney’s regiments. A
+brief but brilliant campaign in the Tyrol on
+their own account followed for Ney’s men
+immediately after Ulm.</p>
+
+<p>Entering the Tyrol with two of his divisions,
+Ney attacked and by brilliant tactics overthrew
+the Tyrolese forces and Austrian regulars who
+barred his way in a position among the mountains
+deemed impregnable. The battalion Eagles of
+the 69th gave the signal for the frontal attack
+which stormed the enemy’s position. Guided
+by chamois-hunters the soldiers with the Eagles
+scaled the face of a precipitous line of crags
+which overhung in rear the Austrian centre, by
+inserting their bayonets into fissures in the
+rocks and clinging to shrubs and creepers, their
+havresacs tied round their heads as protection
+from the stones that the Tyrolese above showered
+down on them. At the top, driving in the defenders,
+they held up the gleaming Eagles in the
+sunlight on the brink of the precipice to the
+marshal below, firing down on the Austrians at
+the same time to demoralise their resistance and
+clear the way for Ney’s main effort: “Les Aigles
+du 69me plantées sur la cime des rochers servirent<span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">79</span>
+de signal à l’attacque de front que le Maréchal
+Ney avait preparé.”</p>
+
+<p>Innsbrück, the capital of the Tyrol, and the
+head-quarters of the Austrian army corps
+garrisoning the country, was the immediate
+prize of the victory. It was there that this
+incident took place.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">TWO LOST FLAGS ARE FOUND</div>
+
+<p>One of Ney’s regiments, the 76th, had fought
+in the Tyrol six years before; in Masséna’s
+campaign of 1799, in one of the battles of which—at
+Senft in the Grisons, on August 22—two
+of its battalions lost their colours. An
+officer of the regiment, while visiting the
+arsenal at Innsbrück after Ney’s capture of the
+city, came across the two flags there, in tatters
+from bullet-holes, hung up as trophies. He made
+known his discovery, and the place was quickly
+filled with the soldiers of the regiment, eager
+to see the old flags. “They crowded round them
+and kissed the fragments of their old colours,
+with tears in their eyes.”</p>
+
+<p>Ney had the flags removed at once. He restored
+them to the custody of the regiment with
+his own hand at a grand parade in the presence
+of the rest of his army, which the marshal
+attended with his staff, all in full uniform. The
+old colours were received with an elaborate display
+of military ceremonial. They were borne
+along the lines while the regimental band played
+a stately march, and the Eagles of both battalions
+were formally dipped in salute to them.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">80</span></p>
+
+<p>On receiving Ney’s report, Napoleon thought
+fit to give the recovery of the flags a Bulletin
+to itself. Relating how they had been lost in
+battle, and the “affliction profonde” of the
+regiment in consequence, he set forth how they
+had been found and handed back by Marshal
+Ney to the regiment “with an affecting solemnity
+that drew tears from the eyes of both the old
+soldiers and the young conscripts, proud of
+having had their share in regaining them!”
+“Le soldat Français,” concluded the Bulletin,
+“a pour ses drapeaux un sentiment qui tient
+de la tendresse; ils sont l’objet de son culte,
+comme un présent reçu des mains d’une mère.”
+A medal was specially struck to commemorate
+the event; and Napoleon, in addition, specially
+commissioned an artist, Meynier, to paint a
+picture for him of Marshal Ney presenting the
+recovered colours to the regiment. The painting
+is now in one of the galleries of Versailles.</p>
+
+<h3 id="toclink_80"><span class="smcap">The Midnight Battle by the Danube</span></h3>
+
+<div class="sidenote">TRAPPED BY NAPOLEON’S FAULT</div>
+
+<p>A startling and dramatic episode of the first
+campaign of the Eagles comes next. It took
+place during the second stage of the war; in
+the midst of Napoleon’s impetuous advance on
+Vienna down the Danube valley after Ulm.
+Intent on dealing a shattering blow at the advanced
+army corps of the Russians, which had
+reached Lower Austria and was making an<span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">81</span>
+effort to cover the capital, Napoleon made a
+false move, and left one of the headmost French
+divisions in an exposed position, temporarily
+isolated. It got trapped by the Russians at
+Dürrenstein, or Dirnstein, on the north side of
+the Danube, to the west of and about seventy
+miles up the river from Vienna; and was all
+but annihilated. There was nearly twenty
+hours of continuous fighting, including a night
+battle of the fiercest and most desperate character
+in which three Eagles were temporarily lost;
+fortunately to be recovered later among the dead
+on the battlefield.<a id="FNanchor_8" href="#Footnote_8" class="fnanchor">8</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">82</span></p>
+
+<p>It was on an extemporised corps, specially
+placed under the command of Marshal Mortier,
+that the blow fell.</p>
+
+<figure id="i_82" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 40em;">
+ <img src="images/i_082.jpg" width="3147" height="2775" alt="">
+ <figcaption class="caption">
+ <p>NAPOLEON’S CONCENTRATION IN REAR OF ULM</p>
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<p>While Napoleon and the Grand Army in force
+advanced along the south, or right, bank of the
+Danube, Mortier had been detached across the
+river to hold in check any attempt to interfere
+with the main operations from the Bohemian
+side. A body of Austrian cavalry, under the
+Archduke Ferdinand, had managed to cut their
+way through from Ulm at one point just before
+the closing of the net round General Mack.
+With the aid of the local militia levies these
+might prove troublesome on the line of communications.
+To deal with them, three divisions,
+drawn from as many corps, were amalgamated
+as Mortier’s special corps, which numbered in
+all between twenty and twenty-five thousand
+men: Gazan’s division, lent by Marshal Lannes;
+Dupont’s, lent by Ney; Dumonceau’s, lent by
+Marmont. To keep Mortier in touch with the
+main body of the army, and that he might be
+reinforced in emergency, a flotilla of Danube
+craft was at the same time improvised, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">83</span>
+placed in charge of the Seamen of the Guard,
+a battalion of whom had accompanied Napoleon
+for the campaign. The flotilla was to keep pace
+with Mortier and link him with Napoleon.
+Mortier crossed at Linz and moved forward;
+his three divisions each a day’s march apart,
+for convenience of provisioning. He marched
+so fast, however, that he outstripped the connecting
+boats.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE DANUBE FLOTILLA STOPPED</div>
+
+<p>At the moment the fighting opened, the flotilla
+was miles in rear. It had been stopped and its
+progress blocked near Moelkt, unable in the
+swollen state of the Danube to pass the dangerous
+Strudel, or whirlpool, there, raging just then,
+after the heavy autumn rains, with the force of
+a swirling maelstrom. The flooded river had
+made it extremely difficult work all the way,
+even for the picked Seamen of the Guard, to
+navigate with safety the assortment of boats
+and timber rafts, clumsy structures of logs and
+spars lashed together, 160 feet long each, and
+planked over, with cabins on the planks, which
+composed the flotilla. On them, together with
+a quantity of spare stores and ammunition for
+the army, convalescents and footsore men of
+various regiments were being carried, who, it
+was intended, would thus be on the spot to
+reinforce Mortier first of all in case of danger.</p>
+
+<p>Immediately after passing Dürrenstein, the
+leading division, General Gazan’s, numbering
+some 6,000 men, unexpectedly stumbled across<span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">84</span>
+part of the Russian rearguard. All unknown to
+Mortier, the Russian army corps which had been
+entrenched in front of Vienna had abandoned
+its position and had hastily withdrawn north
+of the river, crossing a short distance from
+Dürrenstein.</p>
+
+<p>Mortier, after clearing a narrow and difficult
+pass on the eastern side of Dürrenstein, with
+steep and rocky hills on one hand and the Danube
+on the other, first learned of the presence of
+the enemy by catching sight of the smoke of the
+burning bridge of Krems, which the Russians
+had set fire to after passing over. Then he
+suddenly found his further advance barred by
+troops with guns, who rapidly formed up across
+his path. The Russians took up a formidable-looking
+position, but the marshal decided to
+attack without waiting for Dupont to come up
+with the Second Division, or for the flotilla; both
+miles in rear. The sight of the burning bridge and
+the apparent haste of the enemy to get across
+the river, it would seem, misled Mortier into
+thinking that the Russians had been in action
+with Napoleon, and were in flight, trying
+to escape. He went at them without pausing
+to reconnoitre. He assumed that they were
+only making a show of defence. The troops
+before him he would sweep aside easily. Then
+he would press on and complete the rout of the
+rest of the Russians, whom he took to be retreating
+in confusion, screened by the force he saw,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">85</span>
+across his front. Confident of easy success,
+Mortier entered into the fight then and there.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">A SURPRISE FOR THE MARSHAL</div>
+
+<p>The sudden rencontre, as has been said, was a
+surprise for the marshal. Half an hour previously
+a battle had been almost the last thing
+in Mortier’s thoughts. His guns were on board
+a number of river boats which were being
+drifted downstream abreast of the troops, the
+artillery horses being led with the marching
+columns along the bank. The boats had been
+requisitioned a few miles back, so as to enable
+the troops to get on faster over the rough stretch
+of road through the Pass of Dürrenstein. The
+guns were hastily disembarked and raced forward
+into the firing line in order to stop a forward
+movement that the Russians, who promptly
+took advantage of the opportunity offered by
+Mortier being apparently without artillery,
+began by making.</p>
+
+<p>The Russians came on and quickly increased
+in numbers, to Marshal Mortier’s further surprise.
+Were those beaten troops in full flight?
+They began to swarm down to meet the French;
+heading for the guns as these were being brought
+forward. The fight rapidly became general, and
+charge after charge was made by the Russians
+to carry Mortier’s guns. They captured them,
+but were then beaten back and the guns recaptured.
+Twice were the guns taken and retaken.
+The two French regiments nearest the
+guns, the 100th and 103rd, defended them with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">86</span>
+brilliant courage, their four battalion Eagles
+conspicuous in the forefront and repeatedly the
+centre of desperate fighting, as the Russians
+essayed again and again at the point of the
+bayonet to make prize of the gleaming emblems.</p>
+
+<p>But more and more Russians kept joining in,
+and after four hours of very severe fighting
+the marshal began to get anxious. He had
+gained ground towards Krems, and had made
+some 1,500 prisoners; but every foot of the
+way had been stubbornly contested, and his
+losses had been serious.</p>
+
+<p>Mortier after that left the troops, and with an
+aide de camp galloped back through the pass
+in order to hasten up Dupont. But the Second
+Division was still at a distance. Dupont’s men
+were still a long way beyond Dürrenstein and
+could not arrive for some time yet. Mortier
+could only tell them not to lose a moment, and
+then retrace his own steps. On his way back,
+to his amazement, he came upon a second Russian
+column in great strength in the act of debouching
+from a side pass and entering Dürrenstein. It
+had come round by a track among the hills on
+the north to take Gazan’s division in rear, and
+interpose between it and Dupont’s reinforcing
+troops. At considerable personal risk the marshal
+managed to evade discovery by the Russians.
+By following a devious by-path he at
+length got back to where Gazan’s division was;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">87</span>
+as before, in hot action and slowly forcing the
+Russians back.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">TOO LATE TO CLEAR THE PASS</div>
+
+<p>Mortier stopped the advance at once. He
+faced his troops about, and, while keeping off
+his original enemy, retreated; closing his
+columns and rushing all back as fast as possible
+to repass the defile of Dürrenstein and confront
+the new enemy on the further side, in a position
+he might hold until Dupont could reinforce him.
+But it was already too late. The French
+reached the entrance of the pass on the near
+side to find it already occupied by the Russians,
+who were pouring through in dense masses.
+There were nearly 20,000 of them on that side
+of him and 15,000 on the other, his former foes
+now fast closing in from behind hard on his
+heels. Mortier’s reduced ranks numbered barely
+4,000 all told.</p>
+
+<p>Owing to the high, steep rocks on one hand, and
+the river on the other, it was impossible to push
+past the Russians on either flank. All that could
+be done was to attack in front and try to cut a
+way through. That; or to surrender! With
+reckless impetuosity the French attacked, firing
+furiously and flinging themselves on the Russian
+bayonets; while their rearguard, facing round,
+kept their first foes back. For two long hours
+they fought like that; their ranks swept by the
+enemy’s cannon on each side. At length they
+forced the entrance to the pass: but they could
+get no farther. They had by then lost all their<span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">88</span>
+guns but two: but they still had all their Eagles.
+With bullet-holes through some of them, and
+their silken flags shot away or torn to tatters,
+the Eagles did their part. Now they were rallying-centres;
+now they were leading charges.
+There was hardly a battalion in which the first
+standard-bearer had not gone down.</p>
+
+<p>All were fighting almost without hope, holding
+out in sheer despair as long as they had cartridges
+left, when, as that dreadful November
+afternoon was drawing to its close, suddenly,
+from beyond the far end of the pass was heard
+the booming of a distant cannonade. The
+soldiers heard it and hope revived. It could
+only be Dupont! Help, then, was coming! The
+despairing rank and file took heart again—but
+the hour of rescue was not yet.</p>
+
+<p>They had four long hours more to go through;
+every hour making their terrible situation worse.
+At nightfall “our cavalry gave way, our firing
+slackened, our bayonets, from incessant use, became
+bent and blunted. The confusion became
+terrible. Things, indeed, could hardly have got
+worse.” So an officer describes. The enemy,
+in places, had got right in among them, but
+“our soldiers, being the handier and more agile,
+had an advantage over the great clumsy
+Russians.” Here and there “the men were so
+close, that they seized each other by the
+throat.” In the midst of the fiercest of the
+fighting the tall figure of the marshal was conspicuous.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">89</span>
+He was seen amid the flashes from
+the muskets “at the head of a party of grenadiers,
+sword in hand, laying about him like any
+trooper.”</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">“YOUR DUTY IS TO SAVE THE EAGLES!”</div>
+
+<p>The Battalion-Eagles of the 100th, with their
+Porte-Aigles and a handful of soldiers, got cut
+off together, amid a surging <i lang="fr">mêlée</i> of Russians.
+The major of the regiment, Henriot by name,
+the senior surviving officer—the colonel of the
+100th, as also the colonel of the 103rd, had
+fallen earlier in the fight—saw what was happening
+and the extreme peril of the Eagles. Calling
+for volunteers, he got together some of his men,
+cut his way through to the Eagles, and rescued
+them. Major Henriot, after that, having saved
+the Eagles for the moment, determined as a last
+resource to attempt a forlorn-hope charge; to get
+beyond the enemy and reach Dupont with them.
+It might be possible to save them under the
+cover of darkness. One of the Porte-Aigles
+of the 6th Light Infantry with his Eagle, near by
+at the moment, joined the devoted band of men
+that the intrepid major now managed to rally
+round the Eagles of the 100th. With half a
+dozen stirring words Henriot called on them
+to follow him. “Comrades, we must break
+through! They are more than we, but you are
+Frenchmen: you don’t count numbers! Remember,
+your duty is to save the Eagles of
+France!” (“Souvenez vous qu’il s’agit de sauver
+les Aigles Françaises!”)</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">90</span></p>
+
+<p>There was a hoarse shout in reply: “We
+are all Grenadiers! Pas de charge!”</p>
+
+<p>They dashed at the Russians, Henriot leading,
+and, after fighting their way through the pass
+and nearly to Dürrenstein, fell to a man. Yet
+the three Eagles did not fall into Russian hands,
+thanks to the darkness. They were found next
+morning by French search-parties under a heap
+of dead, where the last survivors, fighting back
+to back, had fallen while making their final
+stand.</p>
+
+<p>So desperate, indeed, did things look for the
+French at one time, a little before midnight,
+that some of his staff appealed to Mortier to
+make his escape and get across to the other side
+of the Danube in a boat, “so that a Marshal of
+France shall not fall into the hands of the
+enemy!”</p>
+
+<p>But the gallant veteran flatly refused to listen
+to the proposal.</p>
+
+<p>“No,” was his answer, “certainly not! I
+will not desert my brave comrades! I will save
+them or die with them! Keep the boats
+for the wounded,” he went on. “We have still
+two guns and some case-shot—rally and make
+a last effort!”</p>
+
+<p>Almost immediately afterwards an opportunity
+did offer for the marshal to save them.</p>
+
+<figure id="i_90" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 24em;">
+ <img src="images/i_090.jpg" width="1860" height="2311" alt="">
+ <figcaption class="caption">
+ <p>MARSHAL MORTIER.</p>
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<div class="sidenote">A DASH IN THE DARK TO HELP</div>
+
+<p>Two of Dupont’s regiments at that moment
+reached the battle. By persistent exertions,
+outstripping the rest of the Second Division,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">91</span>
+and continuing in the dark, guided by the flashes
+of the guns, they had made their way by a
+goat-path along the steep rocky slopes at the
+side of the defile and taken the Russians barring
+Mortier’s retreat in rear. Instantly the new
+arrivals flung themselves hotly into the fight.
+They were the 9th Light Infantry and the 32nd
+of the Line, that old favourite of Napoleon’s in
+the days of the Army of Italy, whose flag on the
+Eagle-staff bore, as has been said, the golden
+inscription which Napoleon had placed there—“J’étais
+tranquille, le brave 32me était là.”</p>
+
+<p>The golden legend was of good omen for
+Mortier.</p>
+
+<p>Their interposition put the Russian main force
+between two fires, weakening the attack on
+Mortier and compelling a portion of them to face
+about. Its effect was speedily felt, and at
+once; although a desperate effort by the two
+regiments to break through and join hands with
+Mortier, in which the Eagles of the 9th
+and 32nd were “taken and retaken,” was beaten
+back under pressure of numbers.</p>
+
+<p>The arrival of the two regiments so opportunely
+put heart into all: Dupont’s whole division,
+declared the marshal, could not be far off. He
+himself would make an effort to meet him on
+the farther side of the pass.</p>
+
+<p>“Then,” as is described by Napoleon’s aide
+de camp, Count de Sègur, “rallying and closing
+up the remaining troops, he brought up the only<span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">92</span>
+two guns left him. One was to point towards
+Krems and against Kutusoff’s troops;
+the other Mortier placed at the head of the
+column, in the direction of Dürrenstein. As all
+the drums had been broken he had the charge
+sounded on iron cooking-cans.</p>
+
+<p>“At that moment the Austrian general,
+Schmidt, who had led the Russian corps from
+Dürrenstein, headed a final charge which was to
+strike a crushing blow and complete the destruction
+of our column. But Fabvier (the
+colonel in charge of Mortier’s artillery) heard
+them advance. Concealed by the darkness, he
+let Schmidt approach quite near. Then he
+suddenly fired the gun on that side, at the
+shortest range, in among the headmost of
+the attacking troops. The discharge threw the
+enemy into confusion and killed their leader.
+Into this bloody opening Mortier and Gazan
+precipitated themselves, overthrowing everything
+before them. Dürrenstein itself was retaken
+in the impetuous dash.”</p>
+
+<p>It was indeed a <i lang="fr">tour de force</i>; a sudden reversal
+of the fortunes of the fight. The feat in its
+complete accomplishment surprised even Mortier’s
+expectations. “The Marshal, in fact, could
+hardly believe his own success.” So an officer
+puts it. But he had done more than burst
+through the toils. As daylight next morning
+showed, the Russians, driven headlong, had
+abandoned six of their guns, and left in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">93</span>
+hands of the French no fewer than twelve
+standards. Two of them were taken by the
+two Dupont regiments which had so gallantly
+flung themselves on the Russian rear.</p>
+
+<p>That was as concerned honour and glory.
+As a set off, barely 2,000 remained of Mortier’s
+corps of 6,000 men. Two-thirds of the total
+when the roll was called next day were found to
+have fallen on the field.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THEIR FATE STILL IN DOUBT</div>
+
+<p>Mortier’s men regained Dürrenstein, all in
+flames; set on fire by the Russians as they
+evacuated the village. But where was Dupont
+and his Division? They had heard Dupont’s
+distant guns just before dark; but except the
+two regiments who had been rushed forward
+independently, ahead of the main body, starting
+immediately after Mortier’s visit in the early
+afternoon, no help from Dupont had reached them.
+Gazan’s wearied survivors of the midnight battle
+dared not even yet lay aside their arms. The fight
+was not all over. The enemy were still near
+by; just beyond the outskirts of the village.
+Both the Russian divisions that they had been
+fighting with in front and rear had in the end
+united. Outnumbering Mortier’s men as they
+did by ten to one, the Russians would certainly
+turn back and be on them before long with
+re-formed ranks, eager to take vengeance for their
+defeat and the rough handling they had undergone.</p>
+
+<p>But the end was near.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">94</span></p>
+
+<p>Suddenly, from the farther side of Dürrenstein,
+from the direction in which the enemy
+had fallen back, there came a violent outburst
+of firing. Immediately on that followed sounds
+of shouting. Then there was the trampling rush
+of a great host of men all making for the village.
+“With despair in our hearts we were preparing
+for another battle, when, in answer to our
+challenge of ‘Qui vive?’ came back, with
+electrifying effect, the answer ‘France!’ It
+was Dupont. At last he had arrived to the
+rescue of his Marshal.</p>
+
+<p>“We recognised each other in the light of the
+blazing houses, and with transports of joy and
+gratitude and cries of ‘Long live our rescuers!’
+our men threw themselves on the necks of their
+deliverers.”</p>
+
+<p>In that dramatic fashion the battle of Dürrenstein
+reached its close. The Russians fell back
+under cover of the night, retreating up the
+lateral valley-pass, by which way at the outset
+they had worked their way round, guided by the
+Austrian general, Schmidt, to surprise and cut
+off Gazan’s division.</p>
+
+<p>Napoleon, in his great relief at learning that
+Mortier had come through without disaster,
+for once blamed nobody. He knew that he
+himself was most of all to blame, for exposing
+to sudden attack a comparatively weak detachment
+of his army in the face of an enemy still
+full of fight, on the farther side of a deep and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">95</span>
+rapid river. “It seemed,” in Marbot’s words,
+“as if no explanation of this operation beyond
+the Danube satisfactory to military men being
+possible, there was a desire to hush up its consequences.”</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">BY WAY OF COVERING THE BLUNDER</div>
+
+<p>By way of covering up his own glaring blunder
+Napoleon heaped praises on the troops engaged.
+He expressed unbounded admiration at the
+stand they had made. In the 22nd “Bulletin
+of the Grand Army,” issued from Schönbrunn,
+near Vienna, two days later, the Emperor declared
+that “le combat de Dürrenstein sera à
+jamais mémorable dans les annales militaires.”
+Gazan, he said, had shown “beaucoup de valeur
+et de conduite.” The 4me and 9me Légère and
+the 32nd and 100th of the Line, wrote Napoleon,
+“se sont couverts de gloire.”</p>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">96</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV<br>
+
+<span class="subhead">ON THE FIELD OF AUSTERLITZ</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class="in0"><span class="firstword">Austerlitz,</span> the crowning triumph of the First
+War of the Grand Army, set its <i lang="fr">cachet</i> to the
+fame of the Eagles.</p>
+
+<p>Napoleon there lured the enemy on into
+attacking him at apparent disadvantage on
+ground of his own choosing. Then, availing
+himself to the fullest extent of the flagrant
+blundering of his assailants, he struck at them
+with a smashing, knock-down blow from the
+shoulder.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">LURED ON TO MEET THEIR FATE</div>
+
+<p>By making believe that his army was separated
+in detachments, out of touch, and beyond
+possibility of early concentration, and causing
+it to appear further that he had become alarmed
+for his own safety and was on the point of commencing
+a retreat, he decoyed them into a
+false move. He tempted the Czar Alexander,
+whose main force had arrived within a few miles
+of Vienna, and was confronting him, into making
+a rash manœuvre designed to cut his line of
+communications and defeat him before the
+second Austrian army in the field, under the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">97</span>
+Archduke Charles, hastening from the Italian
+frontier to join hands with the Russians, could
+reach the scene. In the confident belief that
+by themselves they outnumbered Napoleon at
+the critical point by two to one, with nearly
+90,000 men to 40,000, the Russians made a
+risky flank march to interpose between Napoleon
+and his base, and drive him in rout into the
+wilds of Bohemia. They began their advance
+suddenly, on Thursday, November 2, but immediately
+afterwards wasted two days through
+faulty leadership. Before they could get within
+striking distance of Napoleon he had called in
+his detached corps and had massed 70,000 men
+at the point of danger. Foreseeing the possibility
+of the enemy’s move, his apparent disposal
+of the various corps had been elaborately
+arranged so as to ensure concentration at short
+notice in case of emergency.</p>
+
+<p>From hour to hour during Sunday,
+December 1, the Russian army in dense
+columns streamed past within six miles of the
+French position in full view of Napoleon, all
+marching forward in stolid silence, intent only
+on getting between Napoleon and Vienna. No
+counter-move meanwhile was made from the
+French side. Strict orders were sent to the
+outposts that not a shot was to be fired. But
+by the early afternoon all was ready for action.
+Completely seeing through the enemy’s plans,
+Napoleon exclaimed in a tone of absolute confidence:<span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">98</span>
+“Before to-morrow night that army is
+mine!”</p>
+
+<p>On Napoleon’s right flank, in a strong defensive
+position, stood Marshal Davout’s corps,
+thrown back at an angle to the main front of
+the army, so as to induce the enemy to extend
+themselves widely on that side before opening
+their attack. Marshal Soult’s corps, the most
+powerful in the Grand Army, formed the centre;
+supported by the Imperial Guard, Oudinot’s
+Grenadier Division, and two divisions of Mortier’s
+corps. Marshal Lannes’ corps, with Bernadotte’s,
+was on the left, as well as Murat’s
+cavalry. Napoleon proposed to allow the
+Russian leading columns to circle round his
+right flank and get into action with Davout.
+Then, as soon as they were committed to their
+attack in that quarter, Soult’s immense force
+would hurl itself on the Russian centre and break
+through it by sheer weight of numbers. Thus
+the Allied Army would be cleft in two, after
+which Napoleon would only have to fling his
+weight to either side for the enemy to be destroyed
+in detail. During Soult’s move, Lannes
+on the left flank was to hold in check by a brisk
+attack the Russian right wing and reserves,
+which would prevent assistance reaching the
+centre until too late to save the day. So the
+battle was planned; so it was fought and won.</p>
+
+<figure id="i_98" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 44em;">
+ <img src="images/i_098.jpg" width="3519" height="1915" alt="">
+ <figcaption class="caption">
+ <p>Sketch Plan of the Positions of the Armies at
+ the opening of the Battle of AUSTERLITZ</p>
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<p>The Allied columns were seen during Sunday
+afternoon to be steadily moving southward<span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">99</span>
+over a high ridge opposite the French camp,
+crowned near the centre by the lofty plateau
+of Pratzen, the key of the position on the Russian
+side. They streamed along from the direction
+of the village of Austerlitz, a short distance away
+to the north-east, from which the battle took
+its name. A tract of low marshy country, the
+valley of the little river Goldbach, four miles
+across, with two or three hamlets dotting it here
+and there, connected by narrow cart-roads,
+divided the two armies. The French position,
+facing eastwards, was on a range of tableland
+along the west side of the valley of the Goldbach.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE KEY OF THE POSITION</div>
+
+<p>Monday morning came, and the “Sun of
+Austerlitz”—so often apostrophised by Napoleon
+in after days—rose in a cloudless sky above
+the early mists lying dense over the marshy
+ground of the low-lying valley between the
+armies. The dominating crest of the Pratzen
+plateau showed above the mist almost bare of
+troops. On the evening before it had bristled
+with Russian bayonets, glistening in the rays of
+the setting sun. Pratzen, the master-key of the
+battlefield, had been left unoccupied. The
+enemy’s corps had taken no measures to hold it
+in their haste to get forward to attack the French
+right wing, and cut Napoleon off.</p>
+
+<p>Soult’s corps—the entire French army had
+been under arms since four o’clock—was ordered
+to descend into the valley before the morning
+mist dissipated as the sun rose. Under cover<span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">100</span>
+of the mist Soult was to get as close as possible
+to the foot of the Pratzen Hill, so as to be on
+the spot ready to seize the height immediately
+the battle opened on the right.</p>
+
+<p>Napoleon waited, standing among the marshals
+on foot near the centre of the position, until
+between seven and eight o’clock. Then sharp
+firing suddenly broke out from the direction of
+Davout’s corps, and a few minutes later an
+aide de camp came galloping up with the news
+that the enemy were attacking the right wing
+in great force. “Now,” said Napoleon, “is
+the moment.” The marshals sprang on their
+horses and spurred off to head their corps.</p>
+
+<p>So Austerlitz opened.</p>
+
+<p>Its first brunt, as Napoleon had foreseen, fell
+hard and heavily on the French right wing;
+but Davout’s men there proved well able to
+maintain their ground. The sturdy linesmen on
+that side disputed every foot of the position at
+the point of the bayonet against four times
+their numbers.</p>
+
+<p>Right gallantly, time and again, did the Eagles
+on that part of the field fulfil their rôle and take
+their part; now heading charges, now rallying
+round them the men who had sworn to die in
+their defence.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">“SOLDIERS, I STAY HERE!”</div>
+
+<p>The 15th Light Infantry—a corps in the ranks
+of which were many young soldiers, now under
+fire for the first time in their lives—stormed the
+village of Tellnitz, which the Russians had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">101</span>
+carried in their first rush on the French outposts.
+The leading battalion of the 15th drove the
+Russians out; and, dashing on beyond the
+village, met a reinforcing Russian column hastening
+to the spot. They charged it without
+hesitation, but could not break through, and
+then they began to recoil before superior numbers.
+The Eagle-bearer was shot down, and
+fell badly wounded. He had to leave hold
+of his Eagle, and amid the surging throng of
+soldiers in disorder it was in great danger of
+being trampled under foot and lost. Fortunately
+the officer in command, <i lang="fr">Chef de Bataillon</i>
+Dulong, saw what had happened, and sprang
+from his horse and seized the Eagle. Holding
+it on high with one hand, he shouted to his men
+to stand fast. “Soldiers, I stay here!” he
+called. “Let me see if you will abandon your
+Eagle and your commander.” The act and
+words checked the disorder. The battalion
+rallied at once, re-formed ranks, and made
+head against the enemy until help arrived, when
+the Russians were driven back.</p>
+
+<p>The Eagle of another battalion in the same
+division of Davout’s army corps, General
+Friant’s, the 111th of the Line, a little time later
+had its part. The 111th had suffered heavily
+in the earlier fighting, but towards eleven o’clock
+were called on to lead a counter-attack beyond
+the line of fortified hedgerow that the regiment
+was holding, against a fresh Russian column<span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">102</span>
+which was advancing with loud shouts and
+bayonets at the charge to storm their position.
+Immediately in front was a wide, open stretch
+of ground, across which a Russian battery, to
+cover the attack, was pouring a tremendous
+fire of shell, the bursting projectiles tearing up
+the ground as if it were being ploughed. Just
+as the order to advance was given, the Porte-Aigle
+fell dead. An old sergeant, Courbet by
+name, took his place. He seized the Eagle and
+looked round, for several of the men were
+wavering. They were unwilling to leave cover
+for certain death, as it looked, on the shell-swept
+space of open ground before them. Courbet
+climbed over the hedge, and, waving the Eagle
+and flag with both hands, stood by himself amid
+the bursting shells, some twenty yards in front.
+“Come on, comrades!” he shouted—“come on!”
+Then with the words, “A moi, soldats du 111me!”
+brandishing the Eagle, he ran straight at the
+fast-nearing Russians. “The effect,” says one
+who saw the brave deed done, “was electric.”
+The men streamed over the hedge instantly,
+re-formed line in spite of the cannon-balls, and,
+led by the grenadiers of the battalion, charged
+the approaching enemy, broke them, drove
+them before them, and seized the village in
+front, whence the Russians had made their
+advance.</p>
+
+<p>The Eagle of the 48th, another of Friant’s
+regiments, in like manner was rallied in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">103</span>
+moment of supreme crisis by the daring of its
+Eagle-bearer.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">SUDDENLY FIRED ON BY FRIENDS</div>
+
+<p>The Eagle of the 108th, which regiment was
+fighting near by, all but fell into the enemy’s
+hands through a blunder. It was early in the
+morning, at the very beginning of the fight, in
+crossing a marshy strip under cover of the mist,
+to take in flank the Russian attack. In the
+uncertain light another French regiment, the
+26th Light Infantry, one of Soult’s regiments,
+moving about a hundred yards on the left of
+Davout’s men, mistook the 108th for the enemy,
+and fired heavily into it. The Eagle-bearer
+was among those shot down, and fell with the
+Eagle. This sudden blow from an unexpected
+quarter staggered the 108th. They fell back
+hastily to re-form in rear, leaving their Eagle,
+whose fall had been unobserved in the mist,
+lying beside its dead bearer on the ground. The
+loss was discovered just as another force of
+Russians, who came up in front, reached the
+place; but before they could carry off the trophy
+a charge forward by some hastily rallied men of
+the 108th recovered the Eagle and bore it back
+to safety.</p>
+
+<p>So far then with Davout’s corps.</p>
+
+<p>Soult, meanwhile, in the centre, was striking
+hard. His attack, in its effect on the Allied
+Army, was a complete surprise. Soult’s advance
+began the instant that the marshal, riding at
+full gallop from the presence of Napoleon, could<span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">104</span>
+reach his men. At that moment the third of
+the Russian columns in the order of march, pressing
+ahead to overtake the first and second, and
+join in the attack on Davout, had not long
+descended the southern slope at the foot of the
+Pratzen heights; while the fourth Russian
+column, a mile or more in rear, was just about
+to ascend the northern slope to cross the Pratzen
+Hill and follow.</p>
+
+<p>Up the steep western hillside face of the
+Pratzen clambered Soult’s regiments. Unseen
+by the enemy at any point, without a shot
+being fired at them, or by them, until just as
+they were nearing the crest-line of the ridge,
+they emerged from the mists of the valley and
+seized the high ground.</p>
+
+<p>They moved on a front of three divisions.
+Legrand’s was on the right, echeloned in the
+direction of Davout’s left flank so as to keep
+touch with that marshal. St. Hilaire’s was in
+the centre, advancing in a long line of battalions
+in attack formation. Vandamme’s division was
+on the left.</p>
+
+<p>The Allied fourth column caught a glimpse of
+Vandamme’s men as they were climbing the
+last ascent, and raced forward to form up and
+bar their way. There were 14,000 troops in the
+column, half Austrians, half Russians; and
+the Czar Alexander with the Emperor of Austria
+rode with them.</p>
+
+<figure id="i_104" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 24em;">
+ <img src="images/i_104.jpg" width="1860" height="2303" alt="">
+ <figcaption class="caption">
+ <p>MARSHAL SOULT.</p>
+ <p>In the uniform of Colonel-in-Chief of the Chasseurs of the Guard.</p>
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<p>Attacking at once, the French broke through<span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">105</span>
+the Allied front line, and, after a hard fight—for
+the Austro-Russian regiments, fighting under
+the two Sovereigns’ eyes, resisted with desperate
+valour—forced it back on the second line with
+the loss of several guns.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">GRAPE-SHOT AT THIRTY PACES</div>
+
+<p>Again there the Eagles took their part. On
+the right of St. Hilaire’s attack, the brigade of
+General Thiébault became separated in the
+fighting with the Russian foremost line. Its
+three regiments—the 10th Light Infantry, the
+14th, and the 36th—became separated, and one
+of them, the 36th, was for a time in danger of
+being overpowered by part of the Russian
+third column, which had faced about on hearing
+the firing in rear and was hastening back up the
+hill. Two Russian regiments raced up towards
+them on that side. Some Austrian infantry of
+the fourth column, extending in their direction,
+were at the same time coming at them on the
+left. In front the 36th was faced by two
+Russian batteries, which dashed up, unlimbered,
+and blazed away, firing grape and case shot at
+barely thirty paces; as well as by some Russian
+dragoons, who made as if about to charge. To
+keep the dragoons off, the leading battalion
+attempted to form square; but the men, breathless
+after their rush uphill, were in some disorder
+and for the moment out of hand. The square,
+while yet half formed, was then nearly torn to
+pieces by a staggering discharge of grape, and
+several of the men began to get unsteady. It<span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">106</span>
+looked bad for the 36th, when, of a sudden,
+Adjutant Labadie, of the First Battalion, snatched
+the Eagle from its bearer and ran out in front.
+He stopped short and held the Eagle-staff with
+both hands planted firmly on the ground. Then
+he called to the men, in a momentary pause while
+the Russian gunners were reloading: “Soldiers
+of the 36th, rally to the front! Here is your line
+of battle!” The men saw him, and obeyed.
+The disorder ceased. Quickly deploying to right
+and left, they dashed at the Russian guns. At
+the same moment the other two regiments of
+the brigade, led by St. Hilaire and the brigadier,
+sword in hand, came up at the <i lang="fr">pas de charge</i>,
+bayonets levelled. The 10th Light Infantry
+brilliantly repulsed the Austrians on one side:
+the 14th on the other side drove Kamenskoi’s
+Russians back down the hill.</p>
+
+<p>Supporting the 10th Light Infantry was the
+59th of the Line, one of Mortier’s corps, of
+Dupont’s division, which had been sent forward
+to help in holding the Pratzen heights. Some of
+the Russian dragoons dashed in among them as
+they deployed to follow the 10th. A Russian
+officer cut down the Eagle-bearer and seized the
+Eagle. Sergeant-Major Gamier, the “Porte-Aigle,”
+struggled to his feet in spite of his wounds,
+wrested the Eagle back, and with his free hand
+fought with his sword and killed the Russian,
+saving the Eagle.</p>
+
+<p>On St. Hilaire’s left, during this time, Vandamme’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">107</span>
+division had had to fight its way forward
+against the Russians and Austrians of the
+fourth column, several battalions of which,
+with artillery, had rapidly taken post along a
+range of knolls towards the northern edge of the
+Pratzen plateau. Driving back at the outset
+six Russian battalions, which charged forward
+to meet them, springing up from the shelter of
+a dip in the ground, Vandamme’s men, “without
+firing a shot, with the bayonet only,
+advanced on the main enemy with shouldered
+arms, not replying to the Russian musketry.”
+When within forty yards, they halted, fired a
+volley, and dashed in with bayonets lowered.
+The attack was successful beyond expectation.
+The enemy before them were routed, and all
+their guns taken, with many prisoners. Then
+Vandamme received orders to wheel his division
+to the right and take in flank the enemy, at that
+moment in hot fight with St. Hilaire.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE RUSSIAN GUARD COME UP</div>
+
+<p>Vandamme was in the middle of the move
+when one of his brigades met with a sudden and
+unexpected disaster. Two battalions belonging
+to the 24th Light Infantry and the 4th of the
+Line, who fought side by side on the extreme
+left of Vandamme’s command, were all but
+annihilated. As they were wheeling round,
+the Russian Imperial Guard came up, hurrying
+forward from the Reserve, and set on
+them fiercely. It was just to the left of the
+village of Pratzen, as approached from the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">108</span>
+French side, on the farther side of the plateau.
+The Russian Foot Guards forced the 4th and the
+24th Light Infantry back into some vineyards
+adjoining the village in disorder. The last to
+retire was the First Battalion of the 4th. They
+had hardly gained the edge of the tract of vineyards,
+when, without the least warning of their
+approach, coming up on their flank and unseen
+in the smoke and turmoil of the contest, a more
+formidable enemy still assailed them. The
+Russian Cuirassiers of the Guard, 2,000 horsemen,
+troopers of the finest cavalry in the world,
+came down on them, and charged them at a
+gallop on the flank. The Grand Duke Constantine,
+brother of the Czar, in person led the Cuirassiers.
+Disaster, hideous, overwhelming, crushing,
+for the two hapless battalions—that of the
+24th Light Infantry was, in like manner, caught
+just beyond cover exposed in the open—was
+the instant result. They tried to form
+square at the last moment, but the Cuirassiers
+were on them before they could begin the evolution.
+Both battalions were practically hurled
+out of existence within three minutes.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">HOW ONE EAGLE MET ITS FATE</div>
+
+<p>They were ridden down, trampled on by the
+huge Russian horses, and slashed to pieces
+mercilessly by the giant Russian troopers with
+their long straight swords. Both battalions
+lost their Eagles. That of the 24th Light Infantry
+was picked up later on the field and
+restored to what was left of the ill-fated corps.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">109</span>
+The Eagle of the 4th was carried off by the
+Russians, and is now in the Kazan Cathedral at
+St. Petersburg. Yet it was lost with honour;
+bravely defended to the last. The Eagle-bearer
+was cut down. A lieutenant tried to get hold
+of the Eagle and save it; he, too, was cut down.
+A private then snatched it from the dead
+officer’s hands, and was in the act of waving
+it on high when he in turn was sabred and fell.
+The Russians made prize of the trophy at once,
+and it was carried direct to the Czar Alexander
+on the battlefield.</p>
+
+<p>Napoleon, who had moved up near the fighting
+in the centre, witnessed the disaster with his
+own eyes.</p>
+
+<p>The corps, as it happened, too, was one he
+had taken an interest in. The 4th of the Line
+had been in favour with him, and he had appointed
+his brother Joseph as its colonel when
+the 4th was at the Camp of Boulogne as part
+of the “Army of England.” He had, indeed,
+specially chosen that particular corps for its
+steadiness. He announced Joseph’s appointment
+to it in a message to the Senate on April 18,
+1804, “in order that he should be allowed to
+contribute to the vengeance which the French
+people propose to take for the violation of the
+Treaty [of Amiens] and be afforded an opportunity
+of acquiring a fresh title to the esteem
+of the nation.”</p>
+
+<p>In wild panic the survivors of the disaster<span class="pagenum" id="Page_110">110</span>
+fled to the rear, tearing by close past where
+Napoleon and the Staff were. “They almost
+rushed over us and the Emperor himself,”
+describes De Ségur, who as an aide de camp
+was close to the Emperor at the moment.
+“Our effort to arrest the rout was in vain.
+The unfortunate fellows were quite distracted
+with fear and would listen to nothing. In reply
+to our reproaches for so deserting the field of
+battle and their Emperor, they shouted mechanically
+‘Vive l’Empereur!’ and they fled away
+faster than ever.</p>
+
+<p>“Napoleon smiled pitifully. With a scornful
+gesture, he said to us: ‘Let them go!’ Retaining
+all his calmness in the midst of the confusion
+he despatched Rapp to bring up the
+Cavalry of the Guard.”</p>
+
+<p>Rapp, another of the Imperial aides de camp,
+was also Colonel of the Mamelukes of the Guard.
+He was at the moment riding close behind the
+Emperor. Rapp darted off, and, after taking
+Napoleon’s order to charge the Russian Cuirassiers
+to Marshal Bessières, in command of the
+Cavalry of the Guard, he himself led their
+headmost squadrons forward; his own swarthy
+Mamelukes with two squadrons of Chasseurs
+and one of Horse Grenadiers. Waving his
+sabre and calling at the top of his voice, “Vengeons
+les! Vengeons nos drapeaux!” “Avenge
+them! Avenge our standards!” he led them
+forward at full gallop. “We dashed at full<span class="pagenum" id="Page_111">111</span>
+speed on the artillery and took them,” described
+Rapp in a letter. The guns were those of a
+Russian battery which had just come into action
+close by where the Guard Cuirassiers had
+charged. “The enemy’s horse awaited our
+attack at the halt. They were overthrown by
+the charge and fled in confusion, galloping
+like us over the wrecks of our squares.”</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">“WE FOUGHT MAN TO MAN”</div>
+
+<p>But the Russians rallied quickly. Reinforced
+by the superb regiment of the Chevalier Guards,
+a corps in which all the troopers were men of
+birth, they came on to meet the French again.
+Just at that moment Bessières, with at his back
+the magnificent cavalry of Napoleon’s Guard,
+came up at full speed. Rapp’s squadrons
+rejoined, and both Imperial Guards met in full
+career. “Again we charged,” says Rapp, “and
+this charge was terrible. It was one of the most
+desperate cavalry combats ever fought, and
+lasted several minutes. The brave Morland,
+Colonel of the mounted Chasseurs of the Guard,
+fell by my side. We fought man to man, and
+so mingled together that the infantry on neither
+side dared fire, lest they should kill their own
+men.” They fought it out until the Russians
+gave back and broke and fled—in full sight of
+the Czar and the Austrian Emperor, who from
+some rising ground near by had been spectators
+of the desperate affray.</p>
+
+<p>The survivors of the hapless First Battalion
+of the 4th of the Line had meanwhile recovered<span class="pagenum" id="Page_112">112</span>
+themselves. Rallied by their officers, they had
+been brought back into the battle. They returned
+with their nerve restored, now only
+anxious to make amends for the disgrace they
+had brought on the Grand Army. They were
+in time to join in the final advance beyond
+the Pratzen heights and cross bayonets with an
+Austrian regiment, from which they took its
+two standards. That feat, as will be seen,
+was to serve them in good stead later on.</p>
+
+<p>The charge of the Cavalry of the Guard
+practically decided the fate of the day at
+Austerlitz. Napoleon at once brought up
+Oudinot’s Grenadiers, Bernadotte’s battalions,
+and the regiments of the Old Guard to further
+reinforce Soult’s divisions. The Allied centre
+was shattered and driven in at all points, and
+forced back for a mile-and-a-half beyond the field
+of battle. It resisted desperately to the last,
+and several fierce counter-attacks were made;
+but in vain.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE DOG THAT SAVED AN EAGLE</div>
+
+<p>In one of these the Eagle of the Chasseurs à
+Pied of the Imperial Guard had a narrow escape.
+According to the story it was saved by a dog—“Moustache,”
+a mongrel poodle that had
+attached himself to the corps and become a
+regimental pet. The Eagle-bearer of the First
+Battalion, to whom the dog was much attached,
+and whom he was following, was shot, and the
+Eagle dropped to the ground beneath the man’s
+body. An Austrian regiment was making a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_113">113</span>
+counter-attack at that point, and before the
+Eagle could be picked up, three Austrian soldiers
+ran forward to seize it. Two of them attacked
+the two men of the Eagle escort. The third
+was faced by “Moustache,” who kept him off,
+growling savagely and snapping at the Austrian
+from behind the dead body of the Eagle-bearer.
+The man dropped his musket, drew
+his hanger, and cut at “Moustache,” slicing
+off a paw. But in spite of that the dog managed
+to keep him off until assistance came. Then
+the three Austrians were bayoneted and the
+Eagle was saved. Marshal Lannes, on hearing
+the story, had a silver collar made for “Moustache,”
+with a medal to hang from it, inscribed
+on one side, “Il perdit une jambe à la bataille
+d’Austerlitz, et sauva le Drapeau de son régiment”;
+and on the other, “Moustache, chien
+Français; qu’il soit partout respecté et cheri
+comme un Brave.” “Moustache,” in the end,
+it may be said, died a soldier’s death. He was
+killed by an English cannon-ball at Badajoz,
+and was buried on the ramparts there, with a
+stone over him, inscribed: “Cy git le brave
+Moustache.”</p>
+
+<p>The Allied centre broken through, the end
+came on swiftly all over the field of battle.</p>
+
+<p>On Napoleon’s left wing, Lannes and Murat
+had engaged the Russian rear column (or right
+wing as they fronted to fight) immediately after
+Soult opened the main attack. They had done<span class="pagenum" id="Page_114">114</span>
+their part by holding in play the enemy in front,
+thus preventing the Allied troops on that side
+from moving up to reinforce the centre. There,
+too, as elsewhere, the Eagles of Napoleon’s
+battalions fulfilled their <i lang="fr">rôle</i>; one Eagle in
+particular, that of the 13me Légère, achieving
+special distinction. When the Allied centre
+gave way, Lannes and Murat pressed forward
+impetuously, forcing their antagonists back,
+and driving them off the field to the north-east,
+past the village of Austerlitz.</p>
+
+<p>Davout, on Napoleon’s right, finished his
+task at the same time; in no less workmanship
+fashion. As Soult swung round his victorious
+divisions to the right to take the Russian
+left wing in rear, Davout’s moment came and
+he gave the order to advance. Surging forward
+with exultant shouts the stout-hearted defenders
+of that fiercely contested side of the field swept
+down on the assailants they had kept at bay for
+five long hours. The Russians did their best to
+make a brave resistance, but the day was lost.
+Formed in close-packed columns they fell back,
+losing guns and colours, and hundreds of prisoners.<a id="FNanchor_9" href="#Footnote_9" class="fnanchor">9</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_115">115</span></p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">VICTORS AND VANQUISHED</div>
+
+<p>As darkness closed in, the last shots were fired
+at Austerlitz. Crushing and complete had been
+the overthrow. The Allied army fled in wild
+panic. It left on the field 30,000 men, dead,
+wounded, or prisoners, 100 guns, and 400 ammunition
+caissons. Forty-five standards were in
+the hands of the victors. Twelve thousand men
+in killed and wounded was the price Napoleon
+paid. It was a big price; but the victory to
+him was worth the sacrifice. At five next
+morning an aide de camp from the Austrian
+Emperor presented himself before Napoleon to
+beg for an immediate suspension of hostilities.
+The Emperor Francis himself had an interview
+with Napoleon during that afternoon, and, as
+the result, terms of peace—to include the Austrian
+Emperor’s Russian allies—were mutually
+agreed on; to be formally settled between the
+diplomatists as soon as possible, Pressburg in
+Hungary being named for the meeting-place.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_116">116</span></p>
+
+<p>We come now to the dramatic sequel to Austerlitz
+which awaited the ill-fated First Battalion
+of the 4th of the Line. They had to face Napoleon
+and render account to him personally for
+the loss of their Eagle. The dreaded interview
+came some three weeks later; at a grand parade
+of Soult’s corps before the Emperor at Schönbrunn—as
+it befell, on Christmas Day.</p>
+
+<p>Napoleon, attended by the Imperial Staff,
+most of the marshals, half a hundred other
+officers of rank, and nearly as many aides de
+camp, passed down the long line of troops,
+congratulating most of the regiments on the
+parts they had individually taken on the different
+battlefields. In due course the Emperor
+came to the regiments of Vandamme’s division,
+ranged in their allotted place, the 4th of the
+Line among them. Its First Battalion, reduced
+by the disaster to a quarter of the normal
+strength, stood at the head of the regiment,
+looking gloomy and disconsolate, the only corps
+on parade without its Eagle.</p>
+
+<p>Napoleon approached the place with a frown
+on his face and a look as black as thunder. He
+reined up opposite the battalion and addressed
+it in a loud angry tone.</p>
+
+<p>“Soldiers,” he began hoarsely. “What have
+you done with the Eagle which I entrusted to
+you?”</p>
+
+<p>The colonel of the regiment replied that the
+Eagle-bearer had been killed at Austerlitz in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_117">117</span>
+the <i lang="fr">mêlée</i> when the Russian cuirassiers charged
+the regiment, and the Eagle had been lost in
+the tumult and confusion of the moment. There
+was no survivor of those who had seen the
+Eagle-bearer fall. The battalion, indeed, did
+not know of its loss until some time later. One
+and all deeply deplored what had happened,
+but they desired to inform His Majesty most
+respectfully that they, single-handed, had captured
+two Austrian standards, and implored his
+consideration on that account, begging that he
+would allow them to receive a new Eagle in
+exchange.</p>
+
+<p>The whole regiment supported the colonel’s
+request with loud shouts, “réclama à grands
+cris.” But Napoleon’s countenance remained
+unchanged.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">SCATHING CENSURE AND BITTER SCORN</div>
+
+<p>He replied coldly and contemptuously:
+“These two foreign flags do not return me my
+Eagle!” Then, after a pause, he launched
+out into words of the severest censure and rebuke,
+telling the men that he had seen them with his
+own eyes in flight at Austerlitz. He poured
+bitter scorn on their conduct, “in phrases,
+stinging, burning, corrosive, which those present
+remembered long afterwards—to the end of
+their lives.”</p>
+
+<p>Again the unhappy colonel pleaded his hardest
+for his men. He entreated the Emperor’s
+clemency, once more beseeching Napoleon to
+allow that they had wiped out the slur on their<span class="pagenum" id="Page_118">118</span>
+good name, and to grant the battalion a new
+Eagle.</p>
+
+<p>Napoleon said nothing for a moment. Then
+he again addressed them in an abrupt tone:</p>
+
+<p>“Officers, sub-officers, and soldiers, swear to
+me here that not one of you saw your Eagle fall.
+Assure me that if you had done so you would
+have flung yourselves into the midst of the
+enemy to recover it, or have died in the attempt.
+The soldier who loses his Eagle on the field
+of battle loses his honour and his all.”</p>
+
+<p>“We swear it!” came the reply at once.</p>
+
+<p>At that there seemed to come a change in
+the Emperor’s mood. He paused once more
+for a few moments, during which there was dead
+silence. Then he raised his voice: “I will
+grant that you have not been cowards; but
+you have been imprudent! Again I tell you
+that these Austrian standards—even, indeed,
+were they six—would not compensate me for
+my Eagle.”</p>
+
+<p>He stopped short. He seemed to be musing
+for a moment, looking straight into the eyes
+of the men. After that, with a curt “Well,
+I will restore you yet another Eagle!” Napoleon
+turned his horse and rode on down the line of
+troops.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THEY FOUND THE OTHER EAGLE</div>
+
+<p>It was quite true, as the colonel told Napoleon,
+that the regiment was unaware at the time that
+their Eagle had been lost. As a fact, search-parties—practically
+all the survivors of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_119">119</span>
+First Battalion—were out on the day after
+Austerlitz hunting over the battlefield among
+the dead for their lost Eagle. By the irony of
+fate it was they who picked up and restored
+the Eagle of the 24th Light Infantry to their
+fellows in adversity; the Russians, it would
+seem, had not marked its fall in the confusion
+of the fighting. At any rate it was left where
+it fell and where it was found.</p>
+
+<p>There was, as it curiously happened, no
+reference in the Austerlitz Bulletin published
+in France—the 30th “Bulletin of the Grand
+Army”—to the loss of its Eagle by the 4th of
+the Line, although the disaster to the battalion
+is reported. “Un bataillon du 4me de Ligne
+fut chargé par la Garde Impériale Russe à
+Cheval et culbuté.” That was all that was
+said on the subject. Yet, on other occasions
+later, when Eagles were lost, mention was made
+of the misfortune in one or other of the Bulletins,
+with, generally also, some remark by way
+of explaining away the unpleasant fact, and
+now and then a caustic comment by Napoleon.
+A picture connected with the incident was,
+however, painted—at whose request is unknown.
+It is now in the national collection of military
+pictures of the campaigns of Napoleon at Versailles.
+It shows the First Battalion of the
+4th of the Line at the Schönbrunn review
+“presenting Napoleon with two Austrian
+standards taken by them from the enemy,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_120">120</span>
+and claiming in exchange a new Eagle for
+themselves.”<a id="FNanchor_10" href="#Footnote_10" class="fnanchor">10</a></p>
+
+<p>This closing word may be said of the spoils
+of the Eagles at Austerlitz.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE RECEPTION IN NOTRE DAME</div>
+
+<p>The forty-five flags captured in the battle,
+with five others selected from those taken at
+Ulm, making fifty in all, were presented by
+Napoleon to the Cathedral of Notre Dame.
+With the trophies he sent this message: “Our<span class="pagenum" id="Page_121">121</span>
+intention is that every year on the 2nd of December
+a Solemn Office shall be sung in the Cathedral
+in memory of the brave men who fell on the
+great day.” The flags were borne in triumph,
+together with the trophies of the Ulm campaign,—120
+captured standards and colours in all—through
+the streets of Paris on January 15, 1806,
+amid a tremendous demonstration of popular
+enthusiasm. “The behaviour of the people,”
+wrote Cambacérès, “resembled intoxication.”
+Four days later the Austerlitz flags were received
+at Notre Dame by the assembled Cathedral
+clergy, Cardinal du Belloy at their head, with
+elaborate religious ceremonial.</p>
+
+<p>Said the Cardinal-Archbishop of Paris in his
+address from the Altar-steps: “These banners,
+suspended from the roof of our Cathedral, will
+attest to posterity the efforts of Europe in arms
+against us; the great achievements of our
+soldiers; the protection of Heaven over France;
+the prodigious successes of our invincible Emperor;
+and the homage which he pays to God
+for his victories.” Not one of the flags exists
+now. They disappeared mysteriously, in circumstances
+to be described later, in the early
+hours of March 31, 1814, the day on which
+the victorious Allies entered Paris, and Napoleon
+withdrew to Fontainebleau.</p>
+
+<p>Fifty-four of the other trophies paraded
+through Paris, flags taken in the Ulm campaign,
+were presented by Napoleon, as has been said,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_122">122</span>
+to the Senate. In return a picture of the scene
+at the reception of the trophy-flags was ordered
+to be painted for presentation to the Emperor.
+It is now at Versailles.</p>
+
+<p>The remaining sixteen trophies were divided
+by order of the Emperor. Eight were sent to
+the Assembly Hall of the Tribunate; eight to
+the Hôtel de Ville as a gift to the city of Paris.</p>
+
+<p>Thus did France receive the first spoils of the
+Eagles.</p>
+
+<p>“Soldiers,” said Napoleon to the Grand
+Army, in his Austerlitz Proclamation; “I am
+satisfied with you. You have justified my fullest
+expectations of your intrepidity. You have
+decorated your Eagles with immortal glory!”</p>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_123">123</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V<br>
+
+<span class="subhead">IN THE SECOND CAMPAIGN</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<h3 id="toclink_123"><span class="smcap">Jena and the Triumph of Berlin</span></h3>
+
+<p class="in0"><span class="firstword">The</span> curtain rises this time on an act in the War
+Drama of the Eagles unique in the startling
+incidents of its historic <i lang="fr">dénoûment</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Prussia, in September 1806, threw down the
+gage to Napoleon and drew the sword for a
+trial of strength, with the full assurance of
+victory. There was no doubt in Germany as
+to the issue; not the least anxiety was felt.
+No troops in the world, declared one and all,
+could stand up to the Prussian Army. It was
+easy, they said at Potsdam and Berlin, to account
+for what had happened last year on the Danube.
+Any sort of army could have won in that war.
+Timidity and want of skill in the Austrian
+generals, deficient training in the men, had
+been, beyond dispute, the reason of the disasters.
+It would be otherwise now. Napoleon would
+have to meet this time the Army of Prussia;
+the best drilled and smartest soldiers in the
+world, organised and trained under the system
+that the Great Frederick had originated and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_124">124</span>
+himself brought to perfection. “His Majesty
+the King,” said one of the Prussian generals,
+addressing a parade at Potsdam, “has many
+generals better than Napoleon!” In the Prussian
+Army, from veteran field-marshal to
+drummer-boy, there were no two opinions as
+to what must be the outcome of a clash of arms
+with France. The wings of Napoleon’s Eagles
+would be clipped once for all.</p>
+
+<p>But to hurl defiant words was not enough.
+Yet further to display contempt for their French
+foes, the young officers of the Prussian Guard
+marched one night in procession through the
+streets of Berlin to demonstrate in front of
+the French Embassy. Shouting out insults
+and jeers, they brandished their swords before
+the windows of the mansion and made a show
+of sharpening the blades on the Ambassador’s
+doorsteps. The Prussian King’s ultimatum
+went forth, couched in language there was no
+mistaking, and the Royal Guard Corps set out
+from the capital for the frontier with flags
+displayed and their bands playing triumphal
+airs, chanting songs of the victories of the
+Great Frederick, and shouting themselves hoarse
+with cries of “Nach Paris!” All over Prussia
+it was the same. The marching regiments
+tramped through the towns and villages, their
+colours decked with flowers, their bands playing,
+and with the swaggering gait of victors returning
+from conquest.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_125">125</span></p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">A REPLY WITHIN A WEEK</div>
+
+<p>The Prussian ultimatum, delivered on September
+1, haughtily demanded a reply from
+France within a week. It was accepted with
+alacrity. Napoleon had foreseen all and laid
+his plans. “Marshal,” he said to Berthier,
+with a grim smile, as he read the ultimatum,
+“they have given us a rendezvous for the 8th;
+never did Frenchman refuse such an appeal.”</p>
+
+<p>The Eagles never swooped to more deadly
+purpose, with results more amazing and more
+dramatic, than in that campaign.</p>
+
+<p>Within three days of the firing of the first
+shot, a Prussian division of 9,000 men had been
+routed with heavy loss at Schleitz in Thuringia;
+and Murat’s cavalry had captured elsewhere
+great part of the Prussian reserve baggage-trains
+and pontoon equipment. On the fourth
+day of the war, at Saalfeld in Thuringia, 1,200
+Prussian prisoners were taken and 30 guns.
+In the battles of Jena and Auerstadt, both
+fought on the same day, October 14, 20,000
+Prussian prisoners, 200 guns, and 25 standards
+were spoils to the Eagles. At Erfurth, on the
+next day, a Prussian field-marshal with 14,000
+men, 120 guns and the whole of the grand park
+of the reserve artillery of the army were taken.
+At Halle 4,000 Prussian prisoners were taken,
+with 30 guns; at Lübeck 8,000 prisoners and
+40 guns. Magdeburg, one of the strongest
+fortresses in Europe, with immense magazines
+and 600 guns on the ramparts garrisoned by<span class="pagenum" id="Page_126">126</span>
+16,000 troops, surrendered after a few hours’
+partial bombardment. Stettin, a first-class fortress
+mounting 150 guns, with a garrison of
+6,000 men, surrendered without firing a shot.
+The strong fortress of Cüstrin on the Oder, with
+4,000 men in garrison and 90 cannon on the
+ramparts, surrendered, also without firing a
+shot, to a solitary French infantry regiment
+with four guns. The fortress of Spandau,
+garrisoned by 6,000 men, hauled down its flag
+and opened its gates to a squadron of French
+hussars, no other French troops being within
+many miles, bluffed into surrender. Within
+twelve days of Jena, Napoleon had made his
+entry as a conqueror into Berlin, and the Prussian
+Army had ceased to exist. “We have
+arrived in Potsdam and Berlin,” announced
+Napoleon in a Bulletin to the Grand Army,
+“sooner than the renown of our victories!
+We have made 60,000 prisoners, taken 65 standards,
+including those of the Royal Guard,
+600 pieces of cannon, 3 fortresses, 20 generals,
+half of our army having to regret that
+they have not had an opportunity of firing a
+shot. All the Prussian provinces from the
+Elbe to the Oder are in our hands.” Before
+the end of the year, in little more than three
+months from the firing of the first shot, a total of
+100,000 prisoners, 4,000 cannon, 6 first-class
+fortresses, and many smaller ones, were in the
+hands of the victors.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_127">127</span></p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">RUIN, SWIFT AND IRREPARABLE</div>
+
+<p>Never had the world witnessed such an overthrow
+in war, so complete and appalling a
+catastrophe. Two battles sufficed to prostrate
+Prussia and annihilate the model army of
+Frederick the Great: the twin battles of Jena
+and Auerstadt, both fought, as has been said,
+on the same day, October 14, and within ten
+miles of one another. Jena was fought under
+Napoleon’s own eye; Auerstadt by Marshal
+Davout, practically single-handed, with his one
+army corps confronting the King and Blücher
+with the main Prussian army. The Prussian
+generals indeed gave themselves into Napoleon’s
+hands at the outset. They separated their main
+army into two bodies out of touch with each
+other, in the immediate presence of the enemy.
+Ruin, swift and irreparable, was the penalty.
+At Jena, Prince Hohenlohe’s army was flung
+roughly back and dashed to pieces, its scattered
+remnants flying in wild disorder. At
+Auerstadt, Davout defeated numbers nearly
+double his own, through the confused tactics
+of the Prussian generals. Immediately after
+that came on the <i lang="fr">débâcle</i>. The Prussian Auerstadt
+army was falling back, disheartened and
+demoralised, but still in fair military formation
+to a large extent, when, all of a sudden, not
+having had up to then the least inkling of what
+had happened at Jena, the retreating troops came
+upon the shattered fragments of Hohenlohe’s
+battalions, streaming in wild confusion across<span class="pagenum" id="Page_128">128</span>
+their path; masses of fugitives running for their
+lives in frantic panic before the sabres of Murat’s
+pursuing cavalry. That ended everything for
+the Prussian army in five minutes. The sight
+of their fugitive comrades struck confusion and
+sheer fright into the retreating columns from
+Auerstadt. All order was instantly lost: the
+soldiers threw away their arms and spread over
+the country in headlong rout. And there was
+no means of stopping it. In their blind self-confidence
+the Prussian generals had made no
+arrangements in the event of a reverse. No
+line of retreat had been arranged for, no rallying-point
+had been thought of. “The disaster of a
+single day made an end of the Prussian army
+as a force capable of meeting the enemy in the
+field.”</p>
+
+<p>For the Eagles it was a day of adventures on
+both battlefields. Swiftly alternating rushes
+forward, the Eagles showing the way at the
+head of their regiments at one moment; hasty
+halts to form in rallying squares, the Eagles in
+the midst, the next moment, to check the incessant
+Prussian cavalry counter-charges—that
+was what the fighting on the French side was
+like, all through the day, at both Jena and
+Auerstadt. At one time the Eagles were leading
+forward charging lines of exultantly cheering
+men, firing fast and racing forward at the <i lang="fr">pas
+de charge</i>; immediately afterwards they were
+standing fast, each the centre of a mass of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_129">129</span>
+breathless and excited soldiers, surging round and
+closing up to form square, with bristling bayonets
+levelled on every side, to hold the ground they
+had won against the charging squadrons of
+Prussian horsemen that came at them, thundering
+down impetuously at the gallop.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">“LEAD OUT YOUR EAGLE!”</div>
+
+<p>“I want to see the Eagles well to the front
+to-day!” said Napoleon to several regiments
+in turn, as he rode at early dawn along the lines
+of Marshal Soult’s two foremost divisions who
+were to open the attack at Jena. To them the
+task had been appointed to push forward in advance,
+and hold the exits from the narrow defiles
+through which the French troops had to pass,
+before reaching the Prussians on the high ground
+beyond, in order to give time to the main army,
+following close in rear, to deploy and form in battle
+order. “Lead out your Eagle, Sixty-fourth!”
+Napoleon said to one of the regiments told
+off to go forward in the forefront of all. “I
+wish to-day to see the Eagle of the Sixty-fourth
+lead the battle on the field of honour!” How
+that Eagle led its regiment, how those who
+fought under it did their duty, the prized honour
+of special mention in the Jena Bulletin of the
+Grand Army, and a shower of crosses of the
+Legion of Honour, distributed among all ranks,
+bore testimony. Five times did the Eagle of
+the 34th, the regiment fighting next to the
+64th, lead a charge, each charge crossing
+bayonets with the enemy, twice in hand-to-hand<span class="pagenum" id="Page_130">130</span>
+fight with the picked corps of the Prussian
+Grenadiers.</p>
+
+<p>It was on the battlefield of Jena that Marshal
+Ney won his historic sobriquet of “The Bravest
+of the Brave.” He personally led forward his
+attack, with, at either side of him, the Eagles of
+the 18th of the Line, the 32nd, and the 96th.
+Carried away by his impetuous valour, soon after
+the opening of the battle, Ney made his attack
+with only at hand the three regiments of his First
+Division. The other two divisions of Ney’s corps
+had not yet reached the field. A regiment of
+cuirassiers headed the column, and at their first
+charge captured 13 Prussian guns; but the
+Prussian cavalry, charging back at once to recover
+the guns, overpowered the cuirassiers.</p>
+
+<p>“The Prussian cavalry broke the French horse,
+and enveloped the infantry in such numbers
+as would inevitably have proved fatal to less
+resolute troops; but the brave marshal instantly
+formed his men into squares, threw himself into
+one of them, and there maintained the combat
+by a rolling fire on all sides, till Napoleon, who
+saw his danger, sent several regiments of horse,
+under Bertrand, who disengaged him from his
+perilous situation.”</p>
+
+<p>Ney’s other troops then joined the marshal,
+coming up with their Eagles gleaming through
+the battle-smoke: the Eagles of the 39th and
+the 69th, of the 76th, the 27th, and the 59th.
+Ney, extricated from his difficulties, went on<span class="pagenum" id="Page_131">131</span>
+again at once. “With intrepid step he ascended
+the hill, and, after a sharp conflict, stormed the
+important village of Vierzehn-Heiligen, in the
+centre of the Prussian position. In vain Hohenlohe
+formed the flower of his troops to regain the
+post; in vain these brave men advanced in
+parade order, and with unshrinking firmness,
+through a storm of musketry and grape; the
+troops of Lannes came up to Ney’s support,
+and the French established themselves in such
+strength in the village as to render all subsequent
+attempts for its recapture abortive.”</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">LET THEM COME ON!</div>
+
+<p>This was the spirit in which, at Jena, Ney’s
+men fought under the Eagles. One instance will
+suffice. The 76th of the Line, after the village
+of Vierzehn-Heiligen had been taken, were in the
+act of advancing across the open to a fresh attack,
+when a charge of Prussian cavalry swept fiercely
+down on them. The regiment formed in square,
+each battalion rallying round its Eagle, held up
+aloft for all to gather round. The Prussians had
+come up suddenly. They were within 150 yards
+before the 76th were ready. Then the 76th
+were ordered to “present” and fire. Instead of
+doing that, the men, as if moved by one common
+impulse, took off their shakos, stuck them on
+their bayonets, and waved them in the air, with
+defiant cheers of “Vive l’Empereur!” “Donnez
+feu, mes enfants! Donnez feu!” (“Fire, men,
+fire!”) shouted out their colonel, Lannier, anxious
+lest the enemy should get too near. “We<span class="pagenum" id="Page_132">132</span>
+have time: at fifteen paces, Colonel; wait and
+see!” came back in answer from the ranks.
+They did wait, and, at just fifteen paces, fired a
+crashing volley which so staggered the Prussians
+that, leaving half their men on the ground, they
+turned and galloped back.</p>
+
+<p>The regiments of Lannes’ corps, with the fiery
+marshal cantering at their head and waving
+them on, cocked hat in hand, entered the battle
+with drums beating and the Eagles proudly displayed
+in the centre of the leading lines.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">“HERE IS THE COU-COU!”</div>
+
+<p>One regiment lost 28 officers and 400 men. It
+had made good its first attack and was advancing
+to a second, when it was charged in the open by
+the Prussian cavalry, while in the act of forming
+square. It all but lost its Eagle. The Eagle-bearer
+was cut down, and the Eagle was broken
+from its staff in the trampling tumult of horsemen
+intermingled with infantry, savagely fighting
+with their bayonets. A soldier saved the Eagle,
+and in the hurry of the moment stuffed it into
+the pocket of his long overcoat. Then he went
+on fighting. Apparently the man had no time
+or opportunity to think of the Eagle again.
+The regiment was re-forming towards the close
+of the battle, when Napoleon himself, riding across
+the ground near them, with his quick glance,
+missed the Eagle. He cantered up to the spot,
+and, on being told by an officer that he did not
+know where it was, angrily accused the men of
+having lost their Eagle on the field. He began<span class="pagenum" id="Page_133">133</span>
+upbraiding them indignantly: “What is this?
+Where is your Eagle? You have brought disgrace
+on the Army by losing your Eagle!”
+Those were his opening words. He was rating
+the men angrily, when he was abruptly interrupted
+by a voice from the ranks. “No, your
+Majesty, no! they did not get it: they only
+got a piece of the bâton! Here is the Cou-cou!
+I put it in my pocket!” The soldier drew out
+the Eagle as he spoke and held it up. There
+was a loud outburst of laughter from the soldiers
+at the unexpected turn of events, amid which
+Napoleon, without a word more, turned and
+rode off elsewhere.</p>
+
+<p>At Auerstadt, where 30,000 French faced and
+defeated 60,000 Prussians, the fighting was even
+fiercer than at Jena. Recklessly the Prussian
+horsemen, led in person by the dauntless Blücher,
+repeatedly charged down on the French, who
+formed in square everywhere to beat them back,
+They did so at all points, and the Prussians only
+wrecked themselves beyond recovery by their
+efforts. In vain did the Prussian cavalry, as at
+Jena, gallop up to the French bayonets again
+and again. “In vain these gallant cavaliers,
+with headlong fury, drove their steeds up to the
+very muzzles of the French muskets. In vain
+they rode round and enveloped their squares:
+ceaseless was the rolling fire which issued from
+those flaming walls: impenetrable the hedge of
+bayonets which, the front rank kneeling, presented<span class="pagenum" id="Page_134">134</span>
+to their advances.” Erect in the centre
+of each French battalion square glittered its
+Eagle, raised on high defiantly above the smoke
+as the volleys flashed out all round.</p>
+
+<p>Marshal Davout was seen at every point
+wherever the regiments were hardest pressed.
+From square to square the marshal galloped, as
+opportunity offered in the intervals of the
+Prussian attacks, “his face begrimed with sweat
+and powder-smoke, his spectacles gone,<a id="FNanchor_11" href="#Footnote_11" class="fnanchor">11</a> his bald
+head bleeding from a wound, his uniform torn,
+a piece of his cocked hat shot away,” to exhort
+the men to stand fast and hold their ground.
+To one regiment he called out, as he reined up
+beside its square: “Their Great Frederick said
+that God gave the victory to the big battalions.
+He lied! It’s the stubborn soldiers who win
+battles; that’s you and your general to-day!”
+Davout personally brought up support at one
+point to rescue a sorely pressed division of four
+regiments, General Gudin’s,<a id="FNanchor_12" href="#Footnote_12" class="fnanchor">12</a> holding the village
+of Herrenhausen, on the right of the battlefield;
+a post of vital importance to the fate of the day.
+Taken by a brilliant dash forward early in the
+battle, the village was held to the last, in spite of the
+utmost endeavours of the Prussians to regain it.</p>
+
+<figure id="i_134" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 25em;">
+ <img src="images/i_134.jpg" width="1932" height="2471" alt="">
+ <figcaption class="caption">
+ <p>MARSHAL DAVOUT.</p>
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_135">135</span></p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">AT BAY BEHIND A BARRICADE</div>
+
+<p>The French kept the post at the cost of half
+their numbers. One regiment, the 85th, on the
+side of the village fronting the Prussians, lost
+two-thirds of its men and was forced back and
+compelled to abandon the outskirts. It kept
+the Prussians at bay, however, within the
+village, behind a barricade of overturned carts,
+farm implements, and cottage furniture heaped
+together. Close behind the firing line across
+the village street the Eagle-bearer took his stand,
+amidst a hail of bullets, mounted on a wheelbarrow
+and brandishing the Eagle and calling
+on the men to stand firm and fire low.</p>
+
+<p>Marshal Davout brought up his First Division
+of five regiments to rescue Gudin, heading them
+sword in hand as he galloped forward. In doing
+so he received his wound and had a narrow escape
+of his life. “One bullet went through the
+marshal’s hat just above the cockade.”<a id="FNanchor_13" href="#Footnote_13" class="fnanchor">13</a></p>
+
+<p>The 111th of the Line, of Davout’s Third
+Division, had three Eagle-bearers shot down in
+succession, a fresh officer coming forward to
+carry the Eagle as his predecessor fell. All the
+drummer-lads of the regiment were killed, whereupon
+Drum-Major Mauser, dropping his staff,
+picked up a drum and beat it as the regiment
+advanced in its final charge. He ran forward
+close beside the Eagle until he in turn fell shot<span class="pagenum" id="Page_136">136</span>
+dead. This was in storming the village of
+Spielberg, nearly at the close of the battle.</p>
+
+<p>“The corps of Marshal Davout performed
+prodigies,” wrote Napoleon in the Fourth Bulletin
+of the campaign, commending with warmth
+“the rare intrepidity of the brave corps.” He
+ordered 500 crosses of the Legion of Honour
+to be distributed in Davout’s corps, directing
+that when the army reached Berlin, Davout
+and the Third Corps should take precedence,
+and their Eagles lead the triumphal entry
+through the streets of the Prussian capital. At
+a special review of Davout’s corps, calling the
+marshal and his generals round him, he declared
+his unbounded admiration of the feat of arms
+they had achieved. “Sire,” replied Davout,
+deeply moved at Napoleon’s words, “the
+soldiers of the Third Corps will always be to
+you what the Tenth Legion was to Caesar.”</p>
+
+<p>At the attack on Halle, three days after Jena,
+the 32nd of the Line, near the Eagle of which
+regiment Ney had ridden at Jena, distinguished
+themselves brilliantly. The Prussian Reserve
+Army Corps was holding Halle and making a
+gallant effort in a rearguard fight to safeguard
+the passage there over the river Saale. Led by
+the commander of Ney’s First Division, General
+Dupont, in person, they stormed the bridge in
+the face of a tremendous fire of grape and case
+shot. Then, backed up by their comrades in
+Ney’s First Division, the 18th and 96th and 9th<span class="pagenum" id="Page_137">137</span>
+Light Infantry, they fought their way through
+the city and, breaking open the gates, stormed
+the heights beyond, foremost throughout in the
+attack. Four times the Eagle-bearer of the 32nd
+was shot down: each time a fresh officer sprang
+forward to lead the regiment on. The 97th of
+the Line, while fighting their way through the
+streets of Halle at another point, found the
+Prussian cannon mounted at a barricade too deadly
+to face in the open, and the regiment recoiled
+in confusion. Taking the Eagle from the Eagle-bearer,
+Colonel Barrois called forward the
+grenadier company. Leading them on himself
+on horseback, holding up the Eagle with his
+right hand, he went straight at the barricade,
+which was stormed without touching a trigger.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">ACROSS A CONQUERED LAND</div>
+
+<p>Thenceforward there was only left for the
+Eagles to choose the slain; to parade in triumph
+across a conquered land. “Veni, Vidi, Vici,”
+sums up the story of the after-events of the war
+for the Eagles of Napoleon. The army of the
+great Frederick committed suicide after Jena.
+Its resistance collapsed: the army that had gone
+forth in September to cross the Rhine and dictate
+peace at the gates of Paris had ceased to exist
+within six weeks. How completely indeed the
+<i lang="fr">moral</i> of the Prussians had been shattered, this
+story, from a report from Marshal Lannes to
+Napoleon, serves to show. “Three hussars,”
+related Lannes, “having lost their way towards
+Grätz, found themselves in the midst of an<span class="pagenum" id="Page_138">138</span>
+enemy’s squadron. They boldly drew their
+carbines and, levelling them at the enemy,
+called out that the Prussians were surrounded,
+and must surrender at discretion. The Prussians
+obeyed. The commander of the squadron, without
+apparently a thought of resistance, ordered
+his men to dismount, and they surrendered their
+arms to those three hussars, who brought them
+all in prisoners of war.”</p>
+
+<p>General Lassalle, with a handful of hussars,
+as has been said, captured the fortress of Stettin,
+with 150 guns on its walls and a garrison of 6,000
+men, by sheer effrontery. He rode up to the
+main gate and demanded the surrender within
+five minutes; and the governor capitulated on
+the spot. “If your hussars take strong fortresses
+like that,” wrote Napoleon to Murat, on
+hearing the news, “I have nothing to do but
+break up my artillery and discharge my engineers.”
+Prince Hohenlohe with 14,000 men and
+50 guns, his troops including the Royal Prussian
+Guard and six regiments of Guard cavalry,
+laid down their arms at Prentzlau. A few miles
+away, 8,000 more Prussians surrendered on the
+same day to a French brigade of dragoons. The
+unfortunates were remnants of the troops beaten
+at Jena, and had been relentlessly pursued for
+ten days.</p>
+
+<p>The 7th Hussars forwarded to Napoleon as
+their spoils from a three days’ chase, 7 Prussian
+cavalry standards; those of the Anspach and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_139">139</span>
+Bayreuth Dragoons; the Queen of Prussia’s
+regiment; and 4 standards of the Light Cavalry
+of the Guard. Marshal Lannes sent Napoleon
+40 Prussian standards taken between Jena and
+Berlin. Bernadotte and Soult presented 82 more
+trophies, the spoils of Blücher’s army, forced to
+surrender at Lübeck after a forlorn-hope fight
+in the course of which the city was stormed.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">“THE FINEST FEAT OF ARMS”</div>
+
+<p>Marshal Ney took the fortress of Magdeburg
+without having a single siege-gun, and with only
+11,000 men at hand to deal with 24,000 in the
+garrison and 700 guns on the ramparts, some of
+these being the heaviest artillery of the time.
+It was perhaps the most surprising event of the
+war. The taking of Magdeburg, wrote Junot,
+“is the finest feat of arms that has illustrated
+this campaign.” Ney had been ordered to blockade
+Magdeburg until a sufficient army was
+available for the siege of the fortress, which
+Napoleon expected would be a long and difficult
+affair. But so tedious a task as a blockade
+was not at all to Ney’s taste. To hasten matters
+he sent for half a dozen mortars, taken at Erfurt,
+and began throwing shells into the suburbs on
+the side nearest him. The bombardment caused
+a scare among the townsfolk. Panic-stricken at
+seeing their houses set on fire and destroyed by the
+bursting shells, they hastened to General Kleist,
+the governor of Magdeburg, an elderly and
+nervous old gentleman of between seventy and
+eighty years of age, and implored him to ask<span class="pagenum" id="Page_140">140</span>
+terms of the French marshal. Dismayed himself
+at the prospect of a siege, with disorder
+rampant among the military—nearly half the
+garrison was made up of fragments of fugitive
+regiments from Jena who had fled to Magdeburg
+for shelter from the pursuing French—Kleist,
+losing his nerve in the face of the alarming
+situation, agreed to negotiate for terms.
+Ney’s reply was a demand for instant surrender,
+whereupon the wretched governor, although he
+had more than enough good troops at disposal,
+without counting the Jena fugitives, to have
+made a stubborn defence, tamely hoisted the
+white flag.</p>
+
+<p>The march out of the garrison of Magdeburg
+was a repetition of the Austrian humiliation of
+Ulm on a lesser scale. The standards of the
+Black Eagle in their turn had at Magdeburg
+publicly to acknowledge defeat before the Eagles
+of Napoleon.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE GARRISON LAYS DOWN ARMS</div>
+
+<p>Ney drew up his 11,000 men in a great hollow
+square outside the Ulrich gate of the fortress.
+His troops were drawn up along three sides of
+the square; the fourth side, that nearest the city,
+being left open. In front of the regiments stood
+their Eagles, all paraded as at Ulm, the Eagle-guards
+beside them, and the regimental officers
+standing in line with their swords at the carry.
+The Prussians marched out and, to the music of
+the French bands, passed in procession along
+the three inner sides of the square, and in front<span class="pagenum" id="Page_141">141</span>
+of Marshal Ney and his staff. The miserable
+Kleist led them, and then took his stand beside
+Ney, to answer the marshal’s questions as to who
+and what the various regiments were, as each
+set of downcast Prussians trailed past. They
+tramped by, with their muskets on their shoulders
+unloaded and without bayonets, and with their
+colours furled. The hapless prisoners, after
+they had defiled past, were at once marched
+away under escort on the road to Mayence.
+Twenty generals, 800 other officers, 22,000
+infantry, and 2,000 artillerymen, with 59
+standards, underwent the humiliation of the
+defilade.<a id="FNanchor_14" href="#Footnote_14" class="fnanchor">14</a> There were several painful scenes
+at the laying down of the arms. “Their soldiers
+openly insulted their officers,” describes one of
+the French lookers-on. “Most of them looked
+terribly ashamed of themselves; the faces of not
+a few were streaming with tears.”</p>
+
+<p>At Magdeburg, as in the other surrenders
+elsewhere, it was not the personal courage of the
+officers and soldiers that was wanting—there were
+men by thousands in the various garrisons ready<span class="pagenum" id="Page_142">142</span>
+to give their lives for the honour of their country;
+it was the generals in command whose nerve
+lacked. The generals were men past their
+prime, and mostly physically incapable of enduring
+hardships. They had been appointed to their
+posts, in accordance with the system in vogue
+in Prussia, for the sake of the emoluments.</p>
+
+<p>“The overthrow of Jena,” to use the words
+of a modern writer, “had been caused by faults
+of generalship, and cast no stain upon the
+courage of the officers; the surrender of the
+Prussian fortresses, which began on the day
+when the French entered Berlin, attached the
+utmost personal disgrace to their commanders.
+Even after the destruction of the army in the field,
+Prussia’s situation would not have been hopeless
+if the commanders of the fortresses had
+acted on the ordinary rules of military duty.
+Magdeburg and the strongholds upon the Oder
+were sufficiently armed and provisioned to detain
+the entire French army, and to give time to
+the King to collect upon the Vistula a force as
+numerous as that which he had lost. But
+whatever is weakest in human nature—old age,
+fear, and credulity—seemed to have been placed
+at the head of the Prussian defences.” Küstrin
+on the Oder, “in full order for a long siege, was
+surrendered by the older officers, amidst the
+curses of the subalterns and the common soldiers:
+the artillerymen had to be dragged from their
+guns by force.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_143">143</span></p>
+
+<p>At Magdeburg, indeed, before the march out,
+the younger officers of the garrison mobbed
+General Kleist, hooting at him and cursing him
+to his face; some of them, further, being with
+difficulty stopped from acts of personal violence.</p>
+
+<p>There yet remained one day more for the
+Eagles. The triumphal parade of the victorious
+Eagles through Berlin was the crowning humiliation
+that Napoleon imposed on vanquished
+Prussia.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">MARSHAL DAVOUT IN BERLIN</div>
+
+<p>Davout’s corps, as Napoleon had promised,
+marched through the Prussian capital first of
+all. The marshal was waited on as he entered
+by the Burgomeister and civic authorities,
+humbly bowing before him, and offering in
+token of submission the keys of Berlin. The
+offer, however, was declined. “You must present
+them later,” was the reply; “they belong to
+a greater than I!” After marching through
+Berlin, Davout camped a mile beyond the city,
+posting his artillery “in position as for war,
+pointed towards the place as in readiness to
+bombard it.” The soldiers were then allowed
+to go about Berlin in parties. They behaved
+very quietly, and made eager sightseers, we are
+told. The shops, which had been closed during
+the march through, reopened later, and the
+people went about the streets as usual, “mortified
+and subdued in demeanour, but apparently
+very curious to see what they could of the French
+officers.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_144">144</span></p>
+
+<p>Augereau’s corps, and then those of Soult,
+Bernadotte, and Ney made their triumphal
+entry and march through Berlin in turn, on
+different days later on, bands playing and
+Eagles displayed at the head of the regiments—the
+people turning out on each occasion in crowds
+to line the streets and gaze at the show, “expressing
+great surprise at the small size of our men
+and the youth of most of the officers.” Marshal
+Ney’s corps brought with them their fifty-nine
+trophies from Magdeburg, and, after parading
+them through the streets of Berlin, ceremoniously
+presented them to Napoleon in public, in front
+of the statue of Frederick the Great.</p>
+
+<p>Napoleon himself made his triumphal entry
+into Berlin on October 28, three days after
+Davout’s march through. He rode from Charlottenburg
+through the Brandenburg Gate and
+along Unter-den-Linden to the Royal Palace,
+at the head of the Old Guard and six thousand
+cuirassiers in gleaming mail. Squadrons of
+Gendarmerie d’Elite and Chasseurs of the Guard
+and the Horse Grenadiers, in their huge bear-skins,
+led the long procession, all in <i lang="fr">grande tenue</i>,
+with their bands playing and the Eagles glittering
+in the brilliant sunshine of a perfect autumn
+day.</p>
+
+<p>Napoleon came next, “riding by himself, twenty
+paces in front of the staff, with impassive face
+and a stern expression,” passing amid dense
+silent crowds, “the men all wearing black, as in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_145">145</span>
+mourning; the women mostly with handkerchiefs
+to their eyes.” The people lined both
+sides of the roadway, and filled the windows of
+all the houses overlooking the route. All Berlin,
+young and old, was in the streets that day,
+staring at the spectacle in mute silence, looking
+on dumbly, pale-faced and miserable of aspect.
+Not a mutter of abuse was heard, not the least
+sign was apparent of the deadly hatred to their
+conqueror that one and all felt. With rage and
+despair in their hearts, with compressed lips and
+clenched fists at their sides, the men watched
+the splendid array sweep proudly past them in
+all the insolent pomp of victorious war.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">NAPOLEON RIDES THROUGH</div>
+
+<p>For once, on that historic occasion, Napoleon
+discarded his customary wear of the green undress
+uniform of his pet corps, the Chasseurs of
+the Guard. He entered Berlin as the head of a
+conquering army, wearing the full-dress uniform
+of a French general, crimson plumed cocked hat
+with blue and white aigrette, blue coat heavily
+embroidered with gold, and with glittering bullion
+epaulettes, and the blue and gold sash of a
+general round his waist. Four marshals, Berthier,
+Lannes, Davout, and Augereau, riding
+abreast, followed Napoleon, immediately in front
+of the Imperial Staff, a cavalcade of a hundred
+and more brilliantly decorated officers, all in
+their most gorgeous parade uniforms, in celebration
+of the day. The keys of the city were
+presented to the conqueror, and accepted by him,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_146">146</span>
+as Napoleon passed through the Brandenburg
+Gate. Ten thousand infantry of the Old Guard,
+in a vast solid column of glistening bayonets,
+marched, twenty abreast, in rear of the staff.
+Their famous band playing triumphantly, with
+the Eagle of the Grenadiers of the Old Guard
+above its flag of crimson silk and gold, heading
+the veterans. They also were all in the full-dress
+uniform they wore on gala-day parades before
+the Tuileries. By Napoleon’s special order, the
+Old Guard on all campaigns carried in their
+knapsacks their full-dress uniform, specially for
+donning on occasions such as that at Berlin.</p>
+
+<p>But the cup of humiliation for the miserable
+citizens of the Prussian capital was not yet full.
+They had yet another military spectacle with a
+significance of its own to witness; one the deep
+humiliation of which they felt more bitterly
+even than Napoleon’s triumphant ride in person
+through their streets. The citizens of Berlin
+had to look on their own officers of the Royal
+Prussian Guard being led in procession through
+their midst under the armed escort of Napoleon’s
+grenadiers. That was Napoleon’s way of settling
+accounts for that August night of wanton insult
+to France, for the sharpening of the sword-blades
+on the steps of the French Embassy.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE PRISONERS FARMED OUT</div>
+
+<p>Nor, too, did Napoleon spare the Prussian
+prisoners of the rank and file. Writing from
+Berlin to the Minister of the Interior in Paris,
+he gave directions that the Prussian captives<span class="pagenum" id="Page_147">147</span>
+should be made use of as hewers of wood and
+drawers of water for their conquerors. They
+were to be farmed out to municipalities and
+district councils in the Departments. “Their
+services should be turned to account at a trifling
+expense in the way of wages for the benefit of
+our manufacturers and cultivators and replace
+our conscripts called to serve in the ranks of the
+Grand Army.”</p>
+
+<p>Napoleon stayed in Berlin for four weeks,
+while the marshals were leading the Eagles
+through Eastern Prussia towards the Polish
+frontier. Russia had taken up the cause of her
+defeated neighbour, and the armies of the Czar
+were on the move to rescue what was left of the
+Prussian army. Less than 15,000 men were
+all that remained in the field to show fight,
+of 200,000 soldiers who, not two months before,
+had been on the march against France in full
+anticipation of victory.</p>
+
+<p>In the Royal Palace of Berlin Napoleon received
+with elaborate ceremony the deputation
+of the French Senate sent from Paris specially
+to congratulate the victor of Jena in the enemy’s
+capital. He took advantage of the unique occasion
+for the formal presentation and handing
+over to their charge, for conveyance to Paris, of
+the trophies of the war—340 Prussian battle-flags
+and standards.<a id="FNanchor_15" href="#Footnote_15" class="fnanchor">15</a> Forty of the trophies<span class="pagenum" id="Page_148">148</span>
+presented to the Senate on that day at Berlin
+are now among the array of trophies grouped
+round Napoleon’s tomb in the Invalides.</p>
+
+<p>Napoleon handed over to the charge of the
+deputation at the same time, for transfer to the
+Invalides, his own personal spoil—the sword of
+Frederick the Great. It was removed—all the
+world knows the story of the unpardonable
+outrage—by Napoleon’s own hand from its
+resting-place on the royal tomb at Potsdam.
+“I would rather have this,” he said to the
+officers beside him in the royal vault as he took
+possession of the sword, “than twenty millions.
+I shall send it to my old soldiers who fought
+against Frederick in the campaign in Hanover.
+I will present it to the Governor of the Invalides,
+who will guard it as a testimonial of the victories
+of the Grand Army and the vengeance that
+it has wreaked for the disaster of Rosbach. My
+veterans will be pleased to see the sword of the
+man who defeated them at Rosbach!”</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">FREDERICK THE GREAT’S SWORD</div>
+
+<p>The trophies started for France forthwith
+under military escort, and Paris went mad with
+exultation at the sight of them. On the day of
+the State Procession which escorted the trophies<span class="pagenum" id="Page_149">149</span>
+from the Tuileries to the Invalides it proved
+almost impossible to keep back the enormous
+crowds that thronged the streets along the route,
+in spite of cordons of gendarmerie and regiments
+of dragoons. Deputations of veterans and
+National Guards, with the Eagles of the Departmental
+Legions, led the way. Then came Imperial
+carriages with exalted official personages.
+The trophies had their place next, displayed in
+clusters of flags all round a gigantic triumphal
+car. Marshal Moncey, the acting Governor of
+Paris, rode a few paces behind the car of Prussian
+standards, holding up the trophy of trophies
+before the eyes of the wildly cheering onlookers—Frederick
+the Great’s sword. A gaily attired
+train of generals and staff officers attended the
+marshal. The rear of the procession was brought
+up by the battalions of the Guard of Paris, their
+Eagles being borne amid rows of gleaming bayonets.
+Salvos of artillery from the Triumphal
+Battery greeted the arrival of the trophies at the
+Invalides, where the veterans awaited them,
+drawn up on parade before the Gate of Honour.
+As Napoleon had specially directed, the Hanoverian
+War veterans of the Invalides met and
+escorted Marshal Moncey to the chapel at the
+head of other specially nominated veterans, who
+bore, marching in procession, the Prussian
+trophy-standards. The trophies were deposited
+with an elaborate display of ceremonial in front
+of the High Altar, after which Fontanes, the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_150">150</span>
+Public Orator of the Empire, delivered an
+address full of glowingly eloquent passages on
+the glorious achievements of the Grand Army
+and the “resplendent magnificence of the leader
+who had led the Eagles to surpassing triumphs!”</p>
+
+<h3 id="toclink_150"><span class="smcap">The Twelve Lost Eagles of Eylau</span></h3>
+
+<p>Napoleon passed from the victorious fields of
+Prussia to the rough experiences of the Eylau
+and Friedland campaigns, which followed as
+the sequel to Jena on the plains of the Polish
+frontier. The Eagles there had to undergo under
+fire vicissitudes of fortune that were a foretaste
+of the fate in store for some of them later on, at
+the hands of the same enemy, in the Moscow
+campaign. No fewer than fourteen of the Eagles
+borne in triumph through Berlin after Jena were
+on view within a twelvemonth as spoils of war
+in the Kazan Cathedral at St. Petersburg.</p>
+
+<p>The Eagle of Marshal Ney’s favourite regiment
+in the battle-days of the Ulm campaign,
+the 9th Light Infantry, was the first to meet
+adventures in the Polish War. It was on the
+occasion of the surprise of Bernadotte’s army
+corps, at Möhringen near the Vistula, in the last
+week of January 1807. The Grand Army was
+lying in winter quarters to the north of Warsaw,
+awaiting the reopening of the campaign in the
+early spring, when the Russian army, breaking
+up unexpectedly from its cantonments beyond<span class="pagenum" id="Page_151">151</span>
+the Vistula in the depth of winter, made a dash
+at Bernadotte’s outlying troops, posted by themselves
+at some distance from the main army and
+scattered in detachments over a wide tract of
+country for reasons of food-supply. Bernadotte
+only got news of the enemy’s approach
+just in time; practically at the eleventh hour.
+He was rapidly concentrating his corps at Möhringen,
+but barely half his troops had been able
+to reach the point of danger when the Russians
+struck their blow. He was able with the troops
+nearest at hand to avert destruction, but the
+escape was a narrow one and his losses were very
+heavy, all his baggage falling into the hands of
+the enemy. Fortunately for the French the
+Russian advanced guard attacked prematurely
+and was beaten back, after which Bernadotte
+made good his retreat to a safer neighbourhood.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">FOUR TIMES TAKEN AND RETAKEN</div>
+
+<p>The 9th Light Infantry were in the forefront
+of the fighting, which was at the closest quarters,
+the soldiers on both sides meeting man to man.
+Four Eagle-bearers of the 9th fell, one after
+the other. Four times the Eagle was taken by
+the Russians and recaptured at the point of the
+bayonet. A fifth time the Eagle-bearer went
+down, and on his fall this time the Eagle disappeared,
+while the 9th were driven back,
+broken and in disorder. They were quickly
+rallied again, however, and led once more to the
+charge, “going forward to the combat with the
+fury of despair.” This time their impetuous<span class="pagenum" id="Page_152">152</span>
+onset forced the Russians to give ground.
+Advancing with shouts of victory, they stormed
+the village of Psarrefelden, immediately in front
+of them, and there seized part of a Russian
+ammunition train. While searching for fresh
+cartridges in one of the enemy’s ammunition
+wagons to replenish their empty cartouche-boxes
+an officer, to his surprise, came upon the lost
+Eagle. It had been broken from its staff in
+the last fight round it, and its Russian captor,
+probably having enough to do to look after himself
+without carrying it about, had apparently
+thrust it hastily into the ammunition wagon on
+top of the cartridges. At any rate there the
+Eagle of the 9th Light Infantry was found, and
+so it was regained. The broken staff and flag
+were missing and were never seen again, but the
+all-important Eagle had been recovered. It was
+hurriedly mounted on a hop-pole, found leaning
+against a peasant’s hut near by, which was improvised
+for a staff, and on that the Eagle was
+carried to the close of the fighting that day,
+after which the 9th retreated with the rest of
+Bernadotte’s corps.</p>
+
+<p>Napoleon specially decorated the lieutenant
+who recovered the Eagle, and who also had
+led more than one of the charges to rescue it in
+the earlier fighting. He gave him the cross of
+the Legion of Honour with a money grant. He
+further recorded the recovery of the Eagle—though
+without mentioning how it was got back—in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_153">153</span>
+the 55th Bulletin of the Grand Army, dated
+Warsaw, January 29, 1807:</p>
+
+<p>“The Eagle of the 9th Light Infantry was
+taken by the enemy, but, realising the deep
+disgrace with which their brave regiment would
+be covered for ever, and from which neither
+victory nor the glory acquired in a hundred
+combats could have removed the stigma, the
+soldiers, animated with an inconceivable ardour,
+precipitated themselves on the enemy and routed
+them and recovered their Eagle.”</p>
+
+<p>So Napoleon wrote history.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">ON THE FIRST DAY AT EYLAU</div>
+
+<p>Two Eagles met their fate in the first day’s
+fighting at Eylau—in the preliminary combat
+on February 7, which formed the opening phase
+of the terrific encounter next day. At Eylau—a
+small township some twenty-two miles to the
+south of Königsburg—Napoleon in person commanded
+with 80,000 men in the field, and met
+with his first serious check in a European war.
+In following up the Russian rearguard on the
+afternoon of the 7th, as it fell slowly back to
+rejoin its main body, drawn up in position on the
+farther side of Eylau, on ground chosen beforehand
+by the Russian leader for making a stand,
+two of Napoleon’s battalions, while pressing
+hotly forward after the enemy over the open
+plain, some two miles from Eylau, were overpowered
+and cut to pieces. They had charged
+and were driving in the nearest Russians to them,
+when a Russian cavalry regiment, the St. Petersburg<span class="pagenum" id="Page_154">154</span>
+Dragoons, unexpectedly came on the scene.
+Sweeping round amidst the tumult of the fighting,
+the dragoons rode into them on the flank. The
+two battalions were slaughtered almost to a
+man within five minutes, before help could get
+to them, and their Eagles were snatched up and
+borne away. It was an act of expiation for the
+St. Petersburg Dragoons. On the previous day
+Murat’s pursuing hussars had charged and
+broken them, putting them to flight, and in a
+wild panic they had ridden over one of their own
+regiments, trampling their comrades down, with
+loss of life. To retrieve their character the St.
+Petersburg Dragoons now went savagely at the
+two French battalions, riding them down with
+reckless daring and relentless fury, giving no
+quarter. Their capture of two of Napoleon’s
+Eagles in one charge, the taking of two Eagles
+by a single regiment, stands on its own account
+as a unique achievement.</p>
+
+<figure id="i_154" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 45em;">
+ <img src="images/i_154.jpg" width="3552" height="2171" alt="">
+ <figcaption class="caption">
+ <p>Sketch Plan of the Battlefield of EYLAU</p>
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<p>Eylau—the historic battle of February 8, 1807—was
+fought in the depth of winter; in the
+midst of a flat expanse of a desolate snow-plain
+and ice-bound marshes; under dreary lowering
+skies of leaden grey; amid howling gusts of
+piercing wind, with driving snow-storms sweeping
+intermittently across the field of battle. A
+hundred and fifty thousand men on both sides
+faced each other at the break of day, after passing
+the night with their outposts within shot of one
+another, the soldiers all lying in an open bivouac<span class="pagenum" id="Page_155">155</span>
+on the snow, round their watch-fires, wrapped
+up in their cloaks, the only shelter from the bitter
+cold. They fronted each other in the grey dawn
+“within half-cannon shot, their immense masses
+distributed in dense columns over a space in
+breadth less than four miles. Between them
+lay the field of battle, a wide stretch of unenclosed
+ground, rising on the Russian side to a
+range of small hills. All over the plain, ponds
+and marshes intersected the ground, but far and
+wide all was now covered over with ice and
+deep snow.”</p>
+
+<p>Napoleon began the battle with a fierce cannonade,
+opening a terrific fire all along the line
+with no fewer than 350 guns. The Russians
+replied at once, firing back even more furiously
+and with yet more guns. For almost an hour
+nearly 800 cannon belched forth shot and
+shell on either side; an artillery duel perhaps
+unparalleled in war. Then, in the midst of
+the cannonade, Napoleon launched his first
+attack. Fifteen thousand men of Augereau’s
+corps moved out from the centre of the French
+line to storm the Russian position. They went
+forward, massed in two immense columns, with,
+in support, a third column of one of Soult’s
+divisions.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">GOING FORWARD TO THEIR DOOM</div>
+
+<p>They went forward to their doom: to meet
+disaster, swift, terrible, overwhelming, and to
+leave two of their Eagles in the hands of the
+enemy as mementos of their fate. Yet they were<span class="pagenum" id="Page_156">156</span>
+not given up; neither of those Eagles was
+surrendered. They remained on the field amid
+the dead; left behind because there was not a
+man living of their regiments to defend them.
+They lay where they fell, surrounded by the
+soldiers who had died in their defence; lying
+on the snow for the Cossacks to pick up and
+carry away. They were the Eagles of the 14th
+and the 24th of the Line.</p>
+
+<p>The Russians turned their guns on Augereau’s
+corps directly it commenced its advance; it
+was sheer massacre for the French, as the fierce
+tornado of cannon-balls crashed into the thick
+of the densely massed columns. Whole companies
+were swept away, mowed down, on every
+side. “Within a quarter of an hour, half of the
+corps were struck down.” The rest, though,
+with stolid endurance, held firmly on their way.
+The soldiers went doggedly on; only halting
+for a moment now and again to close up their
+shattered ranks. At that moment, as they were
+nearing the Russian position, a furious snow-storm
+burst over the battlefield, the snow blowing
+right in the faces of the French. “It was impossible,”
+one of the survivors told, “to see
+anything at all in front; we could at times barely
+see a foot before us.” All, in spite of that, however,
+laboured bravely to get forward; without
+wavering, and regardless of the merciless fire of
+the Russian guns, which never ceased for one
+moment.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_157">157</span></p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">OVERWHELMED IN A SNOWSTORM</div>
+
+<p>Then, as the snow-blinded soldiers struggled
+on, when the storm of whirling snow was at its
+worst, all in an instant the catastrophe happened.
+Without warning, coming from nowhere,
+as it seemed, an enormous mass of Russian
+horse, dragoons and Cossacks, charged suddenly,
+amid an infernal din of furious shouting, into
+them. “So thick was the snow-storm, and so
+unexpected the onset, that the assailants were
+only a few feet off, and the long lances of the
+Cossacks almost touching the French infantry
+when they were first discerned.” The Russians
+swept down on all sides of the two divisions;
+charging them in front and flanks and rear at
+once, the dragoons sabring them right and left,
+the Cossacks stabbing at them with their long
+eighteen-foot lances.</p>
+
+<p>“The combat was not of more than a few
+minutes’ duration; the corps, charged at once
+by foot and horse with the utmost vigour,
+broke and fled in the wildest disorder back
+into Eylau, closely pursued by the Russian
+cavalry and Cossacks, who made such havoc,
+that the whole, above 15,000 strong, were, with
+the exception of 1,500 men, taken or destroyed;
+and Augereau himself, with his two generals of
+divisions, Desjardins and Heudelet, was desperately
+wounded.”</p>
+
+<p>Cut off in one part of the field and hemmed in,
+the 24th of the Line, “one of the finest regiments
+in the Grand Army, and itself almost equal to a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_158">158</span>
+brigade,” as a French officer speaks of it, was
+destroyed to a man. It refused to turn its back
+to the enemy, and stood its ground to face its
+fate. The 24th were slaughtered as they stood
+in their ranks. Colonel Sémelé and a devoted
+band of soldiers fought round the Eagle to the
+last, and fell dead beside it. A Cossack picked
+the Eagle up and rode off with it.</p>
+
+<p>The 14th had led the attack. It had lost
+heavily from the Russian cannonade, but was
+still pressing on when the cavalry came charging
+down. The regiments next following it, however,
+had suffered still more heavily from the artillery
+fire. They were swept away <i lang="fr">en masse</i> by the
+Cossack rush. Thus the 14th were cut off and
+left by themselves, barely half a battalion of
+men in numbers, in the midst of the raging
+torrent of Cossacks and dragoons. The survivors
+hastily threw themselves into a square
+on and round a low elevation or hillock of snow.
+There, with their Eagle in their midst, they
+stood at bay, refusing to retire without direct
+orders from their marshal.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">ISOLATED AND SURROUNDED</div>
+
+<p>Marbot, in his memoirs, describes the fate of
+the 14th, to which he was sent with a message from
+Napoleon. He was one of Augereau’s aides de
+camp. It was just after the wounded marshal
+had been carried back to the churchyard of the
+village of Eylau, the centre of the French position,
+whence Napoleon, on horseback, among his
+personal suite, had witnessed the disaster. All<span class="pagenum" id="Page_159">159</span>
+could see the 14th standing there, isolated and
+surrounded; “we could see that the intrepid
+regiment, surrounded by the enemy, was brandishing
+the Eagle in the air, to show that it still
+held its ground and wanted help.” Napoleon,
+“touched by the grand devotion of these brave
+men, resolved to try to save them. He gave
+orders that an officer should be sent to tell
+them to try to make their way back towards
+the army. Cavalry would charge out to help
+them. It looked,” says Marbot, “almost impossible
+to get through the thronging Cossacks;
+but Napoleon’s command had to be obeyed.”</p>
+
+<p>“A brave captain of engineers named Froissart,
+who, though not an aide de camp, was on
+Augereau’s staff, happened to be nearest him,
+and was told to carry the order to the 14th.
+Froissart galloped off: we lost sight of him in
+the midst of the Cossacks, and never saw him
+again or heard what became of him. The marshal,
+seeing that the 14th did not move, then sent
+an officer named David. He had the same fate
+as Froissart; we never heard of him again.
+Probably both were killed and stripped, and could
+not be recognised among the many corpses which
+covered the ground. For the third time the
+marshal called, ‘The officer for duty!’ It was
+my turn.”</p>
+
+<p>Marbot had seen his two predecessors go off
+with their swords drawn, as though they intended
+to defend themselves against attacks on the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_160">160</span>
+way. He had remarked that, and now proposed
+another method for himself.</p>
+
+<p>“To attempt defence was madness; it meant
+stopping to fight amidst a multitude of enemies.
+I went otherwise to work. Leaving my sword
+in its scabbard, I considered myself rather as a
+rider who is trying to win a steeple-chase and
+goes as quickly as possible by the shortest line
+towards the appointed goal without troubling
+about what is to right or left of his path. My
+goal was the hillock on which stood the 14th,
+and I resolved to get there without taking
+heed of the Cossacks. I tried to put them out
+of my mind entirely. The plan answered to perfection.”</p>
+
+<p>“Lisette [Marbot’s charger], flying rather
+than galloping, moving more lightly than a
+swallow, darted over the intervening space,
+leaping the heaps of dead men and horses, the
+ditches, the broken gun-carriages, the half-extinguished
+bivouac fires. Thousands of Cossacks
+swarmed over the plain. The first who caught
+sight of me behaved like sportsmen who, while
+beating, start a hare and tell of its whereabouts
+to each other with shouts of ‘Your side!’
+None of the Cossacks tried to stop me. Perhaps
+it was because of the amazing speed of my
+mare; perhaps—probably—because there were
+so many of them swarming round that each
+thought I could not escape from his comrades
+farther on. At any rate I got through them all,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_161">161</span>
+and without scratch either to myself or to my
+mare, and managed to reach where the 14th
+stood.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">“AT LAST I WAS IN THE SQUARE!”</div>
+
+<p>“I found them in square on top of their
+hillock, but the slope all round was very slight,
+and the Russian cavalry had been able to attack
+them with several charges. All, though, had
+been beaten off, and the regiment stood surrounded
+by a circle of dead horses and dragoons.
+The corpses indeed formed a kind of rampart
+round our men, and made by now their position
+almost inaccessible to mounted men. So I
+found, for in spite of the help of our men, I had
+much difficulty in getting across this horrible
+entrenchment. At last, however, I was in the
+square.”</p>
+
+<p>The major of the 14th was the senior officer
+left alive, and to him Marbot gave Napoleon’s
+order. But it was absolutely impossible to
+carry it out; there were too few men left to
+make the attempt possible. They would be
+overpowered, said the major to Marbot, before
+they had gone half a dozen steps. They were
+past hope now, unless the cavalry could cut
+their way to them at once. Marbot must save
+himself and get back at once. He must take
+their Eagle back with him and deliver it into
+Napoleon’s own hands. “I see no means left
+of saving the regiment,” were the major’s words.
+“Return to the Emperor, and bid him farewell
+from the 14th of the Line. We have faithfully<span class="pagenum" id="Page_162">162</span>
+obeyed his orders in defence of the Eagle. Bear
+him back his Eagle which he entrusted to us,
+which now we have no hope of defending longer.
+It would add too much to the bitterness of death
+for us to see it fall into the hands of the enemy.”
+The major handed the Eagle to Marbot and
+then saluted it, amid shouts of “Vive l’Empereur!”
+from the men round.</p>
+
+<p>Marbot took the Eagle, and, as the only means
+of preserving it during his ride back, tried to
+break it off from its stout pole so as to conceal
+it under his cloak. He was in the act of leaning
+forward to get a purchase in order to break
+the oaken staff, when he was suddenly rendered
+powerless by the wind of a grape-shot. It was
+a marvellous escape from death. The shot
+actually went through his hat, within a quarter
+of an inch of his head. It deprived him, as he
+describes, of all power and sensation, although
+he still remained fixed in his saddle, his eyes
+witnessing the last scene, the fate of the 14th.
+The square was finally rushed by a swarm of
+Russian grenadiers, as Marbot says, who came
+charging up to the spot—“big men with mitre-shaped
+caps bound in brass.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">FIGHTING TO THE LAST MAN</div>
+
+<p>“These men hurled themselves furiously on
+the feeble remains of the 14th. Our poor
+fellows had little strength left for resistance,
+weakened as they were by hardships and
+privations. They had for days been only existing
+on potatoes and melted snow, and on that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_163">163</span>
+morning had not had time to prepare even that
+wretched meal. Yet they made bravely what
+fight they could with their bayonets, and when,
+as too soon happened, the square was broken,
+they tried to hold together in groups, fighting
+back to back and keeping up the unequal fight
+to the last man.”</p>
+
+<p>Those nearest Marbot, so as not to be bayoneted
+from behind, stood all round him with their
+backs to the mare, hemmed in by a ring of Russians,
+some shooting down the hapless Frenchmen,
+others killing them with the bayonet.</p>
+
+<p>Marbot, recovering his senses, got at the last
+moment an unexpected chance of escape. His
+mare, Lisette, he says, “of a notoriously savage
+temper,” was pricked by a bayonet apparently,
+for she suddenly sprang forward, lashing out and
+kicking and biting. She crashed through the
+nearest Russians and galloped off with Marbot
+on her back towards Eylau. He was mistaken
+by the Cossacks, he thought, for a Russian officer,
+and rode on until suddenly Lisette collapsed
+beneath him, and Marbot rolled off into the
+snow, where he lay insensible for some hours.
+He lay there until a marauder on the field after
+the battle tried to strip him of his gold-laced
+uniform. That roused him, and he cried for help,
+which came; but the Eagle of the 14th had
+disappeared.</p>
+
+<p>Two Eagles of St. Hilaire’s division of Soult’s
+corps were taken at about the same time that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_164">164</span>
+the 14th met its fate. One was that of the
+10th Light Infantry, ridden down while hastening
+forward to support Augereau. The 10th
+missed its way in the snow-storm and, blundering
+close under the Russian guns, was “decimated
+by grape.” Immediately after that,
+while reeling under the shock, and trying to
+re-form its ranks, the Russian dragoons dashed
+into it. They burst into its midst at full
+gallop, “unseen until they were actually
+among us.” No help was near, and in less than
+three minutes the luckless 10th Light Infantry
+had ceased to exist. The second of Soult’s
+Eagles that was lost at Eylau was that of a
+battalion of the 28th of the Line, which also
+perished, victims to the sabres of the Russian
+horsemen. It was a little later in the day, just
+after the 28th had made a successful bayonet
+charge on the Russian infantry. They were in
+the midst of their combat when the dragoons
+dashed into them, rode through them, and
+scattered them, bearing off the Eagle, snatched
+from the hands of the Eagle-bearer, who was cut
+down in the <i lang="fr">mêlée</i>.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">“THE FIRST GRENADIER OF FRANCE”</div>
+
+<p>The Heart of the “First Grenadier of France”
+nearly went to St. Petersburg at the same time,
+The 46th and 28th together formed General
+Levasseur’s division in Soult’s corps, and both
+were overwhelmed at the same time by the
+Russian dragoons. The more fortunate 46th
+saved both their Eagle and the silver casket<span class="pagenum" id="Page_165">165</span>
+in which the heart of La Tour d’Auvergne was
+kept enshrined. The casket was worn, strapped
+on a velvet shield, on the chest of the senior
+grenadier sergeant of the First Battalion, whose
+station was next the Eagle-bearer. It was with
+the 46th, then known as the 46th Demi-Brigade,
+that the heroic “Premier Grenadier de France”
+was serving as a captain when he met his death
+in the year of Hohenlinden, while in the act of
+capturing an Austrian standard. The 46th of
+the Line of the modern French Army keeps up
+to-day the traditional practice, first ordered by
+Moreau, the victor of Hohenlinden, of calling
+his name first of all at regimental parades.
+It was revived some thirty years ago, after being
+in desuetude since 1809. “Immediately the
+Colonel has saluted the flag,” describes one of
+the officers of the regiment, “the Captain commanding
+the colour-company steps forward and,
+facing the men, calls in a loud voice ‘La Tour
+d’Auvergne,’ on which the senior sergeant of
+the company steps out two paces and replies,
+in a loud voice also, ‘Mort au Champ d’Honneur!’—‘Dead
+on the Field of Honour!’”</p>
+
+<p>The heart of La Tour d’Auvergne in its silver
+casket was ceremoniously deposited by the
+regiment at the Invalides in 1904, eight years
+ago.</p>
+
+<p>The 25th of the Line saved its Eagle, but lost
+on the field every single one of its officers. A
+plainly built obelisk with the brief inscription,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_166">166</span>
+“To the Memory of the Officers of the 25th,”
+was erected by Napoleon to commemorate their
+fate at Eylau.</p>
+
+<p>Two Eagles of Davout’s corps were lost at
+Eylau. One was that of the 18th—the sole
+loss of an Eagle in the battle, as it so happens,
+that it suited Napoleon’s purpose to admit
+publicly. This is what he said of it in his
+Eylau Bulletin—the 58th Bulletin of the Grand
+Army:</p>
+
+<p>“The Eagle of one of the battalions of the
+18th Regiment is missing. It has probably
+fallen into the hands of the enemy, but no reproach
+can attach to this regiment in the predicament
+in which it was placed. It is a mere
+accident of war. The Emperor will give the
+18th another Eagle when it has taken a standard
+from the enemy.”</p>
+
+<p>Comments on this, by the way, a British
+officer, Colonel Sir Robert Wilson, who was
+attached to the Russian army as British military
+commissioner:</p>
+
+<p>“Admirable! the accidental loss of <em>one</em> Eagle
+and only one! Colonel Beckendorff, then, did
+not carry <em>twelve</em> Eagles (and, moreover, several
+colours from which the Eagles had been unscrewed)
+to Petersburg, where they now are for
+the inspection of the world!”</p>
+
+<p>Napoleon made no other open reference to
+the loss of Eagles at Eylau; but, as he showed
+a little later, he felt what had happened. On the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_167">167</span>
+other hand, outside France, many people disbelieved
+the Russian official despatches. “The
+number of Eagles said to be taken,” wrote the
+editor of a London newspaper, “is astounding,
+indeed incredible.”</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">TWO MORE EAGLES LOST</div>
+
+<p>The 18th lost their Eagle in the fierce fighting
+on the extreme right of the battlefield, where,
+after storming the village of Serpallen, Morand’s
+division captured a Russian battery, bayoneting
+the gunners. As they took the guns a Russian
+cavalry brigade came hastening to the spot to
+the rescue. Taking the 18th on the flank, the
+Russians rode them down, breaking the regiment
+up and scattering it. The Eagle disappeared
+in the midst of the fight. The Eagle
+of the 51st of the Line was the other that was
+lost in Davout’s corps. That was taken by the
+Prussian division which fought at Eylau; the
+last remnant of the Jena army still combating
+in the field. The Prussians, some 12,000 in
+number, had made good their escape to the
+Polish frontier and reached the battlefield of
+Eylau at the close of the fight, in time to
+strike in and take vengeance for their countrymen.
+They were, however, deprived in the end
+of their trophy. The captured Eagle of the
+51st was claimed from them by the Russian
+general after the battle, and sent with the eleven
+others to St. Petersburg, where it now is.</p>
+
+<p>Two others of Davout’s Eagles which came
+through at Eylau had narrow escapes. They<span class="pagenum" id="Page_168">168</span>
+were those of the 17th and 30th of the Line.
+The 17th was one of the regiments ridden down
+by Towazysky’s dragoons, the troopers who
+carried off the Eagle of the 18th. In their
+charge the dragoons broke up the 17th as well,
+and the Eagle was left with only a few men
+near by to defend it. They were in the midst
+of the dragoons as the Russians galloped through,
+slashing with their sabres at all within reach.
+As the only means of saving the Eagle, Locqueneux,
+a <i lang="fr">fourrier</i>, or quartermaster-sergeant,
+“thrust the Eagle under the snow and stood
+on it shouting for help. Colonel Mallet heard
+the cry and ran to the rescue. With a few men
+who rallied to the spot he succeeded in getting
+the Eagle away from among the <i lang="fr">débris</i> of the
+17th.” At roll-call next morning only one
+man in five answered to his name. Napoleon,
+on his ride over the field, happening to pass by
+while the muster was being held, the gallant
+<i lang="fr">fourrier</i> was brought before him and presented
+with a lieutenant’s commission and an annuity
+of 2,000 francs. The Eagle of the 30th of the
+Line, another of Morand’s regiments, was saved
+from capture in like manner by the personal
+devotion of another <i lang="fr">fourrier</i>, Morin by name.
+All round him men were falling, and he himself
+had been severely wounded, but the brave
+fellow had just strength enough to bury the
+Eagle under the snow. He fainted from loss
+of blood as he did it. Morin was found next<span class="pagenum" id="Page_169">169</span>
+morning just alive, outstretched over where
+the precious Eagle lay concealed. He was able
+to make signs and indicate that it was lying
+underneath the snow, and then he died.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">FOUR CUIRASSIER EAGLES TAKEN</div>
+
+<p>Four cavalry Eagles, those of cuirassier regiments,
+made up the tale of twelve lost by
+Napoleon in the two days at Eylau. Platoff’s
+Cossacks of the Don captured the four. They
+swooped down on Murat’s cavalry, while out of
+hand and partially dispersed after breaking
+through the Russian centre, at the close of
+Murat’s desperate charge at the head of seventy
+squadrons to save the survivors of the massacre
+of Augereau’s ill-fated battalions. Of one cuirassier
+regiment only 18 men managed to regain
+their own lines, leaving 530 of their comrades
+on the field to be stripped of their shining
+armour by the Cossacks.</p>
+
+<p>The Eagle of the Old Guard led a charge at
+Eylau at the head of the Grenadiers. The Guard
+came into action to beat back a daring Russian
+counter-attack on the centre of Napoleon’s
+position, which immediately followed the annihilation
+of Augereau’s corps. Napoleon himself
+gave the order for the Guard to go forward.
+“The Emperor,” describes Caulaincourt, who
+was on Napoleon’s staff, and near him throughout,
+“standing erect in the stirrups, his glass
+at his eye, was the first to realise that the black
+shadow steadily drawing near through the veil
+of the snow-storm must be the columns of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_170">170</span>
+Russian reserve.<a id="FNanchor_16" href="#Footnote_16" class="fnanchor">16</a> He immediately sent against
+them two battalions of the Grenadiers of the
+Guard commanded by General Dorsenne.” It
+was just after Murat had been ordered to
+make his charge.</p>
+
+<p>Dorsenne—“Le Beau Dorsenne,” he was universally
+called; he had the reputation of being
+the handsomest man in the whole of the Grand
+Army—started off on the instant, rapidly
+deploying his men into lines as he moved forward,
+and with the Eagle of the Grenadiers of
+the Guard in advance of the centre of the front
+line. The Old Guard moved out in stately
+order, marching with clockwork precision, muskets
+at the support—held erect at the side and
+steadied and supported with one arm held
+stiffly across. One of the officers who rode
+beside Dorsenne suggested to the general as
+they were nearing the Russians to open fire.
+“Non!” was the haughty answer. “Grenadiers
+l’arme à bras! La Vieille Garde ne se
+bât qu’à la baïonette!” (“No! Arms at the
+support! The Old Guard only fights at the
+point of the bayonet!”)</p>
+
+<p>They reached the Russians, who, on their side,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_171">171</span>
+seemed for the moment as if spellbound at the
+sight of them. The nearest Russians stopped
+short. They stood stock-still, rooted in the
+ground as it were, gazing at the sudden apparition
+of the solid wall of 2,000 veteran giants in
+their huge towering bear-skins. The next instant
+the battalion guns of the Guard, which
+accompanied the advance on either flank, opened
+with a burst of fire at short range into the thick
+of the Russians. At once, down came the
+gleaming rows of bayonets, and, like one man,
+the Old Guard sprang forward and charged into
+the enemy. A moment before the bayonets
+crossed a squadron of the Chasseurs of the
+Guard, the men on duty as Napoleon’s own
+personal escort, sent forward by the Emperor
+himself to assist the Grenadiers, dashed into the
+rear of the Russian column, and “drove it forward
+on our Grenadiers, who received it with
+fixed bayonets.”</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE EAGLE OF THE OLD GUARD</div>
+
+<p>Just before that it was that the Eagle of the
+Old Guard had its adventure. A shell dropped
+right in front of it and burst. The fragments
+smashed the Eagle pole in two places, just above
+and below the hands of the Eagle-bearer. The
+Eagle fell to the ground at the feet of the Russians.
+But they had not time to get hold of it.
+Instantly Lieutenant Morlay, the Eagle-bearer,
+sprang forward and recovered it. Picking the
+Eagle up, with the flag and fragment of pole
+that was left, Morlay snatched hold of a grenadier’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_172">172</span>
+musket and jammed the piece of the staff
+into the muzzle beside the bayonet. He carried
+the Eagle in that manner throughout the rest of
+the battle.<a id="FNanchor_17" href="#Footnote_17" class="fnanchor">17</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_173">173</span></p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">AT MIDNIGHT AFTER THE BATTLE</div>
+
+<p>A hundred and fifty thousand combatants had
+faced one another at daybreak. An hour before
+midnight, when the last shots were fired, 50,000
+men lay dead or wounded on the field. “Never,”
+if we may recall the grim picture of the scene
+next day that Alison has drawn, “was spectacle
+so dreadful as that field presented on the following
+morning. Above 50,000 men lay in the
+space of two leagues, weltering in blood. The
+wounds were, for the most part, of the severest
+kind, from the extraordinary quantity of cannon-balls<span class="pagenum" id="Page_174">174</span>
+which had been discharged during the action
+and the close proximity of the contending masses
+to the deadly batteries, which spread grape at
+half-musket shot through their ranks. Though
+stretched on the cold snow and exposed to the
+severity of an Arctic winter, the sufferers were
+burning with thirst, and piteous cries were heard
+on all sides for water, or assistance to extricate
+the wounded men from beneath the heaps of
+slain or load of horses by which they were
+crushed. Six thousand of these noble animals
+encumbered the field, or, maddened with pain,
+were shrieking aloud amidst the stifled groans
+of the wounded. Broken gun-carriages, dismounted
+cannon, fragments of blown-up caissons,
+scattered balls, lay in wild confusion amidst
+casques, cuirassiers, and burning hamlets, casting
+a livid light over a field of snow. Subdued by
+loss of blood, tamed by cold, exhausted by
+hunger, the foemen lay side by side, amidst the
+general wreck. The Cossack was to be seen
+beside the Italian; the gay vine-dresser from
+the banks of the Garonne lay athwart the stern
+peasant from the plains of the Ukraine.”</p>
+
+<p>When Napoleon took his ride over the field,
+“the men exhibited none of their wonted enthusiasm;
+no cries of ‘Vive l’Empereur!’ were
+heard; the bloody surface echoed only with the
+cries of suffering or the groans of woe.”</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE “TEMPLE OF VICTORY”</div>
+
+<p>Sixteen Russian standards were sent to Paris
+after Eylau; Napoleon’s set-off to the twelve<span class="pagenum" id="Page_175">175</span>
+Eagles taken to St. Petersburg. They were to
+be hung, he directed, temporarily at the Invalides,
+until such time as the conversion of the
+former Church of the Madeleine into Napoleon’s
+grandiose “Temple of Victory” should be
+effected—a project that was fated never to be
+accomplished. There, designed Napoleon, all
+the trophies of the Grand Army would find their
+final resting-place, in a splendid edifice, designed
+externally after the Parthenon at Athens.
+Within, the trophies would be displayed, amidst
+colonnades of Corinthian pillars of marble and
+granite and a mass of decorative sculptures,
+statues of marshals and generals who had met
+their death in battle, and bas-reliefs of famous
+colonels, before a lofty marble curule chair,
+which Napoleon would occupy as a throne on
+great occasions. “It is a Temple I desire,” he
+laid down, writing from his camp in Poland, “not
+a church; and everything must be made in a
+chaste, severe, and durable style, and be suitable
+for solemnities at all times and all hours.”</p>
+
+<p>Two more Eagles had yet to go to St. Petersburg
+before the war was over—the Eagle of the
+15th of the Line and another. They were the
+spoils that the beaten Russian army carried off
+from the battle of Friedland, fought some six
+months after Eylau, on July 14. Napoleon
+won one of his most famous victories at Friedland,
+and one that he afterwards recorded on the
+colours of all the regiments that fought in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_176">176</span>
+battle; but the defeated army carried back with
+them two more of his Eagles.</p>
+
+<p>The Eagle of the 15th of the Line, a regiment
+of Marshal Ney’s corps, was lost in a bayonet
+charge while fighting the Russian Imperial
+Guard. The second Eagle was left among the
+dead in the repulse of a column of Marshal
+Lannes’ corps in the earlier part of the battle.
+“A column of 3,000 men advanced straight
+against Friedland. They were permitted to approach
+close to the Russian cannon without a
+single shot being fired, when suddenly the whole
+opened with grape, and with such effect that in
+a few minutes a thousand men were struck down,
+the column routed, and the Eagle taken.”</p>
+
+<p>One of the regiments of the column saved
+itself as it fell back by rallying round its Eagle.
+As at Eylau, so at Friedland the Russian dragoons
+dashed down among the broken battalions
+while trying to re-form under the murderous
+cannonade. The 50th of the Line had been near
+the head of the column, and more than half of
+its men had been shot down. The dragoons were
+cutting their way through to the Eagle, when
+Adjutant Labourie snatched it from its wounded
+bearer, and, holding it up, shouted to the men:
+“Rally round the Eagle. We must defend it
+to the death!” A small square hastily formed
+round him, and, stubbornly resisting, they kept
+the Russian dragoons off and fought their way
+back to safety with the Eagle.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_177">177</span></p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">GOLDEN WREATHS FOR THE EAGLES</div>
+
+<p>The Peace of Tilsit closed the war within a
+month of Friedland.</p>
+
+<p>The welcome-home of Paris to the Old Guard,
+and public decoration of the Eagles with crowns
+of gold, was the curtain-scene and grand <i lang="fr">finale</i>
+of the Jena-Friedland drama. To all the regiments
+of the Grand Army under fire at Jena,
+Friedland, and Eylau, wreaths of gold, to be
+affixed round the necks of their Eagles, were
+voted by the Municipality of Paris. The wreaths
+were to be publicly presented to each regiment
+on its return to France.</p>
+
+<p>The Guard were the first to receive theirs, and
+their arrival in the capital was made the occasion
+of a series of civic fêtes; announced
+officially as being “offered in tribute to the
+Glory of the Grand Army.” Wednesday,
+November 25, 1807, was the day on which the
+Guard were due to reach Paris. All had been
+made ready to accord them a magnificent reception.</p>
+
+<p>The Prefect of the Seine, at the head of the City
+magistrates and the Municipal Councillors of
+Paris, all in their robes and chains and glittering
+insignia of office, escorted by a mounted cohort
+of National Guards, met the returning veterans
+at the Barrier on the Strasburg road. Marshal
+Bessières led the Guard, who marched up with
+bands playing and resplendent in their full-dress
+uniforms, horse and foot and artillery—12,000
+men in all. A gigantic triumphal arch was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_178">178</span>
+set up beyond the Barrier, wide enough for
+twenty men to march through abreast. It was
+the approach to a wide arena on which the troops
+drew up, massed in front of a lofty platform,
+decked out with flags and wreaths of evergreens
+and bright-coloured hangings. There the Prefect
+took his place with his <i lang="fr">entourage</i> as the
+soldiers drew near. Grand-stands to accommodate
+a crowd of sightseers surrounded the
+arena.</p>
+
+<p>The Old Guard marched in and drew up in
+close order, on which the proceedings opened
+with the civic address. “Heroes of Jena, of
+Eylau, of Friedland,” began the Prefect, “conquerors
+of a splendid peace, immortal thanks are
+your due from France! We salute you, Eagles
+of war, the symbols of the might of our noble-hearted
+Emperor! You have made known
+throughout the world, with his great name, the
+glory of victorious France!” So, in grandiloquent
+style, the address commenced. At its close
+the regiments of the Guards defiled past the
+platform in turn—Carabineers and Cuirassiers,
+Chasseurs, Dragoons, and Hussars, and the battalions
+of veteran Grenadiers. Round the neck
+of each Eagle, as its corps came up, the Prefect
+hung a wreath of laurel-leaves in gold.</p>
+
+<p>Then came the triumphal march through the
+streets of Paris to the Tuileries, amid cheering
+crowds, nearly beside themselves with excitement
+and enthusiasm, and with difficulty kept<span class="pagenum" id="Page_179">179</span>
+back from breaking through the rows of National
+Guards who lined the pavement, to hug
+the grim bearskin-hatted warriors. The Eagles
+deposited with ceremony in the Imperial Guardroom
+of the Palace of the Tuileries, the horsemen
+dismounted in the Square of the Carrousel,
+muskets were piled, and all marched off
+to the Champs Elysées. An immense banquet
+awaited them there, under vast marquees—shelter
+that the men appreciated, for it turned
+out a miserably wet afternoon.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">BANQUETED BY THE CITY OF PARIS</div>
+
+<p>The banquet in the Champs Elysées was the
+first in the round of festivities with which Paris
+welcomed home the “Victors over Europe.”
+The fêtes lasted over three days, and terminated
+in a grand reception given by the Senate to all
+ranks of “Our Invincible Guard” in the Gardens
+of the Luxembourg.<a id="FNanchor_18" href="#Footnote_18" class="fnanchor">18</a></p>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_181">181</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI<br>
+
+<span class="subhead">PREPARING FOR THE FUTURE</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<h3 id="toclink_181"><span class="smcap">The “Eagle-Guard”</span></h3>
+
+<p class="in0"><span class="firstword">The</span> loss of twelve Eagles in one battle made a
+deep and lasting impression upon Napoleon.
+That twelve of his cherished emblems, those
+mementoes of victorious Caesar, for whose prestige
+he had advanced such exacting claims, should
+have fallen <i lang="fr">en bloc</i> into the hands of the enemy
+came as a galling blow to Napoleon’s military
+pride. Twelve Eagles reft from amid the bayonets
+of the Grand Army on one battlefield: twelve
+Eagles paraded together as trophies through the
+capital of an exulting foe! It was a poignantly
+felt humiliation for the mighty Imperator of the
+Field of Mars. And yet no default could be
+charged against the soldiers to whom these
+Eagles had been entrusted. All that men might
+do for their defence they had done. Most of
+the luckless battalions, indeed, had fought and
+fallen directly under the eyes of the Emperor
+himself, looking on from his post of vantage
+by the wall of Eylau churchyard.</p>
+
+<p>Napoleon, however, had already realised that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_182">182</span>
+his distribution of an emblem to whose preservation
+he attached such extreme importance
+had been made on too lavish a scale. He had been
+imprudent in distributing such hostages to
+fortune broadcast; there were too many Eagles
+on offer to the enemy. Napoleon, indeed, had
+already tacitly admitted that. Within two
+months of the opening of the first campaign of
+the Grand Army—during the Austerlitz campaign—immediately
+after Murat’s daring gallop
+on Vienna, Napoleon had summarily directed all
+the light cavalry Eagles to be sent back from
+the front. Every Hussar and Chasseur regiment
+was ordered to return its three squadron
+Eagles to head-quarters forthwith, for sending
+back to France. In future, a new Army regulation
+laid down, those corps would not take their
+Eagles into the field at all. The regulation after
+that was extended to Dragoons; and later to
+all Light Infantry battalions. No doubt it was
+a step dictated by prudence. In these corps
+particularly, from the nature of the duties they
+had normally to perform, the Eagles were
+peculiarly exposed to risk of isolation and
+capture.</p>
+
+<p>What had happened at Eylau, and several
+narrow escapes in hand-to-hand combats at
+Friedland, together with certain other incidents
+in that battle which had come under Napoleon’s
+personal notice, where, through a nervous anxiety
+for the safety of their Eagles, some battalion<span class="pagenum" id="Page_183">183</span>
+commanders had kept back round them men
+whose bayonets were badly wanted elsewhere,
+led to a further step. Napoleon took advantage
+of the general scheme for the reorganisation of
+the Grand Army, which he carried out in 1808,
+to recast entirely his original arrangement as
+to the Eagles. He reduced the numbers by two-thirds.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">NO MORE BATTALION EAGLES</div>
+
+<p>Battalion Eagles were to be withdrawn in
+favour of Regimental Eagles. In the infantry,
+under the reorganisation scheme, there were to
+be five battalions to each regiment instead of
+three as heretofore; but there would be only
+one Eagle in future for the entire regiment.
+The existing Second and Third battalions were
+ordered to give up the Eagles they had hitherto
+carried, which would find a resting-place at the
+Invalides. The Regimental Eagle would be borne
+by the First Battalion. The other battalions
+would carry only “fanions,” small pennon-shaped
+flags. Each would have one “fanion,” a
+plain serge flag, of a distinctive colour for each
+battalion, without any mark or device on it,
+beyond the number of the battalion.</p>
+
+<p>The Imperial edict, issued early in 1808, laid
+down that for the special protection of the
+Regimental Eagle in battle a commissioned officer
+and two picked veterans were to be appointed
+as the “Eagle-Guard,” replacing the sergeant-major
+and escort of the Battalion Eagles. The
+three were to be known as the First, Second, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_184">184</span>
+Third Eagle-Bearers or “Porte-Aigles.” The
+officer to whose special charge the Regimental
+Eagle itself was committed was to be a senior
+lieutenant, “a man of proved valour, with not
+less than ten years’ Army service, including
+service on the battlefield in four campaigns,”
+specified as those of Ulm, Austerlitz, Jena, and
+Friedland. He would receive captain’s pay, and
+wear a gold-laced cocked hat and gold epaulettes.
+The two other Porte-Aigles were to be, in
+Napoleon’s own words, “deux braves,” of ten
+years’ service in the ranks, and “non-lettrés.”
+On the last qualification, indeed, Napoleon laid
+peculiar stress. The two were to be, as the
+Emperor himself put it, “men who could neither
+read nor write, so that their only hope of promotion
+should be through acts of special courage
+and devotion.” They would receive lieutenants’
+pay, have special privileges, and wear
+four gold lace chevrons on their arms. Only the
+Emperor could nominate or degrade Porte-Aigles.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">PENNONS TO FRIGHTEN HORSES</div>
+
+<p>The Second and Third Porte-Aigles were to
+carry no weapons except heavy pistols, “to blow
+out the brains of an enemy attempting to lay
+hands on an Eagle.” These were Napoleon’s
+own words as to that, in his order of February 18,
+1808: “Pour éviter que l’ardeur dans la mêlée ne
+les détourne de leur unique objet, de la garde
+de l’Aigle, le sabre et l’épée leurs sont interdits.
+Ils n’auront d’autres armes que plusieurs paires
+de pistolets, d’emploi que de veiller froidement<span class="pagenum" id="Page_185">185</span>
+a brûler la cervelle de celui qui avancerait la
+main pour saisir l’Aigle.” After the Wagram
+campaign of 1809 Napoleon substituted a helmet
+and defensive brass scale-epaulettes as the
+First Porte-Aigle’s equipment. He gave the two
+soldiers of the Eagle-Guard a halberd each, with
+a pennon or banderol attached—Red for the
+Second Porte-Aigle, White for the Third—as well
+as a sword and a pair of large-bore pistols. The
+pennons were for use should mounted men attack
+the Eagle; “for fluttering in front of the horses
+in order to make them rear and plunge and upset
+their riders.”<a id="FNanchor_19" href="#Footnote_19" class="fnanchor">19</a></p>
+
+<p>Two more soldiers were added to the Eagle-Guard
+in 1813, as the Fourth and Fifth Porte-Aigles.
+They were armed with the same
+weapons as the others, and had respectively
+Yellow and Green pennons on their halberds.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_186">186</span></p>
+
+<p>Yet further to add to the prestige of the
+Eagles, Napoleon, after Wagram, decreed the
+institution of a Special Order of Military Merit,
+which he called the “Order of the Trois Toisons
+d’Or”—something on the lines of our own
+Victoria Cross—certain of the provisions of
+which had direct reference to the Eagles. The
+decoration was to be conferred on men, whatever
+their rank, “distinguished in the defence of
+the Eagle of their regiment.” Also, according to
+the 6th Article of the Constitution of the Order,
+“Les Aigles des régiments qui ont assisté avec
+distinction aux grandes batailles seront décorés
+de l’Ordre des Trois Toisons d’Or.”<a id="FNanchor_20" href="#Footnote_20" class="fnanchor">20</a></p>
+
+<p>The special distinction of having the badge
+of the Legion of Honour affixed to its Eagle as
+a decoration to the regimental standard was in
+1812 granted to one corps, the celebrated 57th.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_187">187</span>
+It was as a reward for magnificent intrepidity
+displayed under the eyes of Napoleon at the
+battle of Borodino. The 57th had at the same
+time a further and unique mark of Imperial
+regard awarded to it. Napoleon ordered that
+a representation of the badge of the Legion of
+Honour should be stamped on the uniform
+buttons of the regiment. No corps of the Grand
+Army, perhaps, had a finer fighting tradition
+than this splendid regiment—the same “<i lang="fr">Terrible
+57me qui rien n’arrête</i>,” of the Army of Italy;
+which, too, as has been said, Napoleon singled
+out for a special word of encouragement on the
+morning of Austerlitz; calling to them as he
+rode past, “You will remember to-day, Fifty-seventh,
+how I once named you ‘Le Terrible’!”</p>
+
+<p>But, with regard to the Regimental Eagles of
+1808, even for Napoleon it was one thing to
+decree the abolition of Battalion Eagles, and
+another to obtain compliance with the order
+that the surplus Eagles should be returned to
+the War Minister for laying up at the Invalides.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">SOME CORPS DID NOT OBEY</div>
+
+<p>A number of second and third battalions of
+regiments stationed at places out of the way of
+direct Imperial inspection—in garrisons beyond
+the frontiers, in subjugated countries, or in the
+remaining overseas possessions of France—continued
+for some time to evade the order recalling
+their Eagles. No doubt, too, they were unwilling
+to part with standards some of which had led
+the corps under fire at Austerlitz and Jena.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_188">188</span></p>
+
+<p>Napoleon had to repeat his order of recall
+twice: once during 1809; the second time in
+1811. That second order was the outcome of a
+discovery made by the Emperor himself. At an
+Imperial review of the troops of the Amsterdam
+and North Holland garrisons on October 12,
+1810, three of the regiments had the temerity
+to parade before the Emperor’s eyes with four
+Eagles apiece—one to each battalion. Such
+flagrant disobedience could not be overlooked;
+and then subsequent inquiries brought out the
+fact that elsewhere there were many Battalion
+Eagles which had similarly been retained against
+orders. An additional discovery was made at
+the same time, that the Fourth-Battalion Eagles
+had been supplied surreptitiously, through some
+official at the Ministry of War, entirely without
+Napoleon’s knowledge.</p>
+
+<p>It made Napoleon excessively angry. He
+complained bitterly to Marshal Berthier at the
+way in which the department which had to do
+with the standards of the Army had been mismanaged.
+“La partie des drapeaux des régiments,”
+he declared, “est aujourd’hui dans un
+grand chaos.” To the Minister of War, General
+Clarke, Duc de Feltre, Napoleon sent a stinging
+letter of rebuke.</p>
+
+<p>With the letter went the draft of yet another
+decree, to be communicated to every corps in
+the service.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">NAPOLEON’S FINAL ORDER</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_189">189</span></p><div class="blockquot">
+
+<p>“I only give,” wrote Napoleon now, “one
+Eagle per regiment of infantry, one per
+regiment of cavalry, one per regiment of
+artillery, one per regiment of special gendarmerie.
+None to the departmental companies
+or guards of honour.</p>
+
+<p>“No corps may possess an Eagle which
+has not been bestowed by my own hand.</p>
+
+<p>“All regiments, further, of whatever denomination,
+if they did not receive the Eagle
+they are authorised to possess from the
+hand of the Emperor in person, either
+directly on parade, or through a regimental
+deputation, must return it to the Ministry
+of War for the will of his Majesty to be
+declared as to that Eagle.</p>
+
+<p>“All other corps are to carry ‘fanions,’
+ordinary flags. Infantry regiments reduced
+below 1,000 men in strength, and cavalry
+regiments of less than 500 men, cannot
+retain their Eagle, and must return it
+to the dépôt. They will be accorded a
+standard [drapeau] without the Eagle.</p>
+
+<p>“All the infantry regiments now in possession
+of an Eagle per battalion, and cavalry
+with one per squadron, are to send the
+extra-regulation Eagles at once to Paris, to
+be kept [<i lang="fr">déposées</i>] at the Invalides until
+they can be placed in the ‘Temple of Glory’
+[the Church of the Madeleine, then being
+rebuilt].” “Jusqu’à ce qu’elles puissent être
+misées dans le Temple de la Gloire,” was
+what Napoleon wrote.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Three of the British trophy-Eagles now at
+Chelsea, it may be remarked in passing, bear the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_190">190</span>
+number “82.” They came into our hands in
+February 1809, at the surrender of Martinique
+to a conjoint British military and naval expedition.
+The 82nd was one of the regiments referred
+to as out of the way of direct inspection;
+in garrison across the Atlantic. It had not
+obeyed the order of 1808 to return its Second
+and Third Battalion Eagles to Paris—with the
+result that three Eagles at Chelsea represent the
+misfortune of this one regiment.</p>
+
+<p>“The First Battalion,” ordered Napoleon in
+his decree of 1811, “is to carry the Eagle: the
+other battalions will have each a fanion, quite
+plain, as follows: 2nd Battalion, White; 3rd,
+Red; 4th, Blue. Where certain regiments may
+possess additional battalions, these are to have,
+the 5th a Green fanion, the 6th a Yellow fanion.”<a id="FNanchor_21" href="#Footnote_21" class="fnanchor">21</a></p>
+
+<p>In 1813, in Napoleon’s conscript army levied
+to replace the host destroyed in Russia, the
+newly raised Line regiments, and “Provisional-Regiments,”
+made up of the amalgamated
+dépôt battalions of various corps, had to earn
+their Eagles on the battlefield. “No newly
+raised regiment,” ordered Napoleon, “is to
+receive an Eagle until after his Majesty has been
+satisfied with its service before the enemy.”</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE ONLY NAMES ALLOWED</div>
+
+<p>The flags issued in 1808, and after that, to go<span class="pagenum" id="Page_191">191</span>
+with the Regimental Eagles, were much more
+elaborate than those of the Champ de Mars.
+They had white diamond-shaped centre panels,
+similar to those in the flags presented on the
+Field of Mars, but with Imperial crowns embroidered
+in gold on the red and blue upper
+corners of the flag, and golden Eagles on the
+lower corners. Gold embroidered wreaths of
+laurel, encircling the Imperial monogram “N.”
+divided off the crowns above from the Eagles
+below. A border of gold fringe round the entire
+flag, embroidered with bees, was another new
+enrichment. In these flags the regimental battle-honour
+inscriptions on the reverse side of the
+white centre space in the former flags appeared
+in a revised from. Only victories of importance
+since the institution of the Empire, and at which
+Napoleon had commanded in person, were admitted.
+Ulm, Austerlitz, Jena, Eylau, Friedland,
+Eckmühl, Essling, Wagram, constituted
+the full list from which selection was made. One
+regiment alone was allowed to record an earlier
+victory:—the Imperial Guard. They preserved
+their “Marengo” honour. Inscriptions
+such as “Le 75e arrive et bât l’ennemi,” “J’étais
+tranquille, le 32e était là,” and the others
+which had been allowed on the flags of the
+Field of Mars, recalling deeds of the Army of
+Italy, disappeared from the revised pattern of
+1808. A new inscription was specially authorised
+for the flag of one regiment, in honour of a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_192">192</span>
+feat of great distinction during the Wagram
+campaign. The 84th of the Line was permitted
+to inscribe “Un contre dix—Grätz, 1809”—but
+that only lasted for three years; the inscription
+was ordered to be taken off in 1811.</p>
+
+<p>The design of the flag introduced in 1808 held
+until 1814. A less elaborate design was adopted
+for the Eagle-standards of the “Hundred Days,”
+two specimens of which are in this country—the
+Waterloo trophies at Chelsea.</p>
+
+<p>Attractive and handsome as the new flag was,
+the Army, as before, looked on it as but an
+appendage, as merely “l’ornement de l’Aigle.”
+The Eagle at the head of the staff, by itself, was
+all that nine soldiers out of ten troubled about.
+Not a few regiments, indeed, when on service,
+removed the flags altogether from their Eagle-poles
+and displayed as their standard the Eagle
+only. Particularly was this the case in Spain,
+where many regiments were in the field continuously,
+in some instances, for over six years—from
+1808 to 1814. Asked one day after the
+Peninsular War about the inscription and battle-honours
+on the flag of his regiment, an infantry
+<i lang="fr">chef de bataillon</i> frankly confessed that he had
+“never set eyes on it!” The silken flag, he
+explained, “had been removed from the Eagle-pole
+before he first joined as a lieutenant, and
+had always, as he understood, been kept at the
+dépôt of the corps in France, rolled up and
+locked away in the regimental chest. The<span class="pagenum" id="Page_193">193</span>
+Eagle on its bare pole was all he had ever
+seen.”</p>
+
+<p>Said another officer: “We never spoke of the
+regiment’s ‘colours,’ and never saw them. We
+spoke only of ‘the Eagle.’”</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">WHEN NAPOLEON MET AN EAGLE</div>
+
+<p>This may be added. Napoleon was scrupulously
+exact in showing respect to the Eagle of a regiment
+whenever he passed one; whether on the
+line of march, or in bivouac, under a sentry,
+with the Eagle-Guard near at hand, resting
+horizontally on a support of piled muskets with
+bayonets fixed. If on horseback, Napoleon always
+uncovered and bowed low; if on the line of
+march, he sometimes stopped his carriage in
+passing, and got out, saluted the Eagle, and said
+a few words about the regiment’s battle record
+to the Eagle-Guard.</p>
+
+<p>Between the review on the Field of Mars in
+1804 and the overthrow on the plains of Leipsic
+in 1814 the number of regiments in the Grand
+Army increased continuously, requiring the
+presentation of many new Eagles. Forty-four
+were presented in the period to the infantry
+alone; to the regiments of the Line bearing
+numbers from the 113th to 156th; besides others
+to the regiments of the “Middle Guard” and
+“Young Guard,” and to two additional regiments
+of Cuirassiers. In every case Napoleon, in
+accordance with the stipulation that he so insisted
+on, made the presentation in person, with
+his own hand.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_194">194</span></p>
+
+<p>In not a few instances, indeed, the ceremony
+took place on campaign; and for one of these
+exceptionally interesting occasions we have
+available the notes of an eye-witness. It was at
+the presentation of the Eagle of the 126th Regiment
+of the Line, in Germany, in 1813.</p>
+
+<p>Napoleon made his appearance in his campaigning
+uniform, the dark green undress of the
+Chasseurs of the Guard, and mounted as usual on
+a grey charger. His staff, all brilliant in full
+dress, attended him. Approaching the scene
+at a canter, they all slowed down to a walk as
+they neared where the regiment stood, with its
+battalions parading every available man, and
+drawn up to form three sides of a hollow square.
+The new Eagle, enveloped in the leather casing
+in which it had been brought from France, lay
+on a pile of drums on one flank of the First
+Battalion, and a little in advance. The fourth,
+or open, side of the square was for the Imperial
+staff, who drew up there, while the Emperor by
+himself rode into the middle of the square. As
+Napoleon reined up, the regimental drums beat
+the <i lang="fr">Appel</i>, and the officers of the regiment
+stepped to the front, with swords at the carry,
+and formed in line before the Emperor.</p>
+
+<p>Marshal Berthier, Chief of the Head-quarter
+Staff, then rode across to where the Eagle lay.
+He dismounted to receive it at the hands of the
+First Porte-Aigle, the Eagle being uncased at
+the same time. Berthier saluted the Eagle;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_195">195</span>
+then, holding it erect with both hands, the
+marshal bore it ceremoniously along in front of
+the row of officers, who saluted with lowered
+swords as the Eagle passed, the drums of the
+regiment now beating a long roll. Halting close
+in front of Napoleon, Berthier inclined the Eagle
+forward in salute, and the Emperor, on his side,
+uncovered and bowed in return. Then, drawing
+his glove from his left hand, Napoleon raised his
+hand and extended it towards the Eagle. He
+held the reins, according to his custom, in his
+right hand. Napoleon began his address to the
+corps in a deep, impressive tone:</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">AT A PRESENTATION IN THE FIELD</div>
+
+<p>“Soldiers of the 126th Regiment of the Line,
+I entrust to you the Eagle of France! It is to
+serve to you ever as your rallying-point. You
+swear to me never to abandon it, but with life!
+You swear never to suffer an affront to it for the
+honour of France! You swear ever to prefer
+death for it to dishonour! You swear!” The
+last words were pronounced with a peculiar
+stress, in a very solemn tone, with intense
+energy.</p>
+
+<p>Instantly the officers of the regiment replied.
+Holding their swords on high, with one voice
+they shouted: “We swear!”</p>
+
+<p>The next moment the words were taken up
+and repeated enthusiastically by the men:
+“We swear!”</p>
+
+<p>Berthier, on that, formally handed the Eagle
+over to the colonel of the regiment, and the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_196">196</span>
+Emperor, raising his hand to his hat in salute
+to the Eagle, turned to rejoin the Staff and
+ride off elsewhere.</p>
+
+<p>On the afternoon before the three days’ battle
+of Leipsic opened, on October 15, 1813, Napoleon,
+on the Marchfeldt, in the very presence of the
+enemy, presented with these formalities new
+Eagles to three newly raised regiments.</p>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_197">197</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII<br>
+
+<span class="subhead">BEFORE THE ENEMY AT ASPERN AND WAGRAM</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class="in0"><span class="firstword">Napoleon’s</span> regimental Eagles made their début
+on the battlefield in the Wagram campaign of
+1809, when Austria challenged Napoleon to a
+second trial of strength in her premature attempt
+to achieve the liberation of Germany. The gallant
+deeds of the regiments that fought round
+the Eagles in that war are commemorated on the
+standards of the French Army to-day by the
+legend “Wagram, 1809,” a name and date
+that stand as the comprehensive memento of a
+conflict that lasted four months, and included
+no fewer than ten fiercely fought battles. They
+are superabundant as a fact; it would almost
+need a book by itself to tell the full story. It
+must suffice therefore to take here only these,
+picked out at random, as typical of the rest.</p>
+
+<p>This is the achievement that “Wagram, 1809,”
+inscribed in golden letters on the silken tricolor
+standard of the present-day 65th of the Line,
+serves to recall.</p>
+
+<p>Napoleon’s 65th was one of the regiments of
+Marshal Davout’s corps at Ratisbon, where
+Davout had been stationed on the eve of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_198">198</span>
+outbreak of the war. He was hastily recalled
+on the Austrians opening hostilities and advancing
+in greatly superior force. Davout fell
+back at once, leaving behind him the 65th to
+hold the very important bridge over the Danube
+at Ratisbon for forty-eight hours, until the
+bulk of his corps had gained a sufficient start
+on their way.</p>
+
+<p>The 65th had not long to wait for the enemy.
+Within twelve hours of the marshal’s retirement
+the Austrians swooped down on Ratisbon to
+seize the bridge. Two of their army corps led
+the advance. One took possession of the city,
+sending troops forward to secure the bridge.
+Part of the other crossed the Danube in the
+neighbourhood of the city in boats, in order to
+cut off and capture the French troops left behind.
+It was expected that in the presence of so overpowering
+an enemy the single French regiment
+holding the bridge would not venture to make
+a serious defence. The Austrians did not know
+the 65th.</p>
+
+<p>To oppose the first comers three battalions of
+the 65th barricaded and loopholed the houses
+nearest the bridge on that side. The remaining
+battalion held a fortified outwork, or bridge-head,
+across the river.</p>
+
+<p>For a whole day the battalions in the city
+held the Austrians at bay, resisting desperately
+in the streets and from house to house. Four
+hundred Austrian prisoners, together with an<span class="pagenum" id="Page_199">199</span>
+Austrian regimental standard and three other
+flags, testified to the way they did their duty.
+The battalion holding the bridge-head on the
+farther side of the river made meanwhile a no
+less stubborn resistance and kept the enemy off
+until nightfall. Then, however, it was found
+that their ammunition was exhausted. The
+three battalions fighting the city were by that
+time in a no less desperate plight. They on
+their side had been forced back to their last
+defences among the houses immediately surrounding
+the approach to the bridge. Still, though,
+they kept up a fierce resistance, at the last using
+cartridges taken from the cartouche-boxes of the
+Austrian prisoners and their own dead and
+wounded comrades. They held out until further
+defence of the bridge was impossible, until
+indeed further resistance at all was hopeless.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">HOW WERE THEY TO SAVE THE EAGLE?</div>
+
+<p>But the regimental Eagle? What was to
+become of that? The Eagle of the 65th must
+at all cost be kept from being surrendered into
+an enemy’s hands. What was to be done? At
+first it was suggested that an officer, known to
+be a good swimmer, should try to swim down
+the river with it in the dark until he could land
+safely on the farther bank, after which he should
+do his best to make his way to wherever Napoleon
+might be, there to render personally into his
+hands the sacred Eagle. But the other surviving
+officers were loth to part with their treasured
+standard in that way. The risk of a man getting<span class="pagenum" id="Page_200">200</span>
+through the Austrians who were swarming on
+the other side of the Danube was considered too
+great. It was then suggested to sink it in the
+Danube, noting the spot, so as to be able to
+fish it up again on some future day. Colonel
+Coutard, in command of the 65th, however, was
+against that. They might never be able, or have
+time, to find it at the bottom of a deep and
+swiftly flowing river like the Danube. He proposed
+to conceal the Eagle in the ground, burying
+it in some secret place. There it might without
+difficulty be recovered later on and brought back
+to France. The colonel’s proposal was assented
+to, and then a further suggestion was made.
+Their Eagle should be given a fitting shroud by
+wrapping round it the captured Austrian flags
+they had taken that afternoon. That would
+preserve the trophies also for future days when
+the fortune of war again favoured the regiment.
+The idea was eagerly taken up, and the Eagle
+was buried in a cellar, wrapped up in the Austrian
+flags.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">WRAPPED UP IN CAPTURED FLAGS</div>
+
+<p>After that, at the very last, just as the Austrians
+were about to launch another attack it
+was impossible to withstand, Colonel Coutard
+had the <i lang="fr">chamade</i> beaten, and the 65th surrendered.
+They were granted, as they well deserved, the
+honours of war, and were for the time being
+confined under guard in the city. Their captivity,
+however, was not for long. Their release
+came about in a very few days on the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_201">201</span>
+Austrian troops hurriedly evacuating Ratisbon
+before Napoleon’s triumphant advance.<a id="FNanchor_22" href="#Footnote_22" class="fnanchor">22</a> The
+Eagle was now dug up, and Colonel Coutard,
+with a deputation from the regiment, waited on
+Napoleon on his arrival, to present the Eagle
+before him, still wrapped up in the three captured
+Austrian flags.</p>
+
+<p>In recognition of the endurance that the 65th
+had shown, the colonel was created a Baron of
+the Empire; crosses of the Legion of Honour
+were distributed broadcast among all ranks;
+forty soldiers who had shown exceptional gallantry
+in the fighting were, as a reward, specially
+transferred to the Old Guard.</p>
+
+<p>Such is the fine story that the battle-honour
+“Wagram, 1809,” lettered in gold on the regimental
+tricolor of the present-day 65th of the
+Line in the French Army commemorates, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_202">202</span>
+care is taken that every young soldier on joining
+is made acquainted with it.</p>
+
+<p>Equally fine as an exploit, and yet more renowned
+for the exceptional honour that Napoleon
+paid to the Eagle of the regiment, was the
+splendid heroism that the 84th of the Line
+displayed at Grätz in Styria. That episode of
+the campaign, indeed, is commemorated by a
+double battle-honour on the flag of the 84th of
+the modern French Army. Both “Wagram,
+1809,” and “Un contre dix—Grätz, 1809”
+are inscribed in golden letters on its tricolor.
+Napoleon himself, as has been said, bestowed
+the honour of the unique inscription on the
+regimental flag. He had also the words “Un
+contre dix” incised on the square tablet supporting
+the Eagle itself. Here is the story of
+the exploit as related by one of Napoleon’s
+staff officers in the campaign, Colonel Lejeune:</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">KEPT OFF WITH THE BAYONET</div>
+
+<p>“Amongst all these battles and victories
+there was one action so remarkable and so brilliant
+that I feel impelled to describe it here from
+the accounts of eye-witnesses. During the
+taking of Grätz by General Broussier, and when
+the struggle was at its fiercest, Colonel Gambin
+of the 84th Regiment was ordered, with two of
+his battalions, to attack the suburb of St.
+Leonard, where he made from four to five
+hundred prisoners. This vigorous assault led
+General Guilay on the enemy’s side to imagine
+he had to deal with a whole army, and he hurried<span class="pagenum" id="Page_203">203</span>
+to the aid of the suburb with considerable forces.
+Gambin did not hesitate to attack them, and he
+took from them the cemetery of the Graben
+suburb, but was in his turn invested by the
+Austrian battalions, and found it impossible to
+rejoin the main body of the French. He accepted
+the situation, spent the whole of the
+night in fortifying the cemetery and the adjoining
+houses, and, his ammunition being exhausted,
+he actually kept at bay some 10,000 assailants
+with the bayonet alone, even making several
+sorties to carry off the cartouches on the dead
+bodies with which his attacks had strewn the
+ground near the cemetery. General Guilay now
+directed the fire of all his guns and five fresh
+battalions on this handful of brave men, who had
+already for nineteen hours withstood a whole
+army. General Broussier was at last able to
+send Colonel Nagle of the 92nd, with two battalions,
+to the aid of the 84th. The enemy
+vainly endeavoured to prevent the two regiments
+from meeting. Colonel Nagle overthrew
+every obstacle, got into the cemetery, and after
+embracing each other the two officers, with their
+united forces, flung themselves upon the Austrians,
+took 500 of them prisoners, with two flags,
+and carried the suburb of Graben by assault,
+finding no less than 1,200 Austrian corpses in
+the streets. When the Emperor heard of this
+feat of arms, he was anxious to confer the greatest
+distinction he could on the 84th Regiment, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_204">204</span>
+ordered that its banner should henceforth bear
+in letters of gold the proud inscription, ‘One
+against ten.’”</p>
+
+<p>Seldom indeed did the soldiers of Napoleon
+encounter a more determined enemy than the
+Austrians proved themselves in the war of 1809.
+At Aspern, the battle on the Danube near Vienna,
+where Napoleon experienced his first defeat on
+the Continent, more than one Eagle came within
+an ace of being taken. The Eagle of the 9th of
+the Line, for instance, to save it from what appeared
+to be imminent capture, was actually
+buried on the battlefield in the middle of the
+fighting. “Our colonel,” wrote one of the men
+of the 9th, “took the Eagle of the regiment,
+pulled it from its staff, and, after digging a hole
+in the ground with a pioneer’s tool, buried and
+concealed there our rallying signal to prevent
+it from falling into the enemy’s hands.” It was,
+though, after all, an unnecessary precaution.
+The hard-pressed 9th were rescued at the last
+moment, whereupon the Eagle made its reappearance.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">VICTIMS OF A PANIC IN THE DARK</div>
+
+<p>Three other Eagles, less fortunate, are now in
+the Austrian Army Museum at Vienna; those
+of the 35th of the Line and of the 95th and 106th.
+The Eagle of the 35th was taken on the Italian
+frontier near Lake Garda, in a surprise attack
+at daybreak on the camp of the Viceroy, Eugène
+Beauharnais, by the troops of the Archduke
+John. The other two fell into Austrian hands<span class="pagenum" id="Page_205">205</span>
+on the night of the opening attack at Wagram,
+victims of a panic that suddenly seized one of
+the French columns. It had led the attack on
+the centre of the Austrian position with brilliant
+success.</p>
+
+<p>Two thousand prisoners and five standards
+had been taken, and the French were advancing
+exultantly, when the Austrians counter-attacked
+with fresh troops, headed by the Archduke
+Charles in person. The French resisted stubbornly,
+and at first successfully. They held
+their own until, in the midst of furious hand-to-hand
+fighting, they were suddenly charged by
+cavalry. It was late evening, and in the gathering
+dusk a sudden panic seized a regiment on
+the flank. The panic spread instantly to the
+whole of the attacking column. All order was
+lost forthwith. The soldiers gave way in confusion,
+broke up, and went racing back headlong,
+a mob of fugitives, down the steep ascent that a
+few minutes before they had so gallantly won.
+As they went back in a tumultuous rush, fresh
+French troops, coming up to their support, “in
+the darkness mistook the retreating host for
+enemies and fired upon it; they, in their turn,
+were overthrown by the torrent of fugitives.”
+The Austrian prisoners taken in the advance
+escaped, the captured Austrian standards were
+recaptured, and two Eagles disappeared in the
+dark amid the turmoil. Those are the two now
+at Vienna.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_206">206</span></p>
+
+<p>Fortunately for Napoleon the Austrian leaders
+did not realise the smashing nature of the blow
+they had dealt. The fate of Napoleon’s Empire
+otherwise might have been decided on that
+night. Unaware that the panic had “spread an
+indescribable alarm through the French centre
+as far as the tent of the Emperor, they stopped
+the advance, sounded the recall, and fell back to
+their original positions.”</p>
+
+<p>Of the Eagle-bearers of four regiments at
+Aspern, the 2nd, 16th, 37th, and 67th of the
+Line, not one came through the day alive, but the
+Eagles were saved. They were the four regiments
+that took the village of Aspern and held it
+all day and till after dark—12,000 men against
+80,000 enemies. The village was the all-important
+key of the battlefield. Its defence was
+of supreme moment, for only part of Napoleon’s
+army had been able to get across the Danube
+as yet, the main bridge of boats having been
+broken down and swept away.</p>
+
+<p>They had seized Aspern at the outset, but had
+been forced to fall back before an Austrian
+counter-attack, returning after that to recapture
+it, and hold it until the end.</p>
+
+<p>Marshal Masséna led the onset that retook the
+village. “The Austrians,” describes a French
+officer, “had entered Aspern, and it was absolutely
+necessary to dislodge them. Masséna
+therefore, who had had all his horses killed,
+marched on foot with drawn sword at the head<span class="pagenum" id="Page_207">207</span>
+of the Grenadiers of the Molitor division, forced
+his way into the village, crowded as it was with
+Austrians, drove them out, and pursued them
+for some twelve or fourteen yards beyond the
+houses. But here the French troops found
+themselves face to face with the strong force
+under Hiller, Bellegarde, and Hohenzollern,
+advancing rapidly in their direction. It was
+hopeless for the division to attempt to engage
+such superior numbers in the open plain, so Masséna
+recalled the pursuers, and ordered them to
+hold Aspern. The enemy, ashamed apparently
+of this first defeat, returned to the charge with
+80,000 men and more than a hundred pieces
+of cannon, which were soon pointed on the
+village.”</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">AT BAY IN THE BURNING VILLAGE</div>
+
+<p>It was impossible to stop the onrush of the
+Austrians. In spite of every effort of Masséna,
+who with his artillery “opened fire upon the
+densely packed masses of men, every shot working
+terrible havoc amongst them,” they swarmed
+forward to the outskirts of the village. A
+life-and-death struggle in defence began. “In
+a very few minutes the village was completely
+surrounded by troops; and hidden from view
+in the dense clouds of smoke from the cannon,
+the musketry, and the fires which at
+once broke out, the combatants, almost suffocated
+by the smoke, crossed bayonets without
+being able to see each other; but neither
+side gave way a step, and for more than an<span class="pagenum" id="Page_208">208</span>
+hour the terrible attack and desperate defence
+went on amongst the ruins of the burning
+houses.”</p>
+
+<p>It was during the Austrian opening attack on
+the outskirts of Aspern that at one point a
+French regiment—the number of the regiment is
+not given in any account—was forced apart from
+the rest, and driven back in disorder beyond the
+village. Its colonel was killed, and, though the
+Eagle was kept from falling into the enemy’s
+hands, the regiment fell back in confusion. Napoleon
+witnessed the check and galloped to intercept
+the troops as they were retreating. Riding
+into the midst of the fugitives, he personally rallied
+them, and then called angrily for the colonel.
+There was no answer from any one, and in high
+anger Napoleon again called for the colonel.
+Then somebody made the reply that the colonel
+was dead. “I know that!” answered Napoleon
+sharply. “I asked where he was!” “We left him
+in the village.” “What! you left your colonel’s
+body in the hands of the enemy? Go back
+instantly, find it, and remember that a good
+regiment should always be able to produce both
+its Colonel and its Eagle!” Napoleon’s stinging
+rebuke did its work. The men at once re-formed
+and turned back. Charging forward with a rush,
+they forced their way through to where the
+colonel had fallen and recovered the body.
+Then they joined in with the other defenders
+at the village, and did their duty to the end.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_209">209</span>
+The colonel’s body was brought back and laid
+before Napoleon next morning.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">MARSHAL MASSENA UNDER FIRE</div>
+
+<p>The fearful contest in Aspern went on until
+four in the afternoon, by which time the Austrians
+had succeeded in taking half the village.
+They could not, however, get beyond that.
+“Masséna still held the church and cemetery,
+and was struggling to regain what he had lost.
+Five times in less than three hours he took and
+retook the cemetery, the church, and the village,
+without being able to call to his aid the Legrand
+division, which he was obliged to hold in reserve
+to cover Aspern on the right and keep the enemy
+from getting in on that side. Throughout this
+awful struggle Masséna stood beneath the great
+elms on the green opposite the church, calmly
+indifferent to the fall of the branches brought
+down upon his head by the showers of grape-shot
+and bullets, keenly alive to all that was
+going on, his look and voice, stern as the <i lang="la">quos
+ego</i> of Virgil’s angry Neptune, inspiring all who
+surrounded him with irresistible strength.”</p>
+
+<p>Even when the sun went down “the struggle
+was far from being over, and the awful battle
+was still raging in the streets and behind the
+walls of the village of Aspern. The enemy,
+irritated at the stubborn resistance of so small a
+body of troops, redoubled their efforts to dislodge
+them before nightfall, and went on fighting
+by the light of the conflagrations alone. The
+history of our wars relates no more thrilling incident<span class="pagenum" id="Page_210">210</span>
+than this long and obstinate struggle, in
+which our troops, disheartened by the ever-fresh
+difficulties with which they had to contend,
+worn out by fatigue, and horrified by the carnage
+round them, were kept at their posts by the
+example and exhortations of Masséna and his
+officers alone. General Molitor had lost some
+half of his men, and the enemy were hurrying up
+from every side. The struggle was maintained
+under these terrible conditions until eleven
+o’clock, when we remained masters of Aspern
+and of the whole line between it and Essling.”</p>
+
+<p>Five regiments of the French Army of to-day
+commemorate a splendid Eagle-incident in the
+name “Wagram, 1809,” on their colours; the
+final charge of Macdonald’s column which saved
+and decided the battle for Napoleon, besides
+gaining a marshal’s bâton for the Scottish officer
+who achieved the feat. That was on the final
+battlefield of Wagram itself, the outcome of which
+tremendous encounter settled the fate of the war.
+It was the culminating event of the battle. The
+crisis was at hand for both armies when the order
+was given to Macdonald to go forward. On the
+Austrian side the powerful and fresh corps of the
+Archduke John was rapidly nearing the scene,
+and the fortune of the day yet wavered in the
+balance. Napoleon, as his last hope and final
+effort to break the stubborn Austrian array of
+the Archduke Charles’ host which still confronted
+him, defiant still after ten hours of charges and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_211">211</span>
+counter-charges, holding out tenaciously in a
+strong position, massed his reserves and sent
+them at the centre of the Austrians, to press forward
+in a vast column of closely formed battalions.
+They went at the enemy with all the daring of
+a forlorn hope.</p>
+
+<figure id="i_211" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 25em;">
+ <img src="images/i_211.jpg" width="1739" height="1410" alt="Diagram of battalion positions in 3-sides of a square">
+</figure>
+
+<div class="sidenote">MACDONALDS’S COLUMN ADVANCES</div>
+
+<p>“Moving steadily forward through the wreck
+of guns, the dead, and the dying, this undaunted
+column, preceded by its terrific battery incessantly
+firing, pushed on half a league beyond
+the front at other points of the enemy’s line.
+In proportion as it advanced, however, it became
+enveloped in fire; the guns were gradually
+dismounted or silenced, and the infantry
+emerged through their wreck to the front. The
+Austrians drew off their front line upon their<span class="pagenum" id="Page_212">212</span>
+second, and both, falling back, formed a sort
+of wall on each side of the French column, from
+whence issued a dreadful fire of grape and
+musketry on either flank of the assailants. Still
+Macdonald pushed on with unconquerable resolution:
+in the midst of a frightful storm of
+bullets his ranks were unshaken; the destiny
+of Europe was in his hands, and he was worthy
+of the mission. The loss he experienced, however,
+was enormous; at every step huge chasms
+were made in his ranks, whole files were
+struck down by cannon-shot, and at length his
+eight dense battalions were reduced to 1,500
+men. Isolated in the midst of enemies, this
+band of heroes was compelled to halt. The
+Empire rocked to its foundations: it was the
+rout of a similar body of the Guard at Waterloo
+that hurled Napoleon to the rock of St. Helena.”</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE BATTLE WON AT LAST</div>
+
+<p>The five regiments which formed the spear-point
+of the attack had paraded that morning
+6,000 strong. They numbered now, the survivors,
+less than 300. They were at the extreme
+point of the advance, but were held fast and
+unable to go farther. The enemy were on every
+side of them, for in the last moments they had
+pressed on beyond touch of the troops that were
+following next. The Austrians saw their chance
+to charge them and annihilate them before the
+approach of French supports to the main column
+could get near. But General Broussier, the
+Brigadier in command of the leading troops,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_213">213</span>
+knew his work and his men. As they halted
+he rapidly rallied the fragments of the nearest
+regiments and formed them in a single square.
+They drew up under the <i lang="fr">feu d’enfer</i> of cannon
+and musketry, three deep in front, with, in the
+centre, held up on high, the five Eagles of
+the regiments; so as not to weaken the front,
+the firing line, “the Eagles were held up only
+by men who had been wounded.” Broussier
+marked the massing of the Eagles in the midst;
+and, as the firing round them for one moment
+seemed to lull, raising his voice, he called out
+for all to hear: “Soldiers, swear to die here
+to the last man round your Eagles!” “Jurez
+moi, soldats, de mourir tous, jusqu’au dernier,
+autour de vos Aigles!” were the Brigadier’s
+words. But there was fortunately no need for
+all to die. At that moment reinforcing troops
+came up, with the Young Guard at their head.
+The column, on that, moved forward again with
+a steady front, “and the Archduke, despairing
+now of maintaining his position, when assailed
+at the crisis of the day by such a formidable
+accession of force in the now broken part of his
+line, gave directions for a general retreat.”
+The Eagles had done their part and the battle
+of Wagram was won.</p>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_214">214</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII<br>
+
+<span class="subhead">“THE EAGLE WITH THE GOLDEN WREATH” IN LONDON</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class="in0"><span class="firstword">There</span> are thirteen of Napoleon’s Eagles in
+England, among the trophies of the British Army
+at Chelsea Royal Hospital; or, to speak strictly,
+twelve Eagles and a “dummy” Eagle, the later
+reproduction of a very famous trophy, gone
+now, unfortunately, to the melting-pot of a
+thieves’ kitchen. It is with the dummy Eagle,
+as it may be called for short, without disrespect
+to its gallant custodians, and five of the twelve
+Eagles at Chelsea, that we are for the immediate
+moment concerned. That represents
+the first of Napoleon’s trophies won by British
+soldiers in hand-to-hand fight—the once celebrated
+“Eagle with the Golden Wreath.”</p>
+
+<p>The story opens on Saturday morning, May 18,
+1811, a day that was a great occasion for Londoners.
+For the first time, on that Saturday,
+trophies taken from Napoleon were publicly
+displayed in the British Capital, and no pains
+were spared to make the most of the event.
+An elaborate and dramatic ceremonial was
+ordained for the occasion by the authorities<span class="pagenum" id="Page_215">215</span>
+at the instance of the Prince Regent. It was
+like nothing else of the kind ever witnessed or
+heard of in England before.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">WHAT LONDON HAD SEEN BEFORE</div>
+
+<p>On many another day in bygone times London
+had been the scene of stately martial pageants
+in which the victor’s spoils from many battlefields
+were borne in triumph, amid blare of
+trumpets and clash of drums, to be deposited
+with due ceremony in their allotted resting-places.
+So had it been when the Marlborough
+trophies from Blenheim and Ramillies, the
+captured flags from Dettingen, Louisburg, and
+Minden, were borne along the crowded streets,
+preceded by bands playing triumphant music
+and accompanied by armed escorts of Foot and
+Horse. Another Saturday, seventeen years before,
+May 17, 1794, had been the last occasion
+of trophy-flags being displayed in London,
+when the captured French Republican standards
+of the garrison of Martinique were publicly
+carried through the streets by Life Guards and
+Grenadiers, with the band of the First Guards
+leading the way and the Tower guns booming
+out an artillery <i lang="fr">feu de joie</i>, from St. James’s
+Palace to St. Paul’s, to be received at the great
+west doors of the Cathedral by the Dean and
+Chapter, and laid up “as a lasting memorial
+of the success of his Majesty’s Arms.” Some
+of the flags then displayed hang in the Hall of
+Chelsea Hospital to-day.</p>
+
+<p>So, too, had it been in London in yet earlier<span class="pagenum" id="Page_216">216</span>
+times, in the far off, unhappy days of Civil War
+in England, when the citizens of those periods,
+in turn, saw the spoils of Bosworth, and of Marston
+Moor and Naseby, of Worcester, Preston,
+and Dunbar, paraded through their midst,
+escorted by mail-clad men-at-arms, on the way
+to be hung up exultingly in St. Paul’s Cathedral
+or in Westminster Hall. With his own Royal
+banners from Marston Moor and Naseby drooping
+down overhead from the roof of Westminster
+Hall, Charles the First faced his judges and heard
+his fate. But never before in London had so
+elaborately designed a ceremony attended the
+display of trophies taken from any enemy, as
+that planned for the <i lang="fr">Royal Depositum</i>, as it
+was officially styled, of the first of the captured
+Eagles of Napoleon to be received in England.</p>
+
+<p>There was to be a special display of trophies
+the London newspapers announced some days
+beforehand. The newspapers had not spared
+themselves in working up public interest. At
+the outset they had told how, on the night of
+March 24, Captain Hope, First A.D.C. to
+General Graham, had arrived in London with
+the Barrosa despatches and a “French Eagle
+with a wreath of gold,” which, it was stated, “the
+general trusted his aide de camp might be permitted
+to lay at his Majesty’s feet.” Then
+Londoners were informed that the Barrosa
+Eagle was a trophy of unusual importance, and
+was being kept at the War Office, to be presented<span class="pagenum" id="Page_217">217</span>
+to the Prince Regent at the next <i lang="fr">levée</i>. It was
+announced a week later that his Royal Highness
+had been so desirous of seeing it at once,
+that the War Minister, the Earl of Liverpool,
+instead of waiting five weeks for the <i lang="fr">levée</i>, had
+already presented it to the Prince at Carlton
+House. On that came the official notification
+that “the Eagle with the Golden Wreath,”
+as the trophy was everywhere styled, together
+with a number of other French trophies,
+which had been previously received and had
+been some time stored away at the War Office
+pending instructions as to their disposal, would
+be deposited in the Chapel Royal, Whitehall,
+(now the Museum of the Royal United Service
+Institution). “The <i lang="fr">Royal Depositum</i> ceremony
+will be very grand, and the martial music appropriate
+to the occasion, and as the orders have
+been issued by direction of his Royal Highness
+the Prince Regent, the Chapel will be thronged
+with nobility.” So one journal notified; another
+remarking that “in addition to the great
+religious and military ceremony, an anthem is
+to be performed after the manner of the Te
+Deum.”</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">A GRAND MARTIAL CEREMONY</div>
+
+<p>Thus popular interest was aroused and kept
+alive in advance, and the selected Saturday
+morning proving fine and pleasant, with the
+prospect of a genial and sunny forenoon, Londoners
+turned out in large numbers to see the
+show.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_218">218</span></p>
+
+<p>To the Brigade of Guards it fell to carry out
+the ceremony of the military reception of the
+Eagles.</p>
+
+<p>The “Parade in St. James’s Park,” which we
+know now as the Horse Guards Parade, was the
+appointed place for the display, and as the clock
+struck nine the preliminaries opened with the
+arrival of a large body of Guards’ recruits who
+were to keep the ground. From quite an early
+hour a crowd had been gathering there and
+along the side of the Park. Soon afterwards
+the first of the troops designated to attend the
+ceremony began to arrive. These were several
+companies of the First Guards and Coldstreamers
+“in undress, with side arms.” They formed
+line along either side of the parade-ground; on
+one side “extending from the corner of the
+Chancellor of the Exchequer’s garden to the
+Egyptian gun”; on the opposite side, “from the
+Admiralty towards the Park.” To right and
+left of the archway under the Horse Guards
+leading to Whitehall were drawn up the “recruiting
+parties stationed in the Home District.”</p>
+
+<p>At a quarter to ten came on the scene the
+first of the actors in the day’s proceedings, the
+“King’s Guard” of the day, “in their best
+uniforms, and with sprigs of oak and laurel in
+their hats.” Marching up, headed by the combined
+bands of the First Guards and the Coldstreamers,
+with the regimental colour of the First
+Guards, they formed on the right, along the open<span class="pagenum" id="Page_219">219</span>
+side of the square, facing towards the Horse
+Guards. Following them, a few moments later,
+came the picked detachment appointed as the
+“trophy-escort,” furnished jointly by the
+grenadier companies of the First Guards and
+the Coldstreamers. All were in review-order full
+dress, “wearing long white gaiters, with oak and
+laurel leaves in their hats.” A captain of the
+First Guards was in command; and the detachment
+was made up of two subalterns, four
+sergeants, and ninety-six rank and file. They
+took post on the left of the King’s Guard. As
+the trophy-escort halted, up came another detachment
+of Guards, a hundred strong, with
+the Life Guards; marching across the square
+and through the Horse Guards archway to line
+the way thence to the doors of the Chapel Royal.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">GETTING READY FOR THE PRINCES</div>
+
+<p>Towards ten o’clock privileged spectators
+were admitted within the square, “to stand at
+an appointed spot”: several veteran generals,
+“in their best uniforms and powdered,” as a
+newspaper reporter remarks; Lord Liverpool
+the War Minister; the Earl Marshal; the
+Speaker; the Spanish and Portuguese Ambassadors,
+both gorgeously attired; and “a number
+of beautiful and elegant ladies of distinction.”</p>
+
+<p>The Horse Guards clock struck ten, and as the
+last clanging stroke died away “the authorities”
+came clattering on to the ground on horseback:
+Sir David Dundas, Commander-in-Chief
+of the Army and Governor of Chelsea Hospital,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_220">220</span>
+at the head of a number of other plumed and
+cocked-hatted generals in full uniform, together
+with the Head-quarters Staff at the Horse
+Guards. Prominent in the glittering array of
+gold-laced red coats, “mounted on a cream-coloured
+Arab,” was General Sir John Doyle,
+Colonel of the 87th Royal Irish Fusiliers; the
+regiment whose prowess at Barrosa had won
+the great trophy of the day—“the Eagle with
+the Golden Wreath.”</p>
+
+<p>With Royal punctuality, as the clock chimed
+the half-hour, amid cheers from the crowd and
+the spectators filling the windows of the Horse
+Guards and Admiralty and other Government
+offices overlooking the ground, came riding up
+the three Princes who were to preside at the
+ceremony—the Dukes of York, Cambridge, and
+Gloucester.</p>
+
+<p>The display began forthwith.</p>
+
+<p>Preceded by the two Guards’ bands playing
+the “Grenadiers’ March,” the trophy-escort of
+grenadiers crossed the Parade at a slow step,
+and marched in four divisions, or “platoons,”
+to the old Tilt Yard orderly-room under the
+Horse Guards. There the trophies had been
+taken beforehand to be in readiness for the ceremony.
+The grenadiers halted before the doors,
+and the trophies, twelve in number, were brought
+out by Lifeguardsmen from the Tilt Yard Guard
+and committed to the charge of twelve picked
+sergeants—six of the First Guards, six of the Coldstreamers—selected<span class="pagenum" id="Page_221">221</span>
+to bear them to the Chapel
+Royal.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE CAPTURED EAGLES TAKE POST</div>
+
+<p>The trophy-bearers carrying the Eagles then
+took post according to the date of the capture
+of each trophy; the earliest taken of the Eagles
+leading. In advance of all, immediately after
+the band, marched the three officers with swords
+drawn; the captain and the two subalterns.
+Then, with their flanking grenadiers as escort,
+a file to each trophy, came, one after the other,
+three Battalion Eagles of Napoleon’s 82nd of
+the Line, surrendered at the capitulation of Martinique
+in 1809. Immediately in rear marched
+No. 1 platoon of grenadiers; in the interval
+between the first trophy-group and the second.
+That consisted of the Regimental Eagle of the
+French 26th of the Line, surrendered at Martinique
+at the same time as the Eagles of the
+82nd, and then that of the 66th of the Line, surrendered
+at the capitulation of Guadaloupe in
+1810, with, just behind them, the all-important
+trophy of the day, the first Napoleonic Eagle
+captured—or, at any rate, taken possession of—by
+British soldiers on the battlefield: “the
+Eagle with the Golden Wreath”—that Eagle of
+Napoleon’s 8th Regiment of the Line, won in
+hand-to-hand fight by the 87th Royal Irish
+Fusiliers at Barrosa.</p>
+
+<p>Five of the Eagles had their silken tricolor
+flags still attached to the poles. The Barrosa
+Eagle had none: it showed simply a bare pole<span class="pagenum" id="Page_222">222</span>
+topped by the wreathed Eagle. The wreath,
+according to a newspaper reporter present, was
+“an honour conferred on the regiment for fine
+conduct at the battle of Talavera, where they
+were opposed to the 87th; and, by a singular
+coincidence of circumstances, these regiments
+met in conflict at Barrosa and recognised each
+other.” As we shall see, the statement was a
+freak of journalistic imagination, without a scrap
+of fact behind the story, although, strangely, the
+legend holds to this day and reappears periodically
+in print. Adds the reporter, as to the appearance
+of the Eagle, recording this time what he actually
+saw: “The Eagle is fixed on a square
+pedestal, and standing erect on one foot; the
+other raised as if grasping something; its wings
+expanded. It is about the size of a small pigeon,
+and appears to be made of bronze, or of some
+composition like pinchbeck, gold-gilt.” The
+“something” which the talons of the Eagle appeared
+to be grasping was the “thunderbolt,”
+which was missing, having been either knocked
+out of its place in the scuffle on the battlefield,
+or stolen later by somebody for a relic. The
+wreath was really of gold. A couple of its leaves
+picked up on the field after the battle and given
+to Major Hugh Gough, the gallant commander
+of the 87th at Barrosa, are now in possession of
+one of that officer’s descendants.</p>
+
+<figure id="i_222" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 39em;">
+ <img src="images/i_222.jpg" width="3115" height="2185" alt="">
+ <figcaption class="caption">
+ <p>Plan of the Battle of BARROSA</p>
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<p>The second grenadier platoon divided the
+Eagles from the first three of the flag-trophies,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_223">223</span>
+borne in file, one by one, in the same way as the
+Eagles. The first in date of capture led; a
+French Republican standard taken in fight at
+Sir Ralph Abercombie’s victory at Alexandria,
+ten years before, and kept ever since at the War
+Office: “the Invincible’s standard.” “As it
+is falsely called,” adds the reporter; right for
+once. “So tattered is it,” he continues, “that
+the mottoes are not legible; a bugle in the
+centre was the only figure we could distinguish.”
+Two flags taken by Wellington’s men in the
+Peninsula accompanied the Alexandria flag:
+“a Fort Standard,” as it is described, and the
+battalion colour, or “fanion,” of the Second
+Battalion of Napoleon’s 5th of the Line.<a id="FNanchor_23" href="#Footnote_23" class="fnanchor">23</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_224">224</span></p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE TROPHY FLAGS PARADED</div>
+
+<p>In rear of the colour of the 5th marched the
+third grenadier platoon, and the last three
+trophies sent to England by Wellington. Two
+were a pair of tattered German standards, the
+flags of the two battalions of a Prussian regiment
+in Napoleon’s service, composed of unfortunate
+soldiers levied compulsorily during the French
+occupation of their country, and tramped off to
+Spain to meet their fate under British bullets.
+Each flag bore the legend “L’Empereur des
+Français au Régiment Prussien” on one side,
+and “Valeur et Discipline” on the other, and
+was mounted on a staff with a steel pike-head
+instead of an Eagle. They were silken flags of the
+ordinary Napoleonic pattern. The third flag
+of the group was that of a “provisional regiment”;
+also with a steel pike-head to its staff.</p>
+
+<p>From the Tilt Yard orderly-room the trophies
+and their escort-guard set off, as before, in slow
+time, the bands playing “God save the King!”
+The sergeants, carrying the Eagles and Flags
+between the files of grenadiers, marched in the
+intervals between the four divisions “in double
+open-order with arms advanced.” Right round
+the square they now passed, close along the lines
+of the troops drawn up, “the immense multitude
+rending the air with huzzas.” In front of the First
+Guards, in front of the recruiting parties, in front
+of the long line of Coldstreamers, along each of
+the three sides of the square, paced the procession
+with martial pomp to the stately music<span class="pagenum" id="Page_225">225</span>
+of the two bands as they led the way. Then it
+proceeded along the fourth side of the square
+until it came face to face with the King’s Guard,
+all standing with ordered arms, not at the
+present.</p>
+
+<p>There was a brief pause in front of the Colour
+of the King’s Guard.</p>
+
+<p>That was the supreme moment of the display.
+Now took place the formal act of obeisance to
+the victors; the formal act of abasement and
+humiliation for the vanquished. Amid redoubled
+cheering from all sides, the Eagles and
+the other flags were, one and all, formally dipped
+and prostrated. “The captured standards
+saluted and were lowered to the ground in token
+of submission.”</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">PROSTRATED IN THE DUST</div>
+
+<p>The procession turned away in front of the
+King’s Guard and led round in front of the three
+Royal Dukes, seated on their chargers, a little
+in advance of the Commander-in-Chief and
+Horse Guards Staff, at the centre of the parade-ground.
+Again, as they now passed before the
+Royal trio, the hapless Eagles of Napoleon and
+the other French flags in turn were one by one
+made to pay homage, bowed grovelling to the
+dust; the crowd of onlookers shouting themselves
+hoarse “with,” as we are told, “truly
+British huzzas.”</p>
+
+<p>After that the trophy procession marched
+across to the Horse Guards archway, and through
+to Whitehall and the Chapel Royal; between<span class="pagenum" id="Page_226">226</span>
+Life Guards on one side and more Foot Guards
+on the other, drawn up to keep a lane open through
+the immense crowd of people who had gathered
+there, and thronged the wide roadway. “The
+procession,” says our reporter, “moved off the
+Parade amid the acclamations of many thousand
+spectators and entered the Chapel as the clock
+was striking eleven, which [<i lang="la">sic</i>] was crowded
+by all the beauty and fashion in Town.” Another
+reporter speaks of the Chapel Royal as being
+“exceedingly crowded in all parts with nobility
+and gentlemen and ladies of distinction.”</p>
+
+<p>“The religious part of the ceremony,” we are
+told, “was solemn and impressive.” It comprised
+Morning Prayer and a sermon by the
+Sub-Dean. “Previous to the commencement
+of the Te Deum, a pause was made, when three
+grenadier sergeants entered at each door by the
+sides of the Altar with the Eagles on black poles
+about 8 feet high. They took their stations in
+front of the Altar. Each party was guarded by
+a file of grenadiers, commanded by two officers;
+the whole of them with laurel-leaves in their caps
+as emblems of Victory. At the same instant
+the five French flags and Bonaparte’s honourable
+standard entered the upper gallery at the back
+of the Altar, all carried by grenadier sergeants.</p>
+
+<p>“The whole remained presented for some time
+for the gratification of the beholders, after which
+the Eagles were placed in brass sockets on each
+side of the Altar, suspended by brass chains.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_227">227</span>
+The five flags were suspended from the front of
+the second gallery, and Bonaparte’s honourable
+standard placed over the door of the second
+gallery, behind the others.”</p>
+
+<p>The trophies, with others won at Salamanca
+and Waterloo, and subsequently laid up in the
+Chapel Royal, were removed later to Chelsea
+Royal Hospital, where all, except “the Eagle with
+the Golden Wreath,” are now kept treasured amid
+befitting surroundings.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">STOLEN FROM CHELSEA AT MIDDAY</div>
+
+<p>“The Eagle with the Golden Wreath” disappeared
+from Chelsea Hospital in broad daylight.
+It was displayed in the Chapel, affixed in front
+of the organ-loft over the doorway, until it suddenly
+vanished from there a little after midday
+on Friday, April 16, 1852, in the absence of the
+pensioner-custodian of the Chapel during the
+Hospital dinner-hour. How it was stolen was
+apparent; but the thief was never traced. The
+thief, attracted undoubtedly by the widely told
+story that the wreath was of gold, made his way
+into the Chapel by the roof, which was undergoing
+repairs at the time, to which he got access
+by a workman’s ladder. He got inside by the
+trap-door on the leads above the organ-loft.
+There, with a saw, he cut through the Eagle-pole
+near where it was fastened to the organ-loft,
+and, secreting it under his coat, made his escape
+by the way he had come, unseen by anybody.
+The Eagle-pole was found outside, in front of
+the building, with the Eagle and wreath wrenched<span class="pagenum" id="Page_228">228</span>
+off. For some reason the Royal Hospital authorities
+of the day offered a reward of only a
+sovereign, and though the London police did
+their best, the malefactor was never discovered.<a id="FNanchor_24" href="#Footnote_24" class="fnanchor">24</a></p>
+
+<p>At Barrosa Napoleon’s 8th of the Line was
+in the French column that made its attack on
+the right. It was one of the regiments that
+charged forward across the plain at the foot
+of Barrosa ridge, to break through General
+Graham’s second brigade and drive it back to
+the edge of the cliffs by the seashore, while the
+French left attack seized the ridge itself, and
+beat back the British first brigade in the act of
+hastening to regain that unwisely abandoned
+position. The Eagle went down in the fierce
+counter-attack with which Graham’s men on the
+plain, the 87th Royal Irish Fusiliers in the front
+line, met the French onset.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_229">229</span></p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">“IMPOSSIBLE TO STOP THEM”</div>
+
+<p>What befell the 8th of the Line is told by one
+of their own officers in his <i lang="fr">Journal de Guerre</i>—Lieutenant-Colonel
+Vigo-Roussillon, in command
+of the First Battalion, with which was the Eagle.</p>
+
+<p>Just before the critical moment, says Colonel
+Roussillon, the 8th, who were on the flank of
+the French second line, lost touch with the
+regiment next them, and had in consequence to
+meet the 87th by themselves. They fired their
+hardest as the British troops came on, “but
+could not stop them, ever advancing to a bayonet
+attack.”</p>
+
+<p>They came on silently, steadily, irresistibly.
+“Their officers,” adds one of Victor’s staff,
+“kept up all the time the old custom of striking
+with their canes those of the men who fell out of
+the ranks. Our own non-commissioned officers,”
+he adds, “placed as a supernumerary rank,
+crossed their muskets behind the squads, thus
+forming buttresses which kept the ranks from
+giving way. Several of the French officers, also,
+picked up the muskets of the wounded, and flung
+themselves into the gaps made in the ranks of
+the men.”</p>
+
+<p>“I saw the English line,” describes Colonel
+Roussillon again, “at sixty paces continuing to
+advance at a slow step without firing. It
+seemed impossible to stop them; we had not
+sufficient men.”</p>
+
+<p>Apparently he then caught sight of General
+Graham, leading the British line.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_230">230</span></p>
+
+<p>“Under the influence of a sort of despair, I
+urged forward my charger, a strong Polish horse,
+against an English mounted officer who seemed
+to be the colonel of the nearest regiment coming
+on at us. I got up to him, and was about to run
+him through with my sword, when I was held
+back by a sense of compassion and abandoned
+the murderous thought. He was an officer with
+white hair and a fine figure, and had his hat
+in his hand, and was cheering on his men. His
+calmness and noble air of dignity irresistibly
+arrested my arm.”</p>
+
+<p>Such is the lieutenant-colonel’s own account.
+But did he really get quite close to the general?
+Graham was the last man in the world to let him
+get back unfought!</p>
+
+<p>“I then,” as Vigo-Roussillon continues,
+“quickly galloped back to my own men, and
+was riding along the line, telling them to meet
+the enemy with our bayonets, and drive them
+back, when a bullet from an English marksman
+broke my right leg.</p>
+
+<p>“I managed to dismount and tried to pass
+through in rear of the line, but it was impossible
+to walk. The ground was covered with thick
+bushes, and I was crippled and in great pain.
+All I could do was to sit down where I was,
+calling on the men to fire again. A moment
+later I was enveloped in smoke; and at the same
+instant the English charged in among us.</p>
+
+<p>“I called out my loudest, cheering on my<span class="pagenum" id="Page_231">231</span>
+men; and now two soldiers tried to lift me up
+and carry me. But both were shot down.</p>
+
+<p>“For the time we held our own, and kept the
+enemy back; but some of the English got round
+us. Seeing themselves outflanked, the battalion
+began to give ground. Then came a second
+furious charge from the English, and that broke
+us.”</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">“FIGHTING WITH THEIR FISTS”</div>
+
+<p>The fight, man to man, went on desperately
+for several minutes—some of the British soldiers,
+as yet another French officers relates, fighting
+with their fists. “Many of the Englishmen
+broke their weapons in striking with the butts
+or bayonets; but they never seemed to think
+of using the swords they wore at their sides. They
+went on fighting with their fists.”</p>
+
+<p>It was in the final <i lang="fr">mêlée</i> that “the Eagle with
+the Golden Wreath” was taken; after a sharp and
+fierce hand-to-hand fight round it.</p>
+
+<p>Colonel Roussillon himself was at almost the
+same moment struck down, and lay insensible
+for a space among the dead near by. He was
+recovering his senses and trying to stand up, when,
+as he tells, a British sergeant saw him and ran at
+him with his halberd. He parried the thrust,
+and kept the sergeant off, and then a British officer
+came up. To him the Commandant of the First
+Battalion of the 8th surrendered his sword.</p>
+
+<p>The fight for the Eagle—on one hand to take it,
+on the other to keep it—was furious; desperately
+and heroically contested by both sides.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_232">232</span></p>
+
+<p>First, a gallant Irish boy, from Kilkenny,
+Ensign Edward Keogh of the 87th, caught sight
+of it, borne on high above the fray. There
+had been no unscrewing of the Eagle of the
+8th, no trying to break it from its pole. “See
+that Eagle, sergeant!” called Keogh to Sergeant
+Masterton, among the foremost, close
+by his officer; and then he dashed straight
+into the thick of the party round the Eagle,
+sword in hand. The brave lad cut his way
+through, with Masterton and four or five privates
+close behind him. He got close up to the “Porte-Aigle,”
+crossed swords with him, and got a grip
+of the Eagle-pole. But he could not wrench it
+from the no less brave Frenchman’s hands before
+he went down with half a dozen musket bullets
+and bayonet stabs in his body.</p>
+
+<p>Porte-Aigle Guillemin, as the gallant French
+Eagle-bearer of the 8th was named, fell dead at
+the same moment, shot through the head by
+one of the British privates.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">HOW THE TUSSLE ENDED</div>
+
+<p>Instantly other Frenchmen rushed up to save
+the Eagle, and formed round it hastily. One
+of the British privates who seized hold of the staff
+was slashed to death, and the French recovered
+it. The fight round the Eagle went on for some
+minutes. In that time no fewer than seven
+French officers and sub-officers fell dead in defence
+of the Eagle. An eighth officer, Lieutenant
+Gazan, clung to the pole to the last,
+regardless of wounds that nearly hacked him to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_233">233</span>
+pieces. Finally the Eagle was torn from his
+grasp by Sergeant Masterton, at the end the sole
+unwounded survivor of the attacking British
+party. Gazan “survived miraculously,” and
+lived to be decorated by Napoleon for his devoted
+courage. Masterton seized the Eagle and
+kept it. So “the Eagle with the Golden
+Wreath” became a British trophy.</p>
+
+<p>From the crossing of the bayonets in the final
+charge to the taking of the Eagle, the <i lang="fr">mêlée</i> lasted
+about fifteen minutes.</p>
+
+<p>The remnant of the 8th were saved by a rally
+to the spot by the French 54th, after another
+regiment, the 47th, had attempted its rescue in
+vain. The 47th lost their Eagle in the <i lang="fr">mêlée</i>,
+but recovered it. “The man who had charge
+of it was obliged to throw it away, from excessive
+fatigue and a wound,” explains a British
+officer. The 8th lost at Barrosa their Colonel
+(Autié) and the Lieutenant-Colonel of the Second
+Battalion, killed; Vigo-Roussillon, of the First
+Battalion, wounded; and 17 other officers and
+934 of the rank and file killed or wounded.
+The <i lang="fr">Moniteur</i>, the official Paris newspaper under
+the Napoleonic <i lang="fr">régime</i>, in reporting the battle
+of April 5, referred to the loss of the Eagle in
+these terms: “A battalion of the 8th, having
+been charged in wood-covered ground, and the
+Eagle-bearer being killed, his Eagle has not been
+found since.”</p>
+
+<p>The battalion that fared so hardly had to pay<span class="pagenum" id="Page_234">234</span>
+the regulation penalty. Napoleon gave the 8th
+no other Eagle. He held rigidly to his rule,
+and set his face relentlessly against a second
+presentation. They must present him first with
+a standard taken on the battlefield from the
+enemy. But with Wellington’s men opposed
+to them to the end, the 8th got few chances in
+that direction. They had to fight without an
+Eagle to the close of the Peninsular War.</p>
+
+<p>Two days after Barrosa, when General Graham
+re-entered Cadiz with the Spanish army, “the
+Eagle with the Golden Wreath” was publicly
+paraded through the crowded streets, “between
+the regimental colours,” as the 87th marched to
+barracks, the church bells ringing triumphantly,
+and amid exultant shouts and cheers of the
+populace, and cries of “Long live Spain! Death
+to our oppressors!” At the barracks “we
+presented the Eagle to our gallant commander,”
+says one of the officers.</p>
+
+<p>The Eagle was then sent to England in the
+custody of the officer carrying General Graham’s
+despatch. Its capture is commemorated to
+this day by the Royal Irish Fusiliers, who
+wear “an Eagle with a Wreath of Laurel”
+as a regimental badge, while a similar Eagle
+is embroidered in gold on the regimental colour.
+Also, a representation of the wreathed Barrosa
+Eagle was granted later on as a special augmentation
+to the family arms of the officer who
+commanded the 87th in the battle, Major Hugh<span class="pagenum" id="Page_235">235</span>
+Gough, on his being raised to the Peerage while
+Commander-in-Chief in India after the first
+Sikh War. “The Aiglers” was always the
+regiment’s sobriquet after Barrosa among their
+comrades in Wellington’s army; a sobriquet
+that has endured since then in the form of “the
+Aigle-Takers,” although our modern recruits
+are said to prefer calling themselves “the Bird-Catchers.”<a id="FNanchor_25" href="#Footnote_25" class="fnanchor">25</a></p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">ONE OF THE PARIS WREATHS</div>
+
+<p>It was in this way that the Barrosa trophy
+Eagle came by its golden wreath. The decoration,
+as has been said, had nothing to do with
+Talavera.</p>
+
+<p>The wreath was one of those voted by the
+City of Paris to the regiments that had gone
+through the Jena and Polish frontier campaigns,
+the first of which was presented to the Imperial
+Guard. First of all, in the outburst of patriotic
+enthusiasm in France at the news of Jena, wreaths
+had been voted as decorations for the Eagles,
+by way of popular tribute to the regiments
+which had helped in dealing that staggering blow
+to the famous Prussian Army. After the crowning
+victory of Friedland which ended the war,
+in a fresh outburst of enthusiasm, golden wreaths
+were voted wholesale for the Eagles of all the
+corps that had taken part in the fighting that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_236">236</span>
+followed Jena, during the nine months of war,
+down to the final day of Friedland. It was
+a costly guerdon, and their proposed generosity
+staggered the Paris municipality when the estimate
+was presented. No fewer than 378 wreaths—according
+to the official return—had to be provided.
+But the vote had been carried by acclamation
+on its first proposal, and trumpeted
+all over France. Also, the Emperor had taken
+up with the idea warmly. The Paris authorities
+dared not back out, and had to go on with it in
+spite of the cost. They carried it out with so
+good a grace that, as the sequel, a suggestion
+came from the Tuileries that the Austerlitz
+battalions of the Grand Army which had not
+had the fortune to be in the Jena-Friedland
+campaign should receive wreaths as well, an
+Imperial hint that the authorities, shrinking
+from the extra expense, were so slow to fall in
+with, that in the end it had to be forced on them,
+by means of a bluntly worded letter through the
+Ministry of War. “Tell the Prefect of the
+Seine,” wrote Napoleon to the War Minister,
+“that I expect wreaths of gold, similar to those
+given for Jena and Friedland, to be provided on
+behalf of the City of Paris for all the regiments
+at Austerlitz!”</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">ACROSS GERMANY IN CARTS</div>
+
+<p>The 8th was presented with its wreath in
+Paris, while on the way to take part in the Peninsular
+War. It was one of the regiments of the
+First Corps of the Grand Army, which Napoleon<span class="pagenum" id="Page_237">237</span>
+hastily recalled from Germany in the spring of
+1808, and hurried across Europe to reinforce the
+troops in Spain on the first news of serious
+trouble being on foot in that quarter. The whole
+First Army Corps was recalled; starting from
+Berlin, where it had been quartered, and journeying
+by Magdeburg and Coblentz. Along the
+route the unfortunate German burgomasters
+and village authorities had to provide, not only
+provisions day by day, but transport vehicles
+for 30,000 soldiers; mostly farm-carts and wagons,
+each taking from four to sixteen men. The
+troops travelled by night and day, with only
+two stoppages of fifty minutes each in the
+twenty-four hours, for meals, and the authorities
+of the villages and towns named as halting-places
+were compelled to have hot food kept ready so
+that the men might fall to instantly on arrival.
+It was a journey the soldiers never forgot.
+The weather was rough and wet, the roads
+in places were almost impassable, and the carts
+continually broke down, in addition to which
+the peasant-drivers requisitioned for the conveyances
+deserted at every opportunity, usually
+going off at night with the horses after cutting
+the traces, leaving their wagon-loads of sleeping
+soldiers stranded by the roadside.</p>
+
+<p>The 8th received its wreath at the Barrier of
+Pantin, on the outskirts of Paris. It arrived
+with the Second Division of the corps, and the
+troops were met by the Prefect of the Seine and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_238">238</span>
+the Municipal Council in State, while Marshal
+Victor, the commander of the Army Corps, attended
+the ceremony in full-dress uniform. He
+replied to the Prefect’s complimentary address
+by declaring that “these golden crowns henceforward
+decorating the Eagles of the First Corps
+will to them ever be additional incentives to
+victory.” One by one the regiments passed
+before the Prefect, who hung round each Eagle’s
+neck “a wreath of gold, shaped as two branches
+of laurel.” A triumphal march into Paris and
+an open-air banquet to all ranks in the Tivoli
+Gardens, with free tickets to the theatres after
+it, wound up the day.</p>
+
+<p>All along the line of march through France
+to the Spanish frontier, banquets and elaborate
+festivities welcomed the regiments—and at the
+same time, it would appear, gave some of their
+entertainers more than they bargained for. The
+triumphal progress, from all accounts, proved
+such hard work for the ladies in the country
+towns, where public balls were in the programme
+every night, that at some places for the later
+comers—the 8th and other regiments in the
+Second Division of Marshal Victor’s corps—the
+balls had to be abandoned, “because the ladies
+were too tired to dance any more.” It was explained,
+with apologies, that they had practically
+been danced off their feet by the regiments
+of the First Division, which had preceded the
+Second, incessantly passing through during the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_239">239</span>
+previous three weeks, and that “most of the
+ladies, through sheer fatigue, had taken to their
+beds!”</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THEY DID NOT MEET AT TALAVERA</div>
+
+<p>At Talavera, the 8th, as part of a brigade of
+three regiments, had a passage of arms on the
+battlefield, first with the British 83rd; and then
+with the Guards; lastly with the 48th, before
+whose magnificent charge in the final phase of
+the fight they had to give ground. They did
+not meet the 87th Royal Irish Fusiliers at all
+in the battle.<a id="FNanchor_26" href="#Footnote_26" class="fnanchor">26</a></p>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_240">240</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX<br>
+
+<span class="subhead">OTHER EAGLES IN ENGLAND FROM BATTLEFIELDS OF SPAIN</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class="in0"><span class="firstword">Napoleon’s</span> Eagles made a second appearance
+before the London populace in the following
+year. That was on September 30, 1812, and
+the Horse Guards Parade was again the scene
+of the display—this time with more elaborate
+ceremonial, and with the added presence of yet
+greater personages. Queen Charlotte herself
+this time witnessed the reception ceremony, with
+four of the Princesses; and the Prince Regent
+in person, “mounted on a white charger,”
+attended, to be publicly done obeisance to by
+the humbled standards of the enemy. Four of
+his Royal brothers, the Dukes of Clarence, York,
+Cambridge, and Sussex, accompanied the Prince
+Regent. Only the poor old King, blind and
+insane, was absent of the Royal family, remaining
+in his seclusion at Windsor Castle.</p>
+
+<p>The Queen and Princesses watched the scene
+from the windows of the Levée Room at the
+Horse Guards, looking down over the Parade;
+the Prince Regent was on the ground and took
+the salute. The Eagles this time were five in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_241">241</span>
+number; and four French flags, one of exceptional
+interest, the garrison-standard of Badajoz,
+were with them in the procession.</p>
+
+<p>The military display was on the grandest
+scale possible; the <i lang="fr">ensemble</i> making up, as we
+are told, “a spectacle grand and impressive
+beyond anything ever beheld.” The First and
+Second Life Guards were present, “drawn up
+in a line reaching from the Foreign Office nearly
+to Carlton House,” with their bands in State
+dress and their standards. All three regiments
+of Foot Guards took part, with the State Colour
+of the First Guards, and three bands. Horse
+and Foot Artillery from Woolwich were also
+there; forming by themselves one side of the
+great hollow square which occupied the wide
+space of the ground, the scene of the reception
+of “the Eagle with the Golden Wreath.” Ninety
+grenadiers, drawn from the three regiments of
+Foot Guards, thirty from each, formed the
+trophy-escort, which, as before, accompanied
+the Eagles and captured standards round the
+square at a slow march—the five Eagles in advance
+by themselves, borne by as many Guards’
+sergeants between files of grenadiers with fixed
+bayonets.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE EAGLES ARE HUMBLED AGAIN</div>
+
+<p>Again the trophies of Napoleon were spared
+nothing in the humiliation that they had to
+undergo. Twice were they lowered to the dust
+before the Queen; twice to the Prince Regent;
+eight times before the standards of the Life<span class="pagenum" id="Page_242">242</span>
+Guards; three times before the standards of
+the Guards and the King’s Colour of the First
+Guards, “the immense concourse of spectators
+rending the air with their huzzas” every time
+the trophies went down. Then, as before, the
+trophies were paraded across Whitehall to the
+Chapel Royal, and solemnly “churched” and
+hung up there, before the Royal family and
+“all the Cabinet Ministers and the leading
+members of the nobility in London.”</p>
+
+<p>They were this time all Wellington’s trophies.
+Two of the Eagles were spoils from the battle
+of Salamanca—“dreadfully mutilated and disfigured
+in the conflict,” according to a newspaper
+reporter’s account, “one of them having lost
+its head, part of the neck, one leg, half the
+thunderbolt, and the distinctive number; the
+other without one leg and the thunderbolt.”
+Two had been taken in Madrid “in more perfect
+state and without their flags.” The last of the
+five had been “found on the way to Ciudad
+Rodrigo, in the bed of a river, dried up in summer,
+having been thrown away some months before
+during Masséna’s retreat.” The four Eagles
+which still bore distinctive numbers were, we are
+told, “those of the 22nd, 13th, and 51st and
+the 39th.” Of the standards, the garrison flag
+of Badajoz looked “like a sieve, a great part of
+it quite red with human blood”; the four other
+colours “were so mutilated that not a letter or
+device was legible.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_243">243</span></p>
+
+<p>How we came by the trophies so displayed in
+London on that Wednesday forenoon is our
+story.</p>
+
+<p>The two Salamanca Eagles were—and are,
+for they have a place to-day among our Chelsea
+Hospital trophies—mementoes of one of the most
+dramatic episodes of a battle in which there were
+many.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">WELLINGTON AND SALAMANCA</div>
+
+<p>Salamanca, it may be said incidentally—the
+battle, like Waterloo, was fought on a Sunday,
+on July 22, 1812—was, in Wellington’s own
+eyes, his <i lang="fr">chef d’œuvre</i>, his masterpiece, although
+it may be rather overlooked now perhaps by
+most of us and the world at large, eclipsed in
+the dazzling splendour of the last crowning
+victory of Waterloo. It was at Salamanca that
+Wellington, in the words of a French officer,
+speaking, of course, in general terms, “defeated
+40,000 men in forty minutes.” The victory was
+held in such estimation by Wellington himself
+that he selected it in preference to all his other
+victories to be displayed over again in a sham
+fight on the Plain of Saint-Denis in the presence
+of the three Allied Sovereigns during the occupation
+of Paris in 1815 after Waterloo. Of it
+he wrote at the time: “I never saw an army
+receive such a beating.”</p>
+
+<p>Upwards of 6,000 prisoners were taken, including
+one general and 136 other officers. Six
+thousand of the enemy, at the lowest computation,
+were left dead or wounded on the field<span class="pagenum" id="Page_244">244</span>
+of battle. Three French generals were killed
+and three wounded. Marshal Marmont himself,
+the enemy’s commander-in-chief, was among
+the wounded; grievously maimed by a bursting
+shell as he galloped to rally one of his broken
+columns. “Spurring furiously to the point of
+danger, he was struck by the fragment of a
+shell, which shattered his left arm and tore open
+his side.” Marmont bore the arm in a sling for
+the rest of his life. He was carried off the
+field under fire, on a stretcher made of a soldier’s
+great-coat with a couple of muskets thrust
+through the armholes to give it shape, under
+the escort of a squad of grenadiers. Eleven
+cannon—melted down at Woolwich Arsenal in
+1820 as a cheap way of making new field-guns
+for the British Army—with the two Eagles and
+six stand of colours, were the trophies of the
+day.</p>
+
+<p>The two Salamanca trophy Eagles at Chelsea
+Hospital are the spoils of the fiercest cavalry
+charge that British horsemen ever delivered
+on a battlefield; the death-ride—for 1,200 of
+Napoleon’s infantry—of the Heavy Brigade,
+which annihilated an entire French division in
+less than a quarter of an hour. It came about
+as one of the results of that opening false move
+on the part of the French commander which
+cost France in the end the loss of the battle.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">MARMONT’S FATAL BLUNDER</div>
+
+<p>Marmont, after a series of ably conducted
+manœuvres in the neighbourhood of Salamanca,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_245">245</span>
+had forced Wellington, on July 22, into a
+position so unfavourable that the British
+commander decided to retire towards the Portuguese
+frontier under cover of darkness during
+the following night. But at the last moment
+the French marshal overreached himself. Taking
+in the difficulties that confronted his opponent
+he attempted to anticipate him and cut him off
+from his base by barring the one line of retreat
+that was open to Wellington. In doing that,
+Marmont gave his game away. He rashly
+divided his force in the presence of the enemy,
+separating his left wing to a distance from the
+main body and marching off a whole division of
+infantry, cavalry, and artillery to occupy the
+road to Ciudad Rodrigo.</p>
+
+<p>The fault was flagrant, and Wellington seized
+eagerly at the chance all unexpectedly offered
+him. He was at breakfast when Marmont’s
+troops began their false move and the aide
+de camp whom he had posted on the look-out
+hurriedly came to him with the news. “I
+think they are extending to the left——” the
+young officer began. He did not finish the
+sentence.</p>
+
+<p>“The devil they are!” interposed Wellington
+hastily, with his mouth full. “Give me
+the glass!”</p>
+
+<p>He took it, and for nearly a minute scanned
+the movements of the enemy with fixed attention.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_246">246</span></p>
+
+<p>“By God!” he ejaculated abruptly as he
+lowered the glass. “That’ll do!”</p>
+
+<p>He turned to another aide de camp.</p>
+
+<p>“Ride off and tell Clinton and Leith to return
+to their former ground.” These were the
+generals commanding the Fifth and Sixth
+Divisions, on the right and right-centre of the
+British position. Then Wellington ordered up
+his horse. Closing his spy-glass with a snap,
+he turned with these words to his Spanish
+attaché, Colonel Alava: “Mon cher Alava,
+Marmont est perdu!” A moment later Wellington
+was on horseback and his staff also, all
+galloping off.</p>
+
+<p>Wellington grasped the meaning of Marmont’s
+move. He saw his chance of falling on
+in force and overpowering the detached French
+wing before help could reach it.</p>
+
+<p>He made his way as fast as his charger could
+carry him to the British Third Division—Picton’s
+men, temporarily commanded by
+Wellington’s brother-in-law, General Sir Edward
+Pakenham.</p>
+
+<p>“As he rode up to Pakenham,” says an officer
+whose regiment was close by, “every eye was
+turned on him. He looked paler than usual,
+but was quite unruffled in his manner, and as
+calm as if the battle to be fought was nothing
+more than an ordinary assemblage of troops for
+a field-day.”</p>
+
+<p>“Ned,” said Wellington, as he drew rein<span class="pagenum" id="Page_247">247</span>
+beside Pakenham, tapping him on the shoulder
+and pointing in the direction of the separated
+French column as its leading troops were beginning
+to move towards their distant position,
+“Ned, d’ye see those fellows on the hill? Throw
+your division in column, and at ’em and drive
+’em to the Devil!”</p>
+
+<p>“I will, my lord, by God!” was Pakenham’s
+laconic reply, and he turned away to give the
+necessary orders.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">A FURIOUS COUNTER-ATTACK</div>
+
+<p>The two Eagles were taken in the course of
+Pakenham’s attack, when the Third Division,
+with the Fifth advancing on one flank, was
+moving forward to meet the fierce counter-attack
+with which the enemy, after the first
+collision, attempted to make amends for their
+commander’s blunder.</p>
+
+<p>“We were assailed,” describes a British officer
+in the Third Division, “by a multitude who,
+reinforced, again rallied and turned upon us
+with fury. The peals of musketry along the
+centre continued without intermission, the smoke
+was so thick that nothing to our left was distinguishable;
+some men of the Fifth Division
+got intermingled with ours; the dry grass was
+set on fire by the numerous cartridge-papers
+that strewed the battlefield; the air was scorching;
+and the smoke rolling onwards in huge
+volumes, nearly suffocated us.”</p>
+
+<p>In the midst of the din and turmoil the Heavy
+Cavalry came suddenly on the scene. “A loud<span class="pagenum" id="Page_248">248</span>
+cheering was heard in our rear; the Brigade
+half turned round, supposing themselves about
+to be attacked by the French cavalry. A few
+seconds passed, the trampling of horses was
+heard, the smoke cleared away, and the Heavy
+Brigade of Le Marchant was seen coming forward
+in line at a canter. ‘Open right and left!’
+was an order quickly obeyed; the line opened,
+and the cavalry passed through the intervals,
+and, forming rapidly in our front, prepared for
+their work.”</p>
+
+<p>Catastrophe for the French assailants followed
+at once; swift, overwhelming, irremediable.
+The enemy in front had practically ceased to
+exist within the next twelve minutes. The
+entire French division and its supporting troops
+were struck down and shattered; broken to
+fragments and annihilated.</p>
+
+<p>There was a “whirling cloud of dust, moving
+swiftly forward and carrying 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 out at full speed, and
+the next instant 1,200 French infantry, formed
+in several lines, were trampled down with
+terrible clangour and tumult. Bewildered and
+blinded they cast away their arms and ran
+through the openings of the British squadron,
+stooping and demanding quarter, while the
+dragoons, big men on big horses, rode on hard,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_249">249</span>
+smiting with their long, glittering swords in
+uncontrollable power, and the Third Division,
+following at speed, shouted as the French
+masses fell in succession before this dreadful
+charge.”</p>
+
+<p>So Napier describes the onset.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">CHARGING DOWN AT FULL GALLOP</div>
+
+<p>Startled and aghast at what they saw coming
+at them, the French attempted hastily to form
+squares. But Le Marchant’s impetuous squadrons
+were too quick for them. They came
+swooping down, the troopers galloping their
+hardest, with loosened reins, all racing forward,
+charging down with the irresistible sweep of
+an avalanche, and crashed into the midst of
+the ill-fated infantrymen before the squares
+could be formed.</p>
+
+<p>Down on the enemy the cavalry thundered,
+1,200 flashing British sabres. Three of the finest
+regiments of the British Army formed the
+brigade—the 3rd Dragoons, the “King’s Own”;
+the 4th, “Queen’s Own”; the 5th Dragoon
+Guards—strong and burly men on big-boned
+horses, and with sharp-edged swords. “<i lang="la">Nec
+aspera terrent</i>” was—and is—the fearless motto
+of the gallant “King’s Own,” who showed the
+way; and they flinched at nothing that day.
+“<i lang="la">Vestigia nulla retrorsum</i>” was—and is—the
+motto of the 5th, who closed the column; and
+dead and wounded and prisoners were the vestiges
+they left in rear on that stricken field.</p>
+
+<p>General Edward Le Marchant, a daring and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_250">250</span>
+capable soldier—“a most noble officer,” was
+what Wellington called him—led them.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">FOUR REGIMENTS CUT TO PIECES</div>
+
+<p>A French regiment a little in advance, the
+ill-fated 62nd of the Line, was the first to face
+the British, and to go down. They did not
+attempt to form square. They had, indeed, no
+time to do so. Yet they were in a formation
+sufficiently formidable. The 62nd was a regiment
+of three battalions, and stood formed up
+in a column of half-battalions, presenting six
+successive lines closely massed one behind the
+other. Their front ranks opened fire just before
+the leading horsemen reached them, but it did
+not check the British onset even for a moment.
+The cavalry bore vigorously forward at a gallop
+and burst into and through their column, riding
+it down on the spot. Nearly the whole regiment
+was killed, wounded, or taken; leaving the
+broken remnants to be carried off as prisoners
+by the infantry of the Third Division as these
+raced up in rear, clearing the ground before
+them.</p>
+
+<p>The 62nd were disposed of by the cavalry in
+less than two minutes. According to French
+official returns, the unlucky regiment, out of a
+total strength that morning of 2,800 of all ranks
+in its three battalions, lost 20 officers and
+1,100 men in killed alone; the survivors who
+escaped capture not being sufficient to form half
+a battalion.</p>
+
+<p>Cheering triumphantly, the charging squadrons<span class="pagenum" id="Page_251">251</span>
+dashed on. They came full tilt on a
+second French regiment, the 22nd, catching it
+in the act of forming square. The front face
+of the square was already drawn up and met
+the troopers with a hasty volley which brought
+down some of the men and horses. But that
+made little difference. The next moment the
+cavalry were on them. The mass of the square
+in rear made but a weak effort at resistance.
+They swayed back, broke their ranks, and fell
+apart in utter confusion. Slashed down right
+and left, as had been the case with the 62nd,
+in little more than a minute only groups of
+fugitives were left, to be made prisoners by the
+British infantry, following in rear of the
+horsemen.</p>
+
+<p>The cavalry raced on then to attack a third
+French regiment. In turn it attempted to make
+a stand, but only to be dealt with in like manner.
+It, too, was caught before its square could be
+formed, and was ridden down.</p>
+
+<p>Yet another French battalion confronted the
+British troopers after that. It had had time to
+take advantage of a small copse, an open wood
+of evergreen oaks, where it formed its ranks
+in <i lang="fr">colonne serrée</i>, to await attack, and make a
+stand. “The men reserved their fire with much
+coolness, until the cavalry came within twenty
+yards. Then they poured it in on the concentrated
+mass of men and horses with deadly
+effect. Nearly a third of the dragoons came to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_252">252</span>
+the ground, but the remainder had sufficient
+command of their horses to dash forward. They
+succeeded in breaking the French ranks and dispersing
+them in utter confusion over the field.”</p>
+
+<p>All the time the infantry in rear were racing
+on with exultant cheers, finishing off the horsemen’s
+work as fast as they came up. It was an
+easy task. Further fight had been scared out
+of the French under the stress of the fearful
+experience they had gone through. “Such as
+got away from the sabres of the horsemen,” says
+one of the British officers, “sought safety
+amongst the ranks of our infantry; and, scrambling
+under their horses, ran to us for protection,
+like men who, having escaped the first shock of
+a wreck, will cling to any broken spar, no matter
+how little to be depended on. Hundreds of beings,
+frightfully disfigured, in whom the human face
+and form were almost obliterated—black with
+dust, worn down with fatigue, and covered with
+sabre-cuts and blood—threw themselves among
+us for safety. Not a man was bayoneted—not
+one even molested or plundered. The invincible
+old Third on this day surpassed themselves; for
+they not only defeated their terrible enemies in
+a fair stand-up fight, but saved them when total
+annihilation seemed the only thing.”</p>
+
+<p>The two Salamanca Eagles were taken now.
+They fell to two infantry officers as their actual
+captors: one to an officer of a regiment of the
+Third Division, and the other to an officer of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_253">253</span>
+Fifth Division, which had come into the fight,
+and were following the cavalry, partly mingled
+with Pakenham’s men.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">TAKEN IN HAND-TO-HAND FIGHT</div>
+
+<p>The first Eagle—that of the hapless French
+62nd, whose fate has been told—fell to Lieutenant
+Pierce of the 44th, a regiment in the
+Fifth Division. He came on the Eagle-bearer
+while in the act of unscrewing the Eagle from its
+pole in order to hide it under his long overcoat
+and get away with it. Pierce sprang on the
+Frenchman, and tussled with him for the Eagle.
+The second Porte-Aigle joined in the fight, whereupon
+three men of the 44th ran to their officer’s
+assistance. A third Frenchman, a private, added
+himself to the combatants, and was in the act
+of bayoneting the British lieutenant, when one
+of the men of the 44th, Private Finlay, shot him
+through the head and saved the officer’s life.
+Both the Porte-Aigles were killed a moment later—one
+by Lieutenant Pierce, who snatched the
+Eagle from its dead bearer’s hands. In his
+excitement over the prize Pierce rewarded the
+privates who had helped him by emptying his
+pockets on the spot, and dividing what money
+he had on him amongst them—twenty dollars.
+A sergeant’s halberd was then procured, on
+which the Eagle was stuck and carried triumphantly
+through the remainder of the battle.
+Lieutenant Pierce presented it next morning to
+General Leith, the Commander of the Fifth
+Division, who directed him to carry it to Wellington.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_254">254</span>
+In honour of the exploit the 44th, now
+the Essex Regiment, bear the badge of a Napoleonic
+Eagle on the regimental colour, and the
+officers wear a similar badge on their mess-jackets.</p>
+
+<p>The second Eagle taken was that of the 22nd
+of the Line. It was captured by a British
+officer of the 30th, Ensign Pratt, attached for
+duty to Major Cruikshank’s 7th Portuguese, a
+Light Infantry (or Caçadores) battalion, serving
+with the Third Division. He took it to General
+Pakenham, whose mounted orderly displayed
+the Eagle of the 22nd publicly after the battle,
+“carrying it about wherever the general went for
+the next two days.”</p>
+
+<p>Two more Eagles, it was widely reported in
+the Army, came into the possession of other
+regiments of the Third and Fifth Divisions. One
+of them is said to have “wanted its head and
+number”; but what became of them is unknown.
+Possibly the existence of these particular
+trophies was merely camp gossip. According
+to one story, an officer picked up one of
+the Eagles during the battle and “carried it
+about in his cap for some days.” No Eagles,
+however, reached head-quarters after Salamanca
+except those of the 62nd and 22nd, which in due
+course were sent to England.<a id="FNanchor_27" href="#Footnote_27" class="fnanchor">27</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_255">255</span></p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">ONE THAT JUST ESCAPED</div>
+
+<p>One Eagle narrowly evaded capture at the
+hands of the Hanoverian Dragoons of the King’s
+German Legion in the pursuit after Salamanca.
+It escaped—to find its way to Chelsea Hospital
+on a later day, as the famous trophy of our own
+1st Dragoons, the “Royals,” at Waterloo. What
+took place when the Eagle of the 105th of the
+Line so nearly fell into the enemy’s hands after
+Salamanca is a story that in its incidents stands
+by itself.</p>
+
+<p>General Anson’s cavalry brigade, made up of
+British Light Dragoons and the Hanoverians,
+was sent in chase to follow and break up the wreck
+of the defeated army. It came upon the French
+rearguard in the act of taking post at a place
+called Garcia Hernandez. In front were several
+squadrons of cavalry; in rear the 105th of the
+Line. The three battalions of the regiment<span class="pagenum" id="Page_256">256</span>
+were moving in column, with guns in the intervals.
+Not seeing the French infantry and guns
+at first, owing to an intervening ridge, Anson
+rode for the cavalry and drove them in. “Their
+squadrons fled from Anson’s troopers, abandoning
+three battalions of infantry, who in separate
+columns were making up a hollow slope, hoping
+to gain the crest of some heights before the pursuing
+cavalry could fall on, and the two foremost
+did reach higher ground, and there formed in
+squares.” The squares at once opened fire on
+the horsemen, and for a moment checked them.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">A SQUARE CHARGED AND BROKEN</div>
+
+<p>The Hanoverian Dragoons were the nearest
+of the pursuers to the rearmost of the French
+squares, and there was no way to ride past without
+exposing their flank at close range. Captain
+Von Decken, who was leading the dragoons,
+on the spur of the moment took the daring
+decision to attack the square with the single
+squadron he had with him, then and there. Without
+an instant’s hesitation the gallant captain
+charged, regardless of the fierce fusillade that
+met him at once, from which his men went down
+all round. They dropped fast under fire. By
+twos, by threes, by tens, all round they fell;
+yet the rest of them, surmounting the difficulties
+of the ground, hurled themselves in a mass on
+the column and went clean through it.</p>
+
+<p>The gallant Von Decken was among the first
+to go down, shot dead a hundred yards from
+the square. But a leader no less heroic was at<span class="pagenum" id="Page_257">257</span>
+hand. Instantly Captain Von Uslar Gleichen,
+in charge of the left troop, dashed to the front.
+He rode out to the head of the squadron, inciting
+his men by voice and gesture and example.
+Another French volley smote hard on the
+squadron, but the intrepid troopers galloped
+through it, and, bringing up their right flank,
+swept on towards the enemy’s bayonets, making
+to attack the square on two sides. The two
+foremost ranks of the French were on the knee
+with bayonets to the front, presenting a deadly
+double row of steel. In rear the steady muskets
+of four standing ranks were levelled at the horsemen.
+The dragoons pressed on close up, and some
+were trying, in vain, to beat aside the bayonets
+before them, and make a gap through, when an
+accident at the critical moment gave the opportunity.
+A shot from the kneeling ranks, apparently
+fired unintentionally, as it is said, killed a
+horse, and caused it with its rider to fall forward,
+right across and on top of the bayonets. Thus a
+lane was unexpectedly laid open to the cavalry.
+They seized the chance instantly and crowded
+in through. The square was broken. It was
+cleft apart: its ranks were scattered and dispersed.
+All was over in a few moments. Within
+three minutes the entire battalion had been either
+cut down under the slaughtering swords of the
+dragoons or had been made prisoners.</p>
+
+<p>Immediately on that another Hanoverian
+captain, Von Reitzenstein, came sweeping by<span class="pagenum" id="Page_258">258</span>
+with the second squadron, riding for the second
+French square. These met the charge with a
+bold front and rapid volley, but their <i lang="fr">moral</i>
+had been shaken by the startling and horrible
+scene they had just beheld. The front face of
+the second square gave way as the horsemen got
+close, and four-fifths of that battalion were either
+sabred on the spot or made prisoners.</p>
+
+<p>There was yet, near by, the third battalion in
+its square. Its numbers had been added to by
+such fugitive survivors from the first and second
+squares as had been able to reach the place and
+get inside. The third squadron of the Dragoons
+dealt with the third square in the same way,
+riding boldly at it, and breaking in with deadly
+results, as before.</p>
+
+<p>How the Eagle of the 105th was saved—it was
+with the first battalion in the square first broken—is
+not on record. It did, however, somehow,
+evade capture—hidden hastily perhaps beneath
+the coat of somebody in the handful of men
+who got away in the <i lang="fr">mêlée</i>. Only the broken
+Eagle-pole was left, to be picked up among
+the dead after the fight:</p>
+
+<p>Described a British officer who went over
+the ground after the fight:</p>
+
+<p>“The contest ended in a dreadful massacre
+of the French infantry. The 105th bravely
+stood their ground, but the ponderous weight
+of the heavy cavalry broke down all resistance;
+and arms lopped off, heads cloven to the spine,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_259">259</span>
+or gashes across the breast and shoulders showed
+the fearful encounter that had taken place.”</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">SPOILS TAKEN IN ANOTHER WAY</div>
+
+<p>The third of the trophy Eagles paraded in
+London before the Prince Regent was that of
+Napoleon’s 39th of the Line. It had been
+picked up in the dried-up bed of the river Ceira,
+one of the tributaries of the Douro. Apparently
+the Eagle had been dropped, owing to the fall
+of its bearer during the night action of Foz
+d’Aronce on June 15, 1811, when Ney’s corps
+of Masséna’s army, then retreating from Torres
+Vedras, was roughly handled and driven across
+the river by Wellington’s Third and Light
+Divisions.</p>
+
+<p>The fourth and fifth of the Eagles were found
+at Madrid on Wellington’s occupation of the
+city after Salamanca—stored away in the
+French arsenal and army dépôt there, to which
+uses the ancient Royal Palace of the Buen
+Retiro, just outside the walls of Madrid, had
+been converted.<a id="FNanchor_28" href="#Footnote_28" class="fnanchor">28</a> Seventeen hundred men held
+the Retiro, and the approaches to the arsenal
+had been fortified by order of Napoleon, but
+the garrison surrendered without firing a shot.
+They gave up to the victors 180 brass cannon,
+900 barrels of powder, 20,000 stand of arms,
+muskets and bayonets, together with the Eagles
+of the 13th and 51st of the Line, which had been<span class="pagenum" id="Page_260">260</span>
+laid up at the Retiro for safe custody while the
+two regiments were operating in a wild part of
+the country against the Spanish guerrillas.<a id="FNanchor_29" href="#Footnote_29" class="fnanchor">29</a></p>
+
+<p>The last Eagles taken by Wellington in the
+Peninsular War came into our hands in the
+battles of the Pyrenees.<a id="FNanchor_30" href="#Footnote_30" class="fnanchor">30</a> Neither of them is
+now in existence. One was taken by our 28th
+in the combat of the Pass of Maya. The 28th,
+supporting the 92nd Highlanders in the fighting,
+overwhelmed with a series of fierce volleys an
+unfortunate French regiment, which was afterwards
+discovered to be the French 28th—a
+curious coincidence. The Eagle of the 28th,
+the senior corps of its brigade, was found on the
+battlefield, and was brought to England and
+hung in the Chapel Royal, Whitehall. It disappeared
+from there in circumstances already
+related. The second French Eagle was that
+of the 52nd of the Line, presented by Wellington,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_261">261</span>
+as has been told, to the Spanish Cortes.
+That also has since been entirely lost sight of.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">NAPOLEON’S ORDER OF RECALL</div>
+
+<p>This also may be added. Early in 1813 a
+special order was issued by Napoleon to the
+army in Spain requiring the Eagles of most of
+the regiments to be sent back to France. Napoleon
+at that time was in Paris, engaged in getting
+together a new Grand Army to replace that
+destroyed in Russia. The regiments in Spain,
+he said, would be so weakened by the intended
+withdrawal of their third, fourth, and fifth
+battalions (which he was recalling in order to
+send them to Germany for the coming campaign
+there), that the Eagles—in charge of the first
+battalions which were remaining in Spain—would
+be exposed to undue risk. “In future,” he wrote,
+“there will in Spain be only one Eagle to each
+brigade, that of the senior regiment of the brigade.”
+The Eagles withdrawn from Spain,
+added the order, would “in the end rejoin the
+battalions with the Grand Army in Germany,
+as soon as these had been reconstituted afresh
+as regiments, with a sufficient force of men to
+ensure the safety of the Eagles.” All the cavalry
+Eagles were recalled: “No regiment of Cavalry
+in Spain is to retain its Eagle. Those who have
+not done so are immediately to send theirs to
+the dépôt.”</p>
+
+<p>It was due to this order mainly that at
+Vittoria, after the overwhelming rout of the
+French army, only one Eagle-pole—with its<span class="pagenum" id="Page_262">262</span>
+Eagle gone—fell into British hands, although
+there had been on the field upwards of 70,000
+French soldiers (of whom 55,000 were infantry),
+and the French lost everything—in the words
+of one of their own generals (Gazan), “all their
+equipages, all their guns, all their treasure, all
+their stores, all their papers.”<a id="FNanchor_31" href="#Footnote_31" class="fnanchor">31</a></p>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_263">263</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X<br>
+
+<span class="subhead">IN THE HOUR OF DARKEST DISASTER</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<h3 id="toclink_263"><span class="smcap">After Moscow: How the Eagles faced their Fate</span></h3>
+
+<p class="in0"><span class="firstword">There</span> are seventy-five standards of Napoleon’s
+Grand Army of 1812 now in Russia, trophies of
+the Moscow disaster. Rather more than half
+of the number are Eagles. The remainder of
+the trophies are battalion and cavalry flags; some
+French, some the ensigns of allied contingents
+and the troops of vassal states of the Napoleonic
+Empire, compelled to take a part in the campaign.
+All the European armies of the period are
+represented among the trophies: green and
+white Saxon flags; blue and white Bavarian
+flags; violet and white Polish ensigns; Spanish,
+Dutch, and Portuguese colours; Swiss flags;
+Westphalian and Baden flags of the Confederation
+of the Rhine; the red and black of Würtemburg;
+the yellow and black of Austria; the white
+and black of Prussia; the green, white, and red
+tricolor of Italy.</p>
+
+<p>They are preserved at St. Petersburg, in the
+Kazan Cathedral and in the Cathedral of St.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_264">264</span>
+Peter and St. Paul. Those in the Kazan Cathedral
+are grouped over and round the tomb of the
+septuagenarian hero, Kutusoff, who lies buried
+on the spot where he knelt in prayer before
+setting out to take command as generalissimo
+of the national army. Near by, suspended
+against the pillars, are the marshal’s bâton of
+Davout, and the keys of Hamburg, Leipsic,
+Dresden, Rheims, Breda, and Utrecht, similarly
+spoils of the Napoleonic war.<a id="FNanchor_32" href="#Footnote_32" class="fnanchor">32</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_265">265</span></p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">MOST OF THE EAGLES GOT THROUGH</div>
+
+<p>The actual Eagle trophies number all told
+between forty and fifty: less than a third of the
+total array of Eagles that crossed the Niemen at
+the head of their regiments on the outbreak of
+the war. The majority of the Eagles of the
+Grand Army were saved from falling into the
+hands of the Russians through the devoted
+heroism of those responsible for their safe-keeping
+amid the horrors of the retreat. Of those at St.
+Petersburg, not more than half at most were
+taken in actual combat, and they were only<span class="pagenum" id="Page_266">266</span>
+yielded up by their bearers with life, being picked
+up from among the dead bodies, and carried off
+by the Russians on going over the field after the
+fight was over. Five Eagles only were surrendered
+by capitulation. The others were
+brought in by the Cossacks, who came upon them
+while prowling in rear of the retreating army.
+They were found, some in hollow trees, where
+their despairing bearers had tried to conceal
+them; some in holes dug with bayonets in the
+frozen ground underneath the snow. Others<span class="pagenum" id="Page_267">267</span>
+were dragged to light, broken from their staves,
+from beneath the coats or from the knapsacks
+of officers and men, who had fallen by the way at
+night and been frozen to death, during the final
+stage of the retreat between Wilna and the
+Niemen. It is in remembrance of how, to the
+last, during the Moscow retreat, in many a dark
+and hopeless hour, there yet remained detachments
+of devoted men, the last remnants of
+regiments, at all times ready to stand at bay
+and sacrifice themselves for the honour of their
+Eagles, amidst hordes of disorganised fugitives
+all round—in remembrance of that, the army
+of modern France commemorates on the colours
+of certain regiments, as representing corps that
+bore the same numbers in Napoleon’s Grand
+Army in Russia, the names, among others,
+of “Marojaroslav,” “Polotz,” “Wiasma,”
+“Krasnoi,” “La Berezène,” defeats and disasters
+though these were.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">WHAT FRANCE REMEMBERS TO-DAY</div>
+
+<p>The Eagles were under fire for the first time in
+Russia on July 17, in the attack on Smolensk on
+the Dnieper, the ancient Lithuanian capital,
+where took place the first important battle of the
+war. There the Eagles of Ney’s and Davout’s
+corps did their part in inciting the men to add
+fresh laurels to the fame of their regiments;
+ever prominent in the attack, leading charge after
+charge as the columns made repeated efforts to
+storm the fortified suburbs and lofty ramparts
+of the citadel. The soldiers did all that intrepidity<span class="pagenum" id="Page_268">268</span>
+and desperate valour might attempt,
+but in vain. No valour could prevail against the
+stubborn endurance of the Russians, who also
+occupied a strongly walled position that was
+practically impregnable. The fierce contest
+went on all through a whole day, until nightfall,
+and then, under cover of darkness, the defenders
+silently drew off and retreated beyond the city,
+leaving Smolensk in flames. No fewer than
+15,000 French and 10,000 Russians fell in the
+merciless encounter.</p>
+
+<p>Next morning there followed a spectacle
+hardly ever perhaps paralleled: the march of
+the Grand Army through the streets between the
+still blazing houses, “the martial columns advancing
+in the finest order to the sound of military
+music.” “We traversed between furnaces,”
+as an officer puts it, “tramping over the hot and
+smouldering ashes, in all the pomp of military
+splendour, bands playing and each Eagle leading
+its men.”</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">WON ON THE BATTLEFIELD</div>
+
+<p>At Smolensk one regiment won its Eagle, which
+Napoleon presented at five o’clock in the morning
+on July 19, before the paraded battalions of
+Davout’s corps. It was the 127th of the Line;
+a regiment, it is curious to note, enrolled a few
+months before, from former Hanoverian subjects
+of our own King George the Third, and commanded
+by French officers as a regular corps of
+the French Line. By Napoleon’s latest ordinance,
+issued just before the Emperor quitted<span class="pagenum" id="Page_269">269</span>
+Paris in May, the regiments newly raised for the
+Russian War, of which there were several, were
+in each case to win their Eagles on the battlefield.
+The Eagle for each regiment was to be
+provided in advance, but would be held back,
+locked up in the regimental chest, until it “should
+be won by distinguished conduct.” The 127th
+won their Eagle at Smolensk, their brilliant
+service being specially brought before Napoleon
+by Marshal Davout, who, of his own initiative,
+claimed the Eagle for them from Napoleon.
+The regiment bore it with distinction through
+the hottest of the fighting at Borodino, carried
+it all through the disastrous retreat from Moscow,
+and preserved it to the end to go through the
+later campaign in Germany, and face the enemy
+after that in the last stand before Paris in 1814.
+The Eagle was eventually destroyed by order of
+the restored Bourbon Government.</p>
+
+<p>The second great battle-day of the Eagles in
+the Russian War was at Borodino, on September
+7. There a quarter of a million and
+more combatants faced each other: on one
+side, 132,000 Russians with 640 guns; on the
+other, 133,000 French with 590 guns. The
+battle of Borodino was perhaps the most sanguinary
+and the most obstinately contested in
+history. The opening shots were fired at sunrise.
+When at sunset both sides drew sullenly
+apart, exhausted after twelve hours of carnage,
+neither army was victorious. Each held the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_270">270</span>
+ground on which it had begun the battle;
+25,000 men lay dead on the field, and 68,000
+more lay wounded, an appalling massacre that
+staggered even Napoleon.</p>
+
+<p>Amidst the ferocious savagery of the hand-to-hand
+fighting that characterised Borodino all
+over the field, many of the Eagles were in
+desperate peril. Several were cut off in the
+terrible havoc that the ferocious Russian counter-charges
+wrought in the French ranks, and were
+only saved by the stern fortitude of the soldiers,
+fighting at times back to back round the Eagles,
+keeping off the enemy with bayonet thrusts till
+help should come. In one part of the field the
+9th of the Line was isolated and for a time broken
+up and scattered. The Eagle-bearer was cut off
+by himself and surrounded. He saved the
+Eagle, as he fell wounded. “Amidst the confusion,
+wounded by two bayonet thrusts, I fell,
+but I was able to make an effort to prevent the
+Eagle falling into the hands of the enemy. Some
+of them rushed at me and closed round, but,
+getting to my feet, I managed to fling the Eagle,
+staff and all, over their heads towards some of
+our men, whom I had caught sight of, fortunately
+near by, trying to charge through and rescue the
+Eagle. This was all I could do before I fell
+again and was made prisoner.” The brave
+fellow returned to France two years later, at the
+Peace of 1814, and made his way to the regimental
+dépôt, where he found barely twenty of his comrades<span class="pagenum" id="Page_271">271</span>
+at Borodino left. The rest had succumbed
+during the retreat from Moscow. The
+survivors had brought back the Eagle to France;
+only, however, to have to give it up to the new
+Minister of War for destruction.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">TWO EAGLES JUST SAVED</div>
+
+<p>The 18th of the Line, broken in a Russian
+counter-attack, after storming one of the Russian
+redoubts erected to defend part of the position,
+rallied with their Eagle in their midst and held
+their ground in spite of repeated attacks until
+help could get through to them. At the roll-call
+next morning, 40 officers out of 50, and
+800 men out of 2,000 were reported as missing;
+left dead or wounded on the field. Another
+regiment lost its colonel and half one battalion
+dead on the field; the Eagle-Guard were all
+shot down or bayoneted round the Eagle, which
+in the end was saved and brought out of the
+battle by a corporal, who was awarded a commission
+by Napoleon in the presence of the
+remains of the regiment next day. The Eagle
+of the 61st of the Line again was only kept out
+of Russian hands by the devotion of the men
+round it. Napoleon rode past the regiment next
+day while being paraded for the roll to be called.
+Only two battalions were there, and he asked
+the colonel where the third battalion was. “It
+is in the redoubt, Sire!” was the officer’s reply,
+pointing in the direction of the Great Redoubt,
+round which some of the hardest fighting of the
+day had taken place. The battalion had literally<span class="pagenum" id="Page_272">272</span>
+been annihilated: not an officer or a man
+of the 1,100 in the third battalion of the 61st
+had returned from the fight.</p>
+
+<p>A regiment of Cuirassiers lost its Eagle at
+Borodino: the Eagle had disappeared in the
+midst of a fierce <i lang="fr">mêlée</i>, in which the Eagle-bearer
+had gone down. The loss was not discovered
+till later. All, however, refused to believe that
+it had been captured: that was incredible. The
+dead Eagle-bearer’s body was found after the
+battle, but no Eagle was there. Overwhelmed
+with shame, the regiment had to admit that the
+impossible had happened, and during the weeks
+that they were at Moscow “they remained
+plunged in a profound dolour.” The Eagle
+reappeared in an extraordinary way. In the
+retreat, when passing the scene of the battle,
+a ghastly and horrible spectacle with its unburied
+corpses and the carcasses of horses strewn
+thickly and heaped up all over the field, a sudden
+thought struck one of the officers. Late that
+night, he and a brother officer, taking the risk
+of capture by Cossacks on the prowl in rear
+of the retreating army, rode back and found
+their way by moonlight to where the Cuirassiers
+had had their fight and the Eagle-bearer had
+fallen. They found the Eagle inside the carcass
+of the Eagle-bearer’s horse. It had been thrust in
+there by the dying Eagle-bearer through the gaping
+wound that had killed the horse, as the only
+means to conceal it in the midst of the enemy.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_273">273</span></p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">HOW THE EAGLES ENTERED MOSCOW</div>
+
+<p>The Eagles made their last triumphant entry
+into a conquered capital at Moscow on September
+14, the Eagle of the Old Guard leading
+the way at the head of the grenadiers of the
+Guard, all wearing for the day their full-dress
+parade uniform. As has been said, every officer
+and soldier of the Guard, by Napoleon’s standing
+order, carried a suit of full-dress uniform in
+his kit or knapsack on campaign in readiness
+for such occasions—“en tenue de parade comme
+si elle eut défiler au Carrousel.” They had
+marched like that with music and full military
+pomp twice through Vienna, and through the
+streets of Berlin and Madrid; but there was at
+Moscow a disconcerting and ominous difference,
+both in their surroundings and in the reception
+that they met. Elsewhere, alike in Vienna,
+Berlin, and Madrid, the parade march of the
+victorious Eagles passed through densely crowded
+streets of onlookers, silently gazing with dejected
+mien at the scene. At Moscow not a
+soul was in the streets, at the windows, anywhere;
+on every side were emptiness and desolation.
+The inhabitants had fled the city, and
+only deserted houses remained. The first incendiary
+fires at Moscow broke out at midnight,
+within twelve hours of Napoleon taking up his
+residence in the Kremlin.</p>
+
+<p>The spell after that was broken. Henceforward
+victory deserted the Eagles; the hour
+of fate was at hand for Napoleon and the Grand<span class="pagenum" id="Page_274">274</span>
+Army. The Fortune of War, indeed, turned
+against the Eagles even before Napoleon had
+quitted Moscow.</p>
+
+<p>Early on October 18, Napoleon, while at
+breakfast in the Kremlin, suddenly heard distant
+cannonading away to the south. He learned
+what had happened that afternoon while holding
+a review of the Italian Royal Guard. “We
+hastily regained our quarters, packed up our
+parade-uniforms, put on our service kit ...
+and to the sound of our drums and bands
+threaded our way through the streets of Moscow
+at five in the afternoon.” During the past five
+weeks, while all had been outwardly quiet, the
+Russian armies had been manœvring to close in
+along the only road of retreat open to Napoleon.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE FIRST SENT TO THE CZAR</div>
+
+<p>The nearest of the Russian armies, concentrated
+to the south-west of Moscow, struck the
+first blow on October 18 at daybreak, by surprising
+Murat’s cavalry camp near Vinkovo.
+The results to the French were disastrous. Two
+thousand of Murat’s men were killed and as many
+more were taken prisoners. Between thirty and
+forty guns were lost, and Murat’s personal camp-baggage
+train, which included “his silver canteens
+and cooking utensils, in which cats’ and horse flesh
+were found prepared for food”—a discovery that
+opened the eyes of the Russians to the precarious
+position of affairs in Napoleon’s army. Murat
+himself, according to one story, “rode off on
+the first alarm in his shirt.” He only got away,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_275">275</span>
+according to another, by cutting his way through
+the Russians sword in hand, at the head of his
+personal escort of carabineers. Two Eagles were
+spoils of the surprise; the first to fall into Russian
+hands in the war. They were lost in the
+general scrimmage, their bearers being sabred
+at the outset of the Russian onslaught. The
+Eagles were at once sent off to St. Petersburg
+to be presented to the Czar Alexander.</p>
+
+<p>On the other hand nine Eagles were saved,
+their escorts fighting their way successfully
+through the Russians.</p>
+
+<p>Many stories are recorded in memoirs of survivors
+of the Grand Army of heroic endeavours
+made repeatedly by officers and men to save
+their Eagles from the enemy amid the disasters
+and horrors of the retreat. Their devotion and
+self-sacrifice had their reward in the preservation
+of seven Eagles in every ten.</p>
+
+<p>Two Eagles were lost fourteen days after
+leaving Moscow, in the disastrous battle at
+Wiasma on November 2, halfway on the road
+back to Smolensk, where the advanced columns
+of the pursuing Russians attacked and all but
+cut the retreating French army in two. The
+rearguard of the Grand Army, Marshal Davout’s
+corps, with the Italian corps of the Viceroy
+Eugène Beauharnais, was overpowered and
+driven in and broken up; crushed under the
+overpowering artillery fire of the Russians. They
+left behind 6,000 dead, 2,000 prisoners, and 27<span class="pagenum" id="Page_276">276</span>
+guns. Two Eagles were taken, their regiments
+being virtually annihilated, but twenty-one were
+saved. They were safeguarded through the rout
+by groups of brave-hearted officers and men,
+who beat off the rushes made at them by the
+Russian cavalry and the Cossacks. They fought
+their way through until they met Ney’s troops,
+who had heard the firing and turned back,
+arriving in time to stem and check the Russian
+pursuit and enable what was left of the two
+shattered army corps to rally under their protection.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">“WE HAVE DONE OUR DUTY!”</div>
+
+<p>One infantry regiment at Wiasma perished on
+the battlefield to a man, but saved its Eagle.
+It was the rearmost of all, and was isolated
+and surrounded beyond reach of help. In vain
+its men formed square and tried to fight their
+way after the rest through the surging masses
+of the Russians. They made their way for a
+time until the enemy brought up artillery. A
+Russian battery galloped up, unlimbered close
+to them, and opened fire with murderous effect.
+The Frenchmen tried desperately to charge
+the guns, but were beaten back by a rush of
+cavalry. At last, in despair, they formed square
+and faced the cruel slaughter that the guns
+made in their ranks, in the hope that help might
+reach them. Terms were offered them and
+refused. They would not surrender, and fought
+on till dusk, when their ammunition gave out.
+The Russians were closing round for a final<span class="pagenum" id="Page_277">277</span>
+decisive charge on the small handful of survivors,
+when the wounded colonel, seeing all was
+over, made the attempt that saved the Eagle.
+The scanty remnant of what had that morning
+been a regiment of 3,000 men formed round in a
+ring, facing towards the enemy with bayonets
+levelled. The Eagle-staff was broken up and
+the fragments thrust under the ground. With
+flint and steel a match was lighted and the
+silken tricolor consumed. The Eagle was then
+tied up in a havresac and entrusted to an old
+soldier who was known to be a good rider. The
+colonel, giving up his own charger to the man,
+bade him watch his chance and, as the enemy
+came on in the dark, dash through them and
+ride his hardest. “Carry the Eagle to his
+Majesty,” were the colonel’s words. “Deliver
+it to him, and tell him that we have done our
+duty!” The man rode off. He was able to
+get through the nearest Russians under cover
+of the darkness, having to fight his way before
+he got clear, and receiving several wounds. Then
+his horse fell dead from its injuries. On foot he
+stumbled on, and before midnight reached, not
+Napoleon, but Marshal Ney, to whom he gave
+up his precious charge. No officer or man of
+the others of the luckless regiment was ever
+heard of in France again. No prisoners from
+it ever returned—only the Eagle survived.</p>
+
+<p>Three days after Wiasma the Russian winter
+suddenly set in on the doomed host. It brought<span class="pagenum" id="Page_278">278</span>
+about at once the disintegration and disorganisation
+of the Grand Army. Already, demoralised
+by their privation, hundreds of men
+had fallen out of the ranks, flinging away
+their muskets and knapsacks, and straggling along
+in disorderly groups. A third practically of the
+Army ceased to exist as a fighting force within
+the first fortnight of the retreat, before the first
+snows fell. The others, though, still kept to their
+duty. Marching in the ranks day after day,
+they strove their hardest to beat back the incessant
+attacks of the swarms of Cossacks,
+hovering round on the watch to raid the baggage-convoys
+at every block or stoppage on the
+road. With the coming of the snow the doom of
+the Grand Army was sealed. It was impossible
+to maintain discipline with the thermometer
+at twenty degrees below zero. Men dropped
+dead from cold by the score every half-mile.</p>
+
+<p>On November 6 the sun disappeared; a grey
+fog enshrouded everything; the frost set in;
+and a bitter north wind in howling gusts swept
+over the face of the land; with it came down the
+snow, falling hour after hour by day and night
+without ceasing.</p>
+
+<p>“From that day the Army lost its courage
+and its military instinct. The soldier no longer
+obeyed his officer. The officer separated himself
+from his general. The disbanded regiments
+marched in disorder. In their frantic search
+for food they spread themselves over the plain,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_279">279</span>
+pillaging and destroying whatever fell in their
+way.” So a survivor wrote.</p>
+
+<p>The snow came down “in large broad flakes,
+which at once chilled and blinded the soldiers:
+the marchers, however, stumbled forward, men
+often struggling and at last sinking in holes
+and ravines that were concealed from them by
+the new and disguised appearance of the country.
+Those who yet retained discipline and kept
+their ranks stood some chance of receiving
+assistance; but amid the mass of stragglers,
+the men’s hearts, intent only on self-preservation,
+became hardened and closed against every feeling
+of sympathy and compassion. The storm-wind
+lifted the snow from the earth, as well as that
+steadily pelting down from above, into dizzy
+eddies round the soldiers. Many were hurled
+to the ground in this manner, while the
+same snow furnished them with an instant
+grave, under which they were concealed until
+the next summer came, to display their ghastly
+remains in the open air.”</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">WHEN THE COSSACKS GOT TO WORK</div>
+
+<p>The Cossacks redoubled their attacks on the
+retreating army after Wiasma. They had
+harassed the French incessantly from the day
+after Napoleon passed Mojaisk, but after Wiasma
+their audacity increased a hundredfold. They
+captured prisoners hourly, from among the
+stragglers mostly; in droves, by fifties and
+hundreds at a time. Day after day they hung
+on the flanks, swooping down with loud shouts<span class="pagenum" id="Page_280">280</span>
+on the unfortunate wretches, rounding them up
+like sheep, and driving them before them towards
+their own camps at the points of their long
+lances. Many they killed on the spot, or
+stripped naked to perish in the snow. Others
+they drove along to the nearest camp of Kutusoff’s
+regulars for the sake of the money reward
+offered for prisoners brought in alive. Others
+again, to save themselves the trouble of driving
+them all the way to the army camp, they handed
+over to peasants in the villages, selling them
+at a rouble a head, for the peasants to make
+sport of and maltreat or kill. The brutalities and
+ruthless devastations that the French army
+had committed in its advance to Moscow had
+infuriated the Russian peasantry. Intent on
+vengeance they now made use of their opportunity
+to the full. They burned alive some of
+their captives, by tossing them into pits half
+filled with blazing pine-logs. Seventy were
+done to death in this horrible way in one village.
+Others they buried up to their necks in the
+ground and left to die; or else tied them to
+trees for the wolves to tear to pieces.<a id="FNanchor_33" href="#Footnote_33" class="fnanchor">33</a> Others
+they clubbed or flogged to death, tying down<span class="pagenum" id="Page_281">281</span>
+the wretched Frenchmen to logs on the ground,
+hounding on the women and children to hammer
+their heads to pieces with thick sticks. A
+common method of Cossacks and peasants alike
+for making prisoners was to light great watch-fires
+at night, a little way off from the retreating
+column, and as the frozen and starving
+stragglers came crowding up to the blaze they
+surrounded them and carried them off wholesale.</p>
+
+<p>After the snow set in, guns and baggage-wagons
+were abandoned to the Cossacks at
+almost every hundred yards. It was impossible
+for the weakened and dying horses to drag
+them along; even to keep their footing on the
+frozen ground. Within the first week after
+Wiasma the appalling number of 30,000 horses
+either died of starvation, there being no way of
+getting fodder for them because of the snow,
+or were frozen to death.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE EAGLES OF NEY’S CORPS</div>
+
+<p>In spite of everything, some of the regiments
+still kept together and marched in military
+formation, with their Eagles at their head;
+those in particular of Marshal Ney’s corps.
+They formed the rearguard and chief protection
+to the army from Wiasma onwards; held
+together by the heroic example and personality
+of their indefatigable leader, ever present where
+there was fighting, ever calm and confident, and
+ready with words of encouragement. Not an Eagle
+was lost along the line of march between Moscow<span class="pagenum" id="Page_282">282</span>
+and Smolensk by Ney’s men; rallying round
+them to beat off the Cossack attacks time and
+again with the cry, “Aux Aigles! Voici les
+Cosaques!”</p>
+
+<p>This incident, not unlike the cuirassier ride
+to recover the Eagle left on the field at Borodino,
+is said to have taken place between Wiasma
+and Smolensk. One regiment of Ney’s cavalry
+missed its Eagle after a sharp fight on the road,
+the Eagle-bearer having apparently fallen during
+the encounter, unseen by the survivors. That
+night round the bivouac fire lots were drawn,
+and two officers rode back amid blinding snow
+squalls to try to find the Eagle. They successfully
+evaded the Cossacks and made their
+way ten miles back to the scene of the combat,
+where, after scaring off some wolves, they
+searched in the snow and found the dead officer’s
+body with the Eagle by its side. They brought
+it back safely to the regiment and restored it
+to their comrades. Their limbs were frost-bitten
+and rigid from cold, so that they had to be
+lifted off their horses, but the brave men were
+content—they had saved their Eagle.</p>
+
+<figure id="i_282" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 35em;">
+ <img src="images/i_282.jpg" width="2753" height="1780" alt="">
+ <figcaption class="caption">
+ <p class="p0 left smaller"><cite>Photo Alinari.</cite></p>
+ <p>MARSHAL NEY WITH THE REARGUARD IN THE RETREAT FROM MOSCOW.</p>
+ <p class="smaller">From a picture by A. Ivon, at Versailles.</p>
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<div class="sidenote">SO FAR TEN EAGLES LOST</div>
+
+<p>At Krasnoi, on November 19, between
+Smolensk and the Beresina, Napoleon underwent
+another severe defeat from the pursuing
+Russians, 10,000 prisoners and 70 guns falling
+into the victors’ hands. Two Eagles were
+carried off from the battlefield and despatched
+to St. Petersburg by special courier, together<span class="pagenum" id="Page_283">283</span>
+with Kutusoff’s report to the Czar. Twenty-seven
+Eagles, however, got past the Russians,
+fighting their way through, thanks to the endurance
+of brave men who rallied round them.
+Krasnoi it was that gave the death-blow to
+Napoleon’s last hope of rallying the Grand Army.
+After it less than 30,000 men remained under
+arms with the main column, including the
+8,000 survivors of the Imperial Guard. Up to
+then, according to the Russian official returns,
+80,000 prisoners, 500 guns, and “40 standards
+and flags of all kinds” had fallen into the hands
+of the pursuers. Not more than ten, however,
+of the forty standards taken were Eagles: the
+two taken at Murat’s surprise at Vinkovo; the
+two taken at Wiasma; the two taken at Krasnoi;
+also two taken before Napoleon reached
+Smolensk, from a brigade sent from Smolensk
+to help him on the road, which blundered into
+the middle of the Russian army and had to
+surrender; and two captured elsewhere, from
+the French flanking armies of Marshal Macdonald
+and Marshal St. Cyr. An eleventh
+Eagle was taken in the second battle at Krasnoi,
+from Ney’s rearguard; the only Eagle that Ney
+actually lost in fight throughout the 600 miles’
+march between Moscow and the frontier.</p>
+
+<p>At Krasnoi, Ney’s rearguard, following at a
+day’s march behind the rest of the army, found
+its way barred. The Russians, after defeating
+Napoleon’s main column, a day’s march in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_284">284</span>
+advance, had waited on the scene of the former
+fighting for Ney. They held a position that it
+was practically impossible for Ney’s comparatively
+small force to get past. After vainly
+attempting to break through, Ney had to draw
+back, and make a forlorn-hope effort to avoid
+destruction by a long détour, in the course of
+which he had to abandon guns, baggage, and
+horses, and cross the Dnieper on ice hardly thick
+enough to bear the weight of a man.</p>
+
+<p>On the eve of Krasnoi, indeed, the rearguard
+found itself in so desperate a position, that Ney
+ordered all its Eagles to be destroyed. His
+regiments had suffered so severely in their continuous
+fighting, that it was impossible adequately
+to safeguard the Eagles. Every musket
+and bayonet was wanted in the fighting line.
+It was impossible to supply sufficient Eagle-escorts.
+So far, in spite of the dreadful straits
+to which some of the regiments had been reduced,
+all had marched openly with their Eagles, and
+fought round them, guarding them sedulously
+by night and day. “When excess of fatigue
+constrained us to take a few moments of repose,”
+describes Colonel De Fesenzac of the 4th of the
+Line, “we (what was left of the regiment able
+to carry arms—not 100 men) assembled together
+in any place where we could find shelter, a few
+of the men standing by to mount guard for the
+protection of the regimental Eagle.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then,” describes the colonel, “came the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_285">285</span>
+order that all the Eagles should be broken up and
+buried. As I could not make up my mind to
+this, I directed that the staff should be burned,
+and that the Eagle of the 4th Regiment should
+be stowed in the knapsack of one of the Eagle-bearers,
+by whose side I kept my post on the
+march.” The Eagle of the 4th, it may be added
+by the way, was the identical Eagle that Napoleon
+had presented to the regiment in place of
+that lost at Austerlitz, in exchange for, as has
+been told, two captured Austrian flags.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">“THEY OUGHT TO PERISH WITH US”</div>
+
+<p>Other officers did the same as Colonel De
+Fesenzac. One officer, however, the colonel of
+the 18th of the Line, flatly refused to have his
+regimental Eagle either broken up or hidden
+away. “The Eagle,” he says in his journal,
+which still exists, “had throughout, until then,
+been carried at the head of the regiment, and I
+declined to obey the order on behalf of the 18th.
+It seemed to us a monstrous ignominy. Our
+Eagles were not given us to be made away with
+or hidden: they ought to perish with us.” The
+Eagle of the 18th did actually perish with the
+regiment. In the rearguard repulse at Krasnoi
+the entire regiment was destroyed, except for
+some twenty survivors, including the colonel,
+severely wounded. “Our Eagle,” says the gallant
+colonel, proudly recording its fate, “remained
+among our dead on the field of battle.”</p>
+
+<p>That Eagle of the 18th was the only one of
+Marshal Ney’s Eagles to fall into the hands of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_286">286</span>
+the Russians in battle. Some ten of the Eagles
+now at St. Petersburg were found on the bodies
+of officers and men who had been either frozen
+to death or had fallen dead on the march during
+Ney’s retreat after Krasnoi; they were not taken
+in fight.</p>
+
+<p>Ney rejoined Napoleon with only 1,500 men
+left out of 12,000, of which the rearguard had
+consisted when it left Smolensk. It was while
+making his last effort to get past the Russians
+after his attempt to break through at Krasnoi
+had failed, that Ney, overtaken on the banks of
+the half-frozen Dnieper on the evening before he
+risked his perilous crossing, and summoned by
+the Russians to surrender, made that proudly
+defiant reply which has ever since been a treasured
+memory to the French Army: “A Marshal of
+France never surrenders!” Six hours later he
+had evaded capture and, with the remnant of
+his corps, was across the river. All the world
+has heard how Napoleon, hopeless of seeing him
+again, welcomed Ney with the words: “I have
+three hundred millions of francs in the vaults of
+the Tuileries; I would have given them all for
+Marshal Ney!”</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">ALL KEPT TOGETHER FOR SAFETY</div>
+
+<p>The remaining Eagles had by now been assembled
+for preservation under the protection
+of what troops of the main column, which
+Napoleon accompanied, still continued under
+arms. Further effort to rally the shattered host
+was beyond possibility. Only portions of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_287">287</span>
+two army corps of Marshals Victor and Oudinot,
+called in from holding the line of communications,
+still retained military formation, together with
+the reduced battalions of the Old Guard which
+had kept near Napoleon throughout. To save
+the remaining Eagles, the officers of broken-up
+and disbanded regiments, with some devoted
+soldiers who stood by them, took personal charge
+of the Eagles, and carried them with their own
+hands. Banding together and marching in company
+side by side, they tramped on, plodding
+through the snow day and night for 200 miles;
+the collected Eagles all massed in the centre.
+They attached themselves to the column of the
+Old Guard, and kept their way close by Napoleon.</p>
+
+<p>A survivor of the retreat from Moscow, in his
+memoirs, describes how he saw Napoleon and the
+Eagles pass by him on the way to the Beresina
+on the morning of November 25:</p>
+
+<p>“Those in advance seemed to be generals, a
+few on horseback, but the greater part on foot.
+There was also a great number of other officers,
+the remnant of the Doomed Squadron and Battalion,
+formed on the 22nd and barely existing
+at the end of three days. Those on foot dragged
+themselves painfully along, almost all of them
+having their feet frozen and wrapped in rags or
+in bits of sheep’s-skin, and all nearly dying of
+hunger. Afterwards came the small remains
+of the Cavalry of the Guard. The Emperor
+came next, on foot, and carrying a staff. He<span class="pagenum" id="Page_288">288</span>
+wore a large cloak lined with fur, and had a red
+velvet cap with black-fox fur on his head. Murat
+walked on foot at his right, and on his left the
+Prince Eugène, Viceroy of Italy. Next came
+the Marshals Berthier—Prince of Neufchatel—Ney,
+Mortier, Lefebvre, with other marshals and
+generals whose corps had been annihilated.</p>
+
+<p>“The Emperor mounted a horse as soon as he
+had passed; so did a few of those with him:
+the greater part of them had no horses to ride.
+Seven or eight hundred officers and non-commissioned
+officers followed, walking in order and
+perfect silence, and carrying the Eagles of their
+different regiments, which had so often led them
+to victory. This was all that remained of 60,000
+men.</p>
+
+<p>“After them came the Imperial Guard on
+foot, marching also in order.”</p>
+
+<p>Four Eagles were lost in the fighting at the
+passage of the Beresina, where a whole division
+of Marshal Victor’s corps (General Partonneaux’s)
+was cut off and compelled to surrender.
+On the last night, when either massacre under
+the Russian guns or laying down their arms was
+all that was left to them, they broke up and
+buried their Eagles in the ground underneath
+the snow. The officers of one regiment, it is
+told, broke up their Eagle before burying it,
+burned the flag at their last bivouac fire, mixed
+the ashes with thawed snow, and swallowed the
+concoction.</p>
+
+<figure id="i_288" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 29em;">
+ <img src="images/i_288.jpg" width="2313" height="1748" alt="">
+ <figcaption class="caption">
+ <p>NAPOLEON AND THE “SACRED SQUADRON” ON THE WAY TO THE BERESINA.</p>
+ <p>From the picture by H. Bellangé.</p>
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_289">289</span></p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">WHEN THE LAST HOPE WAS GONE</div>
+
+<p>The little column of officers with their Eagles
+passed the Beresina with the Guard, and thus
+escaped that last catastrophe, the crowning
+horror of the bridge disaster, when 24,000 ill-fated
+human beings were sent to their account;
+either killed in the fighting with the Russians,
+or drowned in the river, jammed together on the
+burning bridge, while the Russian guns from the
+rear thundered on them with shot and shell.</p>
+
+<p>The officer-escort with the Eagles tramped on
+until Wilna was reached; until after Napoleon
+had left the army and set off for Paris. Then,
+on the final falling apart of the remnants of the
+stricken host, the officers themselves dispersed,
+to escape as best they could individually and
+get to the Niemen; breaking up the Eagle-poles
+and concealing the Eagles and flags in knapsacks
+or under their uniforms. The dispersal, says one
+officer, was at Napoleon’s own instance. “He
+ordered all the officers who had no troops to make
+the best of their way at once to the Niemen,
+considering that their services had best be saved
+for the future army he was going to Paris to raise
+and organise.” That is one story. According to
+another officer, utter despair at their frightful
+position, abandoned by their chief, was the cause
+of the break-up at Wilna and the final <i lang="fr">débâcle</i>.
+“Until then a few armed soldiers, led by their
+officers, had still rallied round the Eagles. Now,
+however, the officers began to break away, and
+the soldiers became fewer and fewer, and those<span class="pagenum" id="Page_290">290</span>
+left were finally reduced, of necessity, some to
+conceal the Eagles in knapsacks, others to make
+away with them.” Some of the officers fell dead
+on the way to the Niemen, struck down suddenly
+by the cold, and their Eagles remained
+with them. Others who died, with their last
+strength tried to put their charges beyond reach
+of the enemy by scraping or digging holes in
+the frozen ground, and burying the Eagles.<a id="FNanchor_34" href="#Footnote_34" class="fnanchor">34</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_291">291</span></p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE EAGLE OF THE OLD GUARD</div>
+
+<p>The Eagle of the Old Guard recrossed the
+Niemen at Kovno, while Ney was making his
+final stand, defending the gate of the town; the
+marshal fighting musket in hand at the last,
+with less than twenty soldiers. That Eagle was
+still carried openly—the only one still so displayed—carried
+defiantly aloft on its staff, borne
+to the last with its escort in military formation,
+in the midst of the ranks of the 400 men of the
+Old Guard who were all that were able to reach
+the frontier.</p>
+
+<h3 id="toclink_291"><span class="smcap">At Bay in Northern Germany—1813</span></h3>
+
+<p>There were yet dark days in store for the Eagles
+after the retreat from Moscow was over. The
+tale of their misfortunes was not yet ended.
+There was yet to be the sequel to the great
+catastrophe; further humiliations in the War
+in Germany of 1813, and the Winter Campaign
+of 1814 in Eastern France, which followed as
+the consequence and result of the overthrow in
+Russia.</p>
+
+<p>No fewer than fifteen of the Eagles that the
+devotion of their officers brought through the
+retreat from Moscow are now—making allowance
+for difficulties of identification, owing to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_292">292</span>
+defective records—among the trophies of victory
+to be seen at Berlin and Potsdam, in Vienna, and
+also at St. Petersburg. Those in Germany are
+mostly kept in the Garrison Church of Potsdam,
+suspended triumphantly above the vault in which
+lies the sarcophagus of Frederick the Great.
+They were placed there of set purpose as an act
+of retribution, as a votive offering to the <i lang="la">manes</i>
+of the Great Frederick; as a Prussian rejoinder
+to Napoleon’s act of wanton desecration after
+Jena. The four trophy Eagles at Vienna are
+in the Imperial Arsenal Museum there. Two
+of them are the spoils of Kulm; displayed together
+with the keys of Lyons, Langres, Troyes,
+and the fortress of Mayence, which were surrendered
+during the march of the Allies on Paris.
+The Russian trophy Eagles of 1813 are at St.
+Petersburg, displayed with the Eagles which fell
+into Russian hands in the retreat from Moscow.</p>
+
+<p>What the annihilation of the Grand Army in
+Russia meant for Europe, with what dramatic
+rapidity its import for the vassal states of
+Napoleon was realised and turned to account,
+is a familiar story. Prussia led the revolt at
+once, and all Northern Germany rose in arms <i lang="fr">en
+masse</i> to commence the “War of Liberation,”
+joining hands with Russia as the pursuing armies
+of the Czar crossed the frontier. Then Austria,
+after negotiations rendered abortive at the last
+by Napoleon’s infatuated pride and overweening
+self-confidence, threw her sword into the balance<span class="pagenum" id="Page_293">293</span>
+and turned the scale decisively against France.
+Napoleon’s hastily raised conscript levies, outnumbered
+and outmanœuvred, were defeated
+on battlefield after battlefield, and driven in
+rout across the Rhine to their final surrender
+at the gates of Paris; and then came the abdication
+of Fontainebleau.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE EAGLES DIED HARD</div>
+
+<p>Yet, with all that, in those dark hours of their
+fate the Eagles died hard. The trophy-collections
+of Berlin, Vienna, and St. Petersburg
+testify to that. Only a percentage of the Eagles
+which faced their fate on the battlefield became
+spoils to the victors. Marshal Macdonald’s army,
+routed by Blücher on the Katzbach, thanks to
+the devotion of the regimental officers and
+some of their men, saved all its Eagles from
+the enemy except three. Ney’s army, no less
+roughly handled at Dennewitz, managed to
+retain in like manner all its Eagles except three.
+Vandamme’s army, annihilated and dispersed
+at Kulm, saved its Eagles all but two. Oudinot
+was routed at Gross Beeren, with the loss of guns
+and many prisoners; Gérard underwent the same
+fate near Magdeburg; Bertrand was surprised
+and defeated with heavier losses still; but not
+one Eagle was left as spoil of these disasters
+in the hands of the victorious foe.</p>
+
+<p>In one battle the Eagle of Napoleon’s Irish
+Legion was only just kept from being to-day
+among the trophies displayed in the Garrison
+Church of Potsdam over the tomb of Frederick<span class="pagenum" id="Page_294">294</span>
+the Great. It was immediately after Macdonald’s
+defeat on the Katzbach. The Irish
+Legion was one of the regiments in one of Macdonald’s
+divisions, that of General Puthod.
+They had had a hard fight of it, and their retreat
+was barred by the river Bober in flood. Under
+stress of the continuous attacks of the Prussians
+in ever-increasing force, the 12,000 men of
+Puthod’s Division had been reduced to barely
+5,000. They had used up their last cartridges,
+and had been driven back to the
+river-bank, where the Prussian army closed in
+on them “in a half-moon.” The Prussians
+halted for one moment until they realised that
+the troops before them had no more ammunition.
+Then, aware that they had their foe at their mercy,
+they rushed forward, cheering exultantly, to
+deliver the <i lang="fr">coup de grâce</i>. “All of a sudden,”
+describes an Irish officer, “30,000 men ran forward
+on their prey, of whom none but those who
+knew how to swim could attempt to escape.”
+The greater number of the French, all the same,
+jumped into the river, and took the risk of
+drowning rather than surrender. Less than
+five hundred got across the stream, and after
+that they had to wade waist-deep for half a mile
+over flooded marshes under a pitiless fire from
+the Prussian batteries. In the end only 150
+men reached dry ground alive. Among the
+survivors were just 40 men of the Irish Legion,
+with their Eagle—Colonel Ware, eight officers,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_295">295</span>
+the Eagle-bearer, and thirty privates. The
+Irish remnant made their way eventually to
+Dresden, and reported themselves to Napoleon.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE IRISH EAGLE’S FIRST ESCAPE</div>
+
+<p>That adventure, by the way, was the Irish
+Eagle’s second escape from falling into an
+enemy’s hands since Napoleon presented it to
+the Legion on the Field of Mars. On the first
+occasion it came within an ace of being now
+among our British trophy Eagles at Chelsea; of,
+indeed, being the first Napoleonic Eagle to be
+brought as spoil of war to England. The Irish
+Legion was in garrison at Flushing in 1809, when
+the fortress surrendered to the British Walcheren
+Expedition. On the night before the final
+capitulation, Major Lawless of the Irish Legion
+took charge of the Eagle, and in a rowing-boat
+made a risky passage among the British ships
+of war in front of the batteries. He escaped up
+the Scheldt to Antwerp, where he delivered the
+Eagle personally to Marshal Bernadotte. Napoleon
+sent for the major to Paris, decorated him
+for saving the Eagle, with the Cross of the Legion
+of Honour, and promoted him lieutenant-colonel.</p>
+
+<p>In the disaster on the Bober also, a soldier of
+the 134th of the Line saved the Eagle of another
+regiment, the 147th. The two regiments, as the
+Prussians charged down on them after their
+cartridges gave out, in desperation rushed to
+meet their assailants with the bayonet. They
+were overpowered and hurled back in confusion<span class="pagenum" id="Page_296">296</span>
+to the bank of the river, all intermingled in the
+<i lang="fr">mêlée</i>. The Eagle-bearer of the 147th fell dead,
+shot down, and a Prussian officer made for the
+Eagle. A soldier of the 134th bayoneted the
+officer as he got to it, picked up the Eagle, and,
+seeing only more Prussians round him, flung himself,
+still holding on to the Eagle, into the river.
+The man could not swim, and was fired at as he
+floundered in the water, but he was not hit.
+Unable to reach the other side, he somehow got
+on to a shallow patch, and, still holding fast to
+the Eagle, kept his footing there, until, to get
+away from the hail of bullets all round him, he
+again risked drowning by trying to drift downstream.
+He managed to keep his head above
+water, and got over to a bed of rushes, fringing
+the farther bank. Creeping in there, still holding
+on closely to the Eagle, the brave fellow hid for
+six hours until dark, embedded in mud to his
+armpits most of the time. After nightfall he
+worked his way through and crawled ashore.
+Finally, after wandering across country for eight
+days, feeding on berries and what he could pick
+up, in constant peril of discovery among the
+hostile peasants and parties of Prussian dragoons
+scouring the district, the heroic soldier at length
+found his way to Dresden. There he was
+brought before Marshal Berthier, to whom he
+delivered the Eagle.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">AT THE COST OF HIS LIFE</div>
+
+<p>At the battle of the Katzbach the colonel of
+the 132nd of the Line threw away his life under<span class="pagenum" id="Page_297">297</span>
+the mistaken impression that he saw the Eagle
+of his regiment captured by the enemy. He was
+short-sighted, and suddenly missed it in the
+middle of a charge. Thinking he saw the Eagle
+being carried off by a party of Prussians he rode
+straight through the enemy at them, to fall
+mortally wounded halfway, with his horse shot
+beneath him. Some of the men saw the colonel
+fall, and charged after him. They got to him
+and carried him off the field, and in the retreat
+until a place of safety was reached, where the
+survivors of the regiment had rallied. There
+the officers came round to bid farewell to their
+dying chief. The Eagle-bearer of the regiment
+was among them, and he, to the amazement of
+all, produced the Eagle from his havresac,
+broken from its staff, and held it up before the
+eyes of the dying colonel. No enemy’s hand, he
+declared, had contaminated it. Finding himself
+and the Eagle, he explained, in imminent danger
+of capture, he had wrenched the Eagle off the
+staff and hidden it—his act causing the disappearance
+which the colonel had marked, and
+which had resulted in his fatal dash among the
+enemy.</p>
+
+<p>The 17th of the Line saved their Eagle and
+themselves after Vandamme’s defeat at Kulm,
+and made their way to safety, as one of the
+officers relates, after an extraordinary series
+of adventures. They had joined Vandamme’s
+army at the beginning of the first day’s fighting—the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_298">298</span>
+battle lasted three days—coming in after
+a week’s march from Dresden, through pouring
+rain most of the time. They numbered four
+battalions, 4,000 men in all. Vandamme was
+successful on the first two days and the 17th
+by themselves routed an Austrian regiment
+and captured a gun. On the evening of the
+second day the French advanced again, driving
+the enemy before them into the valley of Kulm.
+They bivouacked on the ground they had won,
+anticipating a final triumph on the morrow.
+But during that night two Russian and Prussian
+army corps reinforced the Austrian columns
+unknown to the French.</p>
+
+<p>One of the officers of the 17th, Major Fantin
+des Odoards, during the night had his suspicions
+aroused about the enemy, and made a discovery;
+but Vandamme would not listen to him.</p>
+
+<p>He was unable to sleep, says Major Fantin,
+and, learning from a patrol that mysterious
+sounds were being heard in the direction in
+which the Austrians had retreated, he left the
+bivouac and went out alone beyond the outposts,
+to creep in the dark towards the Austrian
+watch-fires. At times, as he crawled forward,
+describes the major, he lay flat and listened with
+his ear to the ground. In the end he felt certain
+that he heard the tramp and stir of a vast number
+of men, and also the rumble of artillery wheels
+moving across the front. Apparently, from the
+direction the unseen troops were taking, they were<span class="pagenum" id="Page_299">299</span>
+marching to cut off the retreat of the army from
+Dresden, Napoleon’s base of operations throughout
+the campaign.</p>
+
+<p>Major Fantin returned to the bivouac and
+went at once to report to the general, finding
+him asleep. He aroused Vandamme and told
+what he had heard and suspected; only, however,
+to be rebuffed and rudely answered that he was
+quite mistaken. Vandamme, a surly and ill-conditioned
+boor to deal with at all times,
+awoke in a vile temper. “You are a fool!”
+was what he said in reply. “If the enemy are
+on the move at all, they are in retreat, trying
+to escape me. To-morrow will see them flying,
+or my prisoners.” With that Vandamme terminated
+the interview, and turned over and
+went to sleep again.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">HEMMED IN ON EVERY SIDE</div>
+
+<p>He found out his mistake all too soon. Daylight
+disclosed dense swarms of Austrians, Prussians,
+and Russians in front of Vandamme, on
+his flanks, and closing on his rear; outnumbering
+him nearly four to one. It was a desperate
+position, for the only road by which Vandamme
+might retreat was held by the enemy. Little
+time was left to him to deliberate what to do.
+He was in the act of forming up his columns
+in a mass to try to fight his way through, when
+the enemy attacked in overpowering force.
+Before noon that day, out of 30,000 men, 10,000
+had fallen. Seven thousand more were wounded
+or prisoners. The rest were fugitives, flying<span class="pagenum" id="Page_300">300</span>
+for shelter and hiding-places in the woods
+round the battlefield. All the French guns
+and baggage had been taken, and Vandamme
+himself was a prisoner, together with many
+officers of rank. The “annals of modern warfare
+record few instances of defeat more complete
+than that of Vandamme at Kulm.”</p>
+
+<p>The only regiment that kept its order was
+the 17th, and it before the crisis had lost
+heavily. Its colonel and two of the <i lang="fr">chefs de
+bataillon</i> had been killed; the two others were
+wounded. Only some 1,700 of the 4,000 men
+remained. It rested with Major Fantin, as
+senior officer, to save those that were left and
+the Eagle.</p>
+
+<p>The 17th were on the extreme right of the
+battle, where they had been posted as support
+to Vandamme’s artillery. They held their
+ground as long as possible, but the enemy closed
+in on them, overlapping them on both flanks,
+and then stormed and captured the guns. The
+17th were isolated and in imminent peril—surrender
+or destruction were the only alternatives
+before them.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">“EN HAUT L’AIGLE!”</div>
+
+<p>Looking round, the major, as he describes,
+marked a wooded hill some little way off, and
+decided to make for that. There was just time
+to get away before the enemy closed in on
+them. He sent off all his tirailleurs, about
+400 men, to skirmish and hold in check the
+advancing Austrians. As they went off he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_301">301</span>
+shouted to the rest: “En haut l’Aigle!
+Ralliement au drapeau!” (“Display the Eagle!
+All rally to the standard!”) The men of the
+regiment formed round him quickly, and the
+major pointed out the wooded hill to them with
+his sword. “All of you disperse at once,” he
+told them, “and make your way there as quickly
+as you can. You will find the Eagle of the regiment
+there, and me with it!” The 17th broke
+up and scattered, and, under the protection of
+the skirmishers, aided by the opportune mist
+which hung low over the ground after the heavy
+rains of the past week, they made off in groups
+in the direction pointed out. All just got past
+the enemy in time, Major Fantin and two
+officers accompanying the Eagle.</p>
+
+<p>An hour later, “<i lang="fr">nos débris</i>,” as the major
+puts it, were straggling up the hill, where they
+again rallied round the Eagle. The skirmishers,
+cleverly withdrawn at the right moment, evaded
+the enemy also, and most of them joined their
+comrades on the hill, where all silently drew
+together. They then moved off, to halt for
+concealment in a wooded glade behind. They
+stayed there, keeping quiet and lying down
+beside their arms, for several hours; off the
+track of the pursuit, and undiscovered by the
+enemy. “We were all very hungry and without
+anything but what cartridges we had still
+left.”</p>
+
+<p>At nightfall they moved away in the direction<span class="pagenum" id="Page_302">302</span>
+in which Dresden was judged to be, without
+having a single map or anything to guide them.
+They marched all night, mostly by a forest road,
+and keeping their direction by means of occasional
+glimpses of the stars seen through rifts
+in the cloudy sky overhead. More than once
+they had to halt as the enemy were heard on
+the move not far off. They groped their way
+forward with extreme caution, not a light being
+struck, and the necessary words of command
+being spoken in an undertone, until after midnight.
+Then they suddenly came into the
+open round a bend of the road, and discovered,
+not half a mile off in front, the numerous watch-fires
+of a large body of troops. “The column
+halted at the sight like one man and stood in
+absolute silence. Who were those in front of
+us? Friends or the enemy?”</p>
+
+<p>Two scouts were sent forward to try to find
+out. They were away for half an hour; an
+interval of intense suspense and anxiety to the
+others. At the end of the time the two scouts
+came rushing back. They brought unexpectedly
+good news. It was a French bivouac: that of
+the 14th Army Corps—Marshal St. Cyr’s. So
+the 17th and their Eagle were saved.</p>
+
+<p>Other Eagles that got away from the rout at
+Kulm and rejoined the army owed their safety
+to the determination of small groups of officers
+and men who cut their way through the enemy.
+“Officers fought with their swords, privates<span class="pagenum" id="Page_303">303</span>
+with their bayonets and the butts of their
+muskets: and as the struggle was to escape
+and not to destroy, a push and wrestle, or a blow,
+which might suffice to throw the individual
+struck out of the way of the striker, prevented
+in many instances the more deadly thrust.”
+Finally, as the 17th had done, they found
+shelter among the woods and ravines of the neighbourhood,
+and lay low there until the enemy
+had moved off towards Töplitz, whereupon they
+made their way to Dresden. The cavalry saved
+their Eagles by cutting their way through the
+enemy. They suffered heavy losses, but succeeded
+in their effort. Their commander,
+General Corbineau, “presented himself, wounded
+and covered with blood, before Napoleon”; it
+was his arrival that announced the disaster.
+The Eagles of the 33rd and the 106th of the
+Line taken at Kulm are at Vienna.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE EAGLE-TROPHIES OF LEIPSIC</div>
+
+<p>The three days of battle at Leipsic, between
+October 16 and 19, 1813, cost Napoleon 60,000
+men in killed, wounded, and prisoners, and 300
+guns; but not more than 6 Eagles were among
+the trophies of battalion-flags and squadron-colours
+taken or found on the field, now at
+Berlin, Vienna, and St. Petersburg.</p>
+
+<p>One Eagle was lost during the first day’s
+fighting at Leipsic—taken on the 16th by
+Blücher from Ney’s corps; but no others were
+lost until the end. The 80,000 men who were
+able to make good their retreat with Napoleon<span class="pagenum" id="Page_304">304</span>
+across the bridge over the Elster before it was
+prematurely blown up, through a non-commissioned
+officer’s blunder, carried their Eagles
+with them. What colour-trophies came into
+the possession of the Allies were taken amid
+the final scenes of carnage; from cut-off battalions
+of the three divisions left behind on the right
+bank of the river, victims of the destruction of
+the bridge. They were mostly captured in the
+ferocious hand-to-hand fighting which marked
+the closing phase of the battle in the suburbs of
+Leipsic. The French defended themselves there
+to the last with the courage of despair among
+the fortified villas and loopholed garden walls.
+“Pressed upon by superior numbers, and
+fighting, now in the streets, now in the houses,
+now through gardens or other enclosures, the
+single end which they could accomplish or which
+in point of fact they seemed to desire, was that
+they might sell their lives at the dearest rate
+possible.” Two at least of the Eagles now at
+Berlin were hastily buried in gardens during
+the last stand, and were dug up there later when
+the ground was being turned over.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">AMIDST THE ROUT AT LEIPSIC</div>
+
+<p>Forced to give back before their ever-increasing
+enemies, not a few of the French “preferred
+death to captivity, and fought to the last. These,
+retiring through by-lanes and covered passages,
+made their way to the river, some where the
+ruins of the bridge covered its banks, some above
+and others below that point, and, plunging into<span class="pagenum" id="Page_305">305</span>
+the deep water, endeavoured to gain the opposite
+shore by swimming, an attempt in which comparatively
+few succeeded.”</p>
+
+<p>The three doomed divisions of Lauriston,
+Regnier, and Poniatowski, who were cut off by
+the blowing up of the bridge, had, as it happened,
+not many Eagles among them to lose. They
+were largely made up of newly raised conscript
+regiments to whom Napoleon had not yet awarded
+Eagles; regiments not yet entitled to carry
+Eagles, according to the later regulations that
+Napoleon had laid down. Only four of the newly
+raised regiments altogether, so far during the
+campaign in Germany, had qualified for the
+honour. They had received their Eagles with
+the customary ceremony at the hands of Napoleon:
+three of them on October 15, the day
+before the battle of Leipsic opened. The fourth
+had received its Eagle at Dresden a month
+earlier. Two of these four Eagles only were lost
+to the enemy at Leipsic.</p>
+
+<p>The Eagle-bearers of four or five other regiments
+among those cut off by the bridge disaster
+tried to swim across the Elster with their Eagles.
+Their fate is unknown; probably they were
+drowned in the attempt. Other Eagle-bearers,
+before surrendering, were seen to fling their
+Eagles into the river to sink there.</p>
+
+<p>How one Eagle, during the battle on the 18th,
+was momentarily lost, and then regained by a
+splendid act of valour, is told by Caulaincourt,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_306">306</span>
+who was on Napoleon’s staff, and witnessed the
+gallant deed that won the Eagle back. In the
+midst of the fighting, a number of Saxon regiments
+abandoned Napoleon’s cause and went over <i lang="fr">en
+masse</i> to the enemy. To signalise their defection
+they turned on the nearest French regiment and
+mobbed it; attacking it at close quarters with
+the bayonet. Thrown into confusion by the
+unexpected onslaught, the French were for the
+moment broken and forced back, whereupon the
+Saxons, making for the Eagle, got possession of
+it. “A young officer of Hussars,” relates Caulaincourt,
+“whose name I forget, rushed headlong
+into the enemies’ ranks. In the charge some of
+the miserable renegades had carried off one of
+our Eagles. The gallant young officer rescued it,
+but at the cost of his life. He threw the Eagle
+at the Emperor’s feet, and then he himself fell,
+mortally wounded and bathed in blood. The
+Emperor was deeply moved. ‘With such men,’
+he exclaimed, ‘what resources does not France
+possess!’”</p>
+
+<p>The regiments left by Napoleon to garrison
+the fortresses in Germany, at Stettin, at Magdeburg,
+Torgau, Dantzic, and elsewhere, previous
+to surrendering took steps to prevent their
+Eagles falling into the hands of their adversaries.
+In every case they destroyed them, smashing the
+Eagles into small fragments, which were either
+distributed among officers and men, or else
+thrown into the ditch of the fortress. In more<span class="pagenum" id="Page_307">307</span>
+than one case they melted the Eagles down, and
+broke up and buried the metal, while the flags
+were burned.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">KEPT FROM THE HANDS OF THE FOE</div>
+
+<p>At Dresden, where Marshal St. Cyr had to
+surrender, a month after Leipsic, the terms
+granted by the Austrian general conducting the
+siege allowed the troops to return to France
+with their arms, their baggage, and their Eagles,
+seven in number. Superior authority, however,
+cancelled the privilege. The garrison had already
+started on their march when, to their utter consternation,
+the capitulation was abruptly annulled
+by the Austrian Generalissimo, Schwartzenberg,
+with the result that the hapless troops were
+compelled to yield themselves prisoners at discretion.
+The soldiers were defenceless and could
+only submit to their hard fate. They did not,
+however, let their seven Eagles pass into the
+enemy’s hands. Five of the seven were broken
+up, and the flags torn to pieces and divided among
+the regiments. Two of the Eagles, those of the
+25th of the Line and the 85th, were concealed
+intact by two officers, who kept them from discovery
+for months, while they were prisoners in
+Hungary. After the Peace, in the following
+year, they brought them back to France—to
+meet there the doom that awaited all the Eagles
+of Napoleon of which the officials of the Bourbon
+<i lang="fr">régime</i> got possession.</p>
+
+<p>One memento of the Winter Campaign in
+Eastern France is now at the Invalides—the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_308">308</span>
+Eagle of the 5th of the Line. It was found in
+the river Aube at Arcis after the battle there,
+which, in its result, decided the fate of Napoleon;
+its outcome being the immediate march of the
+Allied armies on Paris. The 5th was one of the
+regiments of the rearguard column, under Oudinot,
+half of which was drowned in the river in
+trying to get across at night, after stubbornly
+holding out in the town all the afternoon in
+order to enable Napoleon to cross the river in
+safety. The 5th was one of the regiments that
+sacrificed themselves. Its Eagle-bearer was
+among the drowned, and his Eagle sank with him.
+It remained in the bed of the stream until long
+afterwards, when it was accidentally discovered,
+and fished up.</p>
+
+<p>The 132nd of the Line of the modern army of
+France commemorates on its flag a feat of arms
+done under the Eagle of the old 132nd of Napoleon’s
+Army, after having been saved from the
+Prussians at the Katzbach, and again at Leipsic.
+It was in one of the fights in the closing campaign
+in Eastern France. The proud legend inscribed
+in golden letters, “Rosny, 1814: Un contre
+huit,” commemorates how the regiment, single-handed,
+held at bay and beat off an enemy eight
+times its force, saving itself for the third time,
+and its Eagle.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE GRAND ARMY’S LAST PARADE</div>
+
+<p>The surviving Eagles of the war, the last
+to face the enemy in the north of those presented
+on the Field of Mars, paid their last salute to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_309">309</span>
+War Lord at Napoleon’s final review of the
+remnants of the Grand Army at Rheims on
+March 15, 1814.</p>
+
+<p>A pitiful, a moving, sight was that hapless
+military spectacle: the closing parade before
+Napoleon of his last remaining soldiers.</p>
+
+<p>This is how Alison describes it: “How different
+from the splendid military spectacles of the
+Tuileres or Chammartin, which had so often
+dazzled his sight with the pomp of apparently
+irresistible power! Wasted away to half the
+numbers which they possessed when they crossed
+the Marne a fortnight before, the greater part of
+the regiments exhibited only the skeletons of
+military array. In some, more officers than
+privates were to be seen in the ranks; in all,
+the appearance of the troops, the haggard air
+of the men, their worn-out uniforms, and the
+strange motley of which they were composed,
+bespoke the total exhaustion of the Empire.
+It was evident to all that Napoleon was expending
+his last resources. Besides the veterans of
+the Guard—the iron men whom nothing could
+daunt, but whose tattered garments and soiled
+accoutrements bespoke the dreadful fatigue to
+which they had been subjected—were to be
+seen young conscripts, but recently torn from the
+embraces of maternal love, and whose wan
+visages and faltering steps told but too clearly
+that they were unequal to the weight of the arms
+they bore. The gaunt figures and woeful aspect<span class="pagenum" id="Page_310">310</span>
+of the horses, the broken carriages and blackened
+mouths of the guns, the crazy and fractured
+artillery wagons which defiled past, the general
+confusion of arms, battalions, and uniforms,
+even in the best appointed corps, spoke of the
+mere remains of the vast military army which
+had so long stood triumphant against the world
+in arms. The soldiers exhibited none of their
+ancient enthusiasm as they defiled past the
+Emperor; silent and sad they took their way
+before him: the stern realities of war had chased
+away its enthusiastic ardour. All felt that in
+this dreadful contest they themselves would
+perish, happy if they had not previously witnessed
+the degradation of France!”<a id="FNanchor_35" href="#Footnote_35" class="fnanchor">35</a></p>
+
+<p>What is indeed the most interesting of all the
+Eagles, the most famous battle-standard in the
+world, which for a time was at the Invalides, is
+at present preserved in private hands in Paris—the
+Eagle of Napoleon’s Old Guard, the Eagle
+of the “Adieu of Fontainebleau.” It is treasured
+with devoted care in the family of the officer who
+commanded the Grenadiers of the Guard in the
+retreat from Moscow, at Fontainebleau, and at<span class="pagenum" id="Page_311">311</span>
+Waterloo—General Petit. It is kept in the house,
+in Paris, in which the old general died, in the
+room he used as his <i lang="fr">salon</i>. General Petit refused
+to be parted from the Eagle of his regiment
+during his lifetime; he kept it with him wherever
+he went, always in his personal care. It
+was at the Invalides while General Petit was in
+residence there as Governor of the Hospital.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE OLD GUARD AT FONTAINEBLEAU</div>
+
+<p>On that never-to-be-forgotten April forenoon
+of 1814, in the Court of the White Horse of the
+Château of Fontainebleau, Napoleon embraced
+the standard, and taking the Eagle in his hands,
+kissed it in front of the veteran Grenadiers of
+the Old Guard. His travelling carriage, to convey
+the fallen Emperor on the first stage of his
+journey to Elba, was in waiting, close by, ready
+to start. Twelve hundred Grenadiers of the
+Guard stood with presented arms all round the
+courtyard; drawn up in a great hollow square
+as a guard of honour to render to the master
+they adored the parting salute.</p>
+
+<p>Napoleon passed slowly round the square
+and inspected the ranks, man by man, looking
+intently into the scarred and war-worn, weather-beaten
+old faces, each one of which was familiar
+to him. Their station on every battlefield
+had been close at hand to where he took up his
+post. Night after night, in every campaign
+from Austerlitz to those last dreadful weeks,
+he had slept in their midst; his tent always
+pitched in the centre of the camp of the Imperial<span class="pagenum" id="Page_312">312</span>
+Guard. That had been Napoleon’s invariable
+custom in war. They had shared with him that
+last forlorn-hope march to save Paris, until,
+completely worn out and footsore, exhausted
+nature forbade their attempting to go farther.
+With tears streaming from their eyes the old
+soldiers, before whose bayonets in the charge
+no Continental foe had ever stood, mutely returned
+Napoleon’s last wistful, pathetic look of
+farewell.</p>
+
+<p>He addressed a few touching words to them,
+standing in the centre of the square. Next he
+turned to General Petit, near at hand, and
+before them he took the general in his arms,
+as representing all, and kissed him on the cheek.
+“I cannot embrace you all,” exclaimed Napoleon
+in a voice broken with emotion, yet which all
+could hear distinctly, “so I embrace your
+General!” Then he motioned to the Porte-Aigle,
+standing all the while before him, with
+the Eagle held in the attitude of salute.</p>
+
+<p>“Bring me the Eagle,” he said, “that I may
+embrace it also!” “Que m’apporte l’Aigle,
+que je l’embrasse aussi!” were Napoleon’s
+words.</p>
+
+<p>The Porte-Aigle advanced and again inclined
+the Eagle forward to the Emperor. Napoleon
+took hold of it, embraced and kissed it three
+times, tears in his eyes, and displaying the
+deepest emotion.</p>
+
+<figure id="i_312" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 30em;">
+ <img src="images/i_312.jpg" width="2388" height="1800" alt="">
+ <figcaption class="caption">
+ <p>NAPOLEON’S FAREWELL TO THE OLD GUARD AT FONTAINEBLEAU.</p>
+ <p>From a print after H. Vernet, kindly lent by Messrs. T.&nbsp;H. Parker, 45, Whitcomb Street.</p>
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<p>“Ah, chère Aigle,” he exclaimed, “que les<span class="pagenum" id="Page_313">313</span>
+baisers que je te donne retentissent dans la
+postérité.”</p>
+
+<p>The Eagle-bearer then stepped back a pace.</p>
+
+<p>“Adieu, mes enfants! Adieu, mes braves!
+Entourez moi encore une fois!” were Napoleon’s
+closing words as the historic scene
+terminated.</p>
+
+<p>The old soldiers all stood utterly broken
+down, weeping bitter tears, overcome with
+grief, as Napoleon made his way to the carriage;
+the members of the Household bowing
+low as he passed, and kissing his hand, were all
+also in tears.</p>
+
+<p>Finally, amid a mournful cry of “Vive
+l’Empereur!” Napoleon drove away.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">ASHES MINGLED WITH WINE</div>
+
+<p>As soon as Napoleon’s carriage was beyond
+the precincts, the Grenadiers of the Guard
+solemnly lowered the Imperial Standard, flying
+above the Château. There, in the courtyard,
+they burned it. Then, mixing the ashes
+in a barrel of wine that was brought out, they
+handed round the liquor in bowls and drank off
+the draught, pledging Napoleon with cries of
+“Vive l’Empereur!” So it is related by one
+who was an eye-witness and a partaker; one
+of the officers of the Old Guard.</p>
+
+<p>Kept safely in concealment for ten months by
+General Petit, during the Bourbon Restoration
+period in 1814, the Eagle of the Old Guard
+appeared once more after the return from Elba.
+It faced the enemy for the last time at Waterloo.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_314">314</span>
+Something of that will be said further on.
+General Petit kept close beside it all through the
+retreat, during that night of horror after Waterloo;
+a faithful band of devoted veterans accompanying
+him and surrounding the Eagle. So it
+made its final return to France, to be preserved
+for the rest of his life by the man who, above
+all others, had most right to be custodian of
+the Eagle of the Old Guard.</p>
+
+<p>The Bourbon War Minister ordered it to be
+given up, to be burned at the artillery dépôt
+at Vincennes with the other Eagles that the
+Restoration officials were able to get hold of.
+General Petit flatly and indignantly refused
+to part with the Eagle of the Old Guard. He
+was able, as before, to conceal it successfully,
+in spite of every effort to discover its whereabouts,
+until after the Revolution of 1830.
+Then, at the last, it was safe.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE FLAG OF THE OLD GUARD</div>
+
+<p>Faded and frayed away in parts, the gold
+embroidery on it dulled and tarnished from the
+lapse of years, and torn here and there round the
+jagged bullet-holes in the silk, is now, in its old
+age, the Flag of the Old Guard. As it was at
+first—as it was when it made its débût at the
+opening of its career, on that December afternoon
+on the Field of Mars—the flag is of rich
+crimson silk, fringed with gold, sprinkled over
+on both sides with golden bees, and with, at the
+corners, encircled in golden laurel-wreaths, the
+Imperial cypher, the letter “N.” In shape<span class="pagenum" id="Page_315">315</span>
+it was—and of course is still—almost a square:
+a metre deep, vertically, on the staff, and some
+half-dozen inches more than that lengthwise,
+horizontally, in the fly. On one side, in the
+centre, the Napoleonic Eagle is displayed, a
+gold embroidered Eagle poised on a thunderbolt.
+Inscribed round the Eagle in letters of
+gold is the legend:</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+“GARDE IMPÉRIALE<br><br>
+
+<span class="smcap">L’Empereur Napoléon</span><br>
+<span class="smcap">au 1<sup>er</sup> Régiment des</span><br>
+<span class="smcap">Grenadiers à Pied.</span>”
+</p>
+
+<p>On the other side are inscribed these fifteen
+names of Napoleon’s great days in war, also
+in golden letters: “Marengo; Ulm; Austerlitz;
+Jéna; Berlin; Eylau; Friedland; Madrid;
+Eckmühl; Essling; Wagram; Vienna; Smolensk;
+Moskowa; Moscow.”</p>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_316">316</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI<br>
+
+<span class="subhead">THAT TERRIBLE MIDNIGHT AT THE INVALIDES</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class="in0"><span class="firstword">The</span> Battalion Eagles of 1804, those of the
+second and third battalions withdrawn by the
+decree of 1808, together with the Light Cavalry
+(Hussar, Chasseur, and Dragoon) Eagles recalled
+in the autumn of 1805, and a number of Light
+Infantry Eagles returned to the Ministry of War
+at the end of 1807, perished in the flames
+of the great holocaust of trophy-flags at the
+Invalides on the night of March 30, 1814, the
+night of the surrender of Paris to the Allies.</p>
+
+<p>It was on that tragic Wednesday night that
+the great sacrifice was made, amid the bowed
+and weeping old soldiers of France, the veterans
+of a hundred battlefields, on the most terrible
+and mournful occasion in the wide-ranging annals
+of the great institution which the Grand
+Monarque, in the full pride of his power, at the
+topmost pinnacle of his renown, founded and
+opened in person with grandiose martial pomp
+and State display. All was over for France on
+that <span class="locked">night—</span></p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indentq">“Around a slaughtered army lay,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">No more to conquer and to bleed:</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">The power and glory of the war</div>
+ <div class="verse indent0">Had passed to the victorious Czar.”</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_317">317</span></p>
+<p>The two marshals charged with the defence
+of Paris, Marmont and Mortier, had on that
+afternoon placed the submission of the capital
+in the hands of Alexander of Russia on the
+heights of Montmartre, whence, and from the
+Buttes Chaumont and the other northern heights
+from right to left, 300 loaded cannon pointed
+threateningly down over the vanquished and
+panic-stricken city, supported by the bayonets
+and sabres of 120,000 men, Russians and
+Prussians, Bavarians, Würtemburgers, and Austrians,
+flushed and exultant in their hour of
+supreme triumph, the soldiers of all the nations
+of the Continent at war with Napoleon.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">NAPOLEON WITHIN TWELVE MILES</div>
+
+<p>It was at ten o’clock on that fateful night for
+France that the great destruction of trophies at
+the Invalides took place. Napoleon had set
+his last stake, had attempted his desperate last
+manœuvre, and had failed. He had been foiled
+and baffled when within reach almost of his goal.
+At that very hour indeed, only twelve miles
+away, he had just been stopped in his wild
+midnight gallop, his final forlorn-hope effort to
+reach the capital, by the news that all hope was
+past, that the worst had happened, that Paris
+had fallen.</p>
+
+<p>Only forty-eight hours before, on Monday night,
+at Saint-Dizier, a small town 170 miles away,
+had Napoleon suddenly realised the gravity
+of the catastrophe impending over Paris. He
+was at that moment in the act of dealing the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_318">318</span>
+Allies a counter-stroke which he confidently
+believed would save the situation and bring the
+enemy’s advance to a general stand. Just a
+week before, he had abruptly turned back in
+his retreat towards the capital and had boldly
+started to march across the rear of the Allies
+in the direction of the Rhine. He would sever
+their communications; he would cut the enemy
+off from their base. Calling out the <i lang="fr">levée en
+masse</i> of the peasantry all over Eastern France,
+and at the same time rallying to him the garrisons
+of the French fortresses in Alsace and
+Lorraine, with 100,000 men at his disposal,
+led by Ney, Macdonald, Victor, and Oudinot,
+while two other marshals, Marmont and Mortier,
+held the enemy at bay in front of Paris, he was
+looking forward to checkmate the Allies at the
+last moment and paralyse their advance on the
+capital. It was a daring and masterly project;
+but the Fortune of War was against Napoleon.
+He had sent word of his plans to Marie Louise
+at the Tuileries, together with instructions to his
+brother Joseph, Governor of Paris, but on the
+way a Cossack patrol captured the bearer of the
+vitally important documents. Napoleon’s despatch
+for once was not in cypher, and its full
+import was apparent instantly. It was carried
+to the Czar Alexander, and forthwith laid before
+a hastily convened Russian council of war.
+Another letter, taken at the same time, laid
+bare the critical condition of affairs inside<span class="pagenum" id="Page_319">319</span>
+Paris itself; describing how all was in confusion
+there, and that treachery to the cause
+of the Empire was at work within the city. The
+council of war decided to pay no heed to Napoleon’s
+counter-stroke, and, instead, to march
+at once on Paris in full force. Marmont and
+Mortier, it was known, could barely muster
+6,000 regulars. With Blücher’s Prussians, at
+that moment on the point of joining them, the
+Allies could bring into line not far short of
+150,000 men. This final plan was agreed to
+on the afternoon of Friday, March 24, and the
+general advance began at once.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">NAPOLEON’S BLANK DISMAY</div>
+
+<p>Napoleon knew nothing of what was happening
+until late on the night of the 27th, the following
+Monday. Then he was suddenly made aware
+of the full position. “Nothing,” exclaimed the
+doomed Emperor in blank dismay, “but a
+thunderbolt can save us now.” The Allies
+then had not turned back! The enemy nearest
+him, whom he had planned to attack next day,
+believing them to be the Russian main army,
+was only—he discovered at the last moment—a
+cavalry division, sent back to delude him and
+prevent his finding out what was really going
+on. And the troops advancing on Paris were
+already three clear days ahead of him! Napoleon
+counter-marched his whole force at once to
+hasten to the rescue of the capital. They would
+take the route by Sens, Troyes, and Fontainebleau,
+making a sweep to keep clear of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_320">320</span>
+enemy’s columns, and approach Paris by the
+south bank of the Seine. It was a long march
+of fully 180 miles, but there was no other
+way open. Marmont and Mortier, to whom
+the news of Napoleon’s intended approach was
+sent off immediately, must manage to hold out
+in front of the city on the north bank until the
+Emperor arrived.</p>
+
+<p>Fresh news, however, and yet more serious,
+as to the imminence of the grave peril threatening
+Paris, reached Napoleon during Tuesday night.
+Leaving the army to follow, he pressed forward
+ahead of the troops by himself in his travelling-carriage,
+escorted only by the Old Guard. They
+hurried forward with feverish eagerness all that
+night and the next day, the men of the Guard
+panting along at the double in their effort to
+keep up. With hardly a halt, they struggled
+along, famishing—most of the men had tasted
+no cooked food for the past five days—shoeless
+most of them, plodding and splashing barefoot
+through the mud, ankle deep; under a pitiless
+downpour of rain all the time. By Wednesday
+evening, the 30th, they had reached Troyes, after
+a forty miles march without a stop. There,
+still worse news reached Napoleon. Marmont
+and Mortier had been disastrously defeated at
+Meaux, and in consequence their defence of the
+northern heights outside the city was all but
+hopeless.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">AT FULL GALLOP FOR PARIS</div>
+
+<p>Napoleon, on that, abandoned his travelling-carriage<span class="pagenum" id="Page_321">321</span>
+for a light post-chaise, which set off at
+a gallop. He must now risk a ride practically
+unattended, in the desperate hope of being
+able to evade hostile patrols and get by stealth
+into the city. Once there, he would himself
+take charge of the defence. The men of the
+Old Guard were left behind at Troyes. They
+were worn out and unable, from sheer exhaustion,
+to go a step farther. Only a troop of Cuirassiers
+rode with the post-chaise, and most of these
+had to give up and drop back as the chaise raced
+forward, Napoleon himself from time to time
+calling from the windows to the postillions to
+keep on flogging the horses and go faster and
+faster. At every stopping-place to change horses
+the Emperor sent off a courier to tell Paris to
+hold out; and at each post-house he received
+still more alarming messages from the city. Now
+he heard that the Empress and his little son had
+had to fly from Paris. Then he learned that the
+whole city was in a state of complete panic, with
+affrighted peasants from all round crowding in;
+the shops and banks all shut; the theatres closed,
+a thing that had not happened even at the
+height of the Reign of Terror; everywhere chaos
+and hopeless despair. After that came the news
+that the enemy were advancing so fast that
+they were expected at any moment before the
+City barriers.</p>
+
+<p>At ten o’clock Napoleon arrived at the village
+of Fromenteau, near the Fountains of Juvisy,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_322">322</span>
+twelve and a half miles from Paris. The post-chaise
+had to stop there again for a relay of
+fresh horses. As it drew up, a party of soldiers
+passed by, coming from the direction of the
+capital. Not knowing who was in the chaise,
+some of them shouted out to the occupants,
+Napoleon, and Caulaincourt, who had been riding
+with the Emperor: “Paris has surrendered!”</p>
+
+<p>The dread news struck Napoleon like a bullet
+between the eyes. “It is impossible! The
+men are mad!” he hissed out, gripping at the
+cushions of his seat. Then he turned to his
+companion: “Find an officer and bring him
+to me!”</p>
+
+<p>One rode up, as it happened, at that moment,
+a General Belliard. Napoleon questioned him
+eagerly, and he gave the Emperor sufficient
+details to leave no doubt of what had befallen.
+Great drops of sweat stood on Napoleon’s forehead.
+He turned, quivering with excitement,
+to Caulaincourt. “Do you hear that?” he
+ejaculated hoarsely, fixing a gaze on his companion
+under the light of the lamps, the bare
+memory of which made Caulaincourt shudder
+ever after to his dying day.</p>
+
+<p>They left the chaise, and looking across the
+Seine Napoleon saw to the north and east, in
+the direction of Villeneuve Saint-Georges, the glare
+of the enemy’s watch-fires. Marshal Berthier
+now came up in a second post-chaise which had
+been following the Emperor’s. Speaking excitedly,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_323">323</span>
+Napoleon declared that he would go
+on to Paris. He set off walking rapidly along
+the road in the dark, leaving the horses to be
+put to and the post-chaise to pick him up.
+Berthier and Caulaincourt attended him, and
+General Belliard and some dragoons followed
+at a few paces behind. Napoleon rejected
+every remonstrance and refused to turn back.
+“I asked them,” exclaimed Napoleon, talking
+half to himself, half to his companions, “to hold
+out for only twenty-four hours! Miserable
+wretches! Marmont swore that he would be
+cut to pieces rather than yield! And Joseph
+ran away: my own brother! To surrender the
+capital to the enemy: what poltroons!” So
+he went on in a breathless torrent of words.
+He added finally: “They have capitulated:
+betrayed their country; betrayed their Emperor;
+degraded France! It is too terrible!
+Every one has lost his head! When I am not
+there they do nothing but add blunder to
+blunder.”</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">“MISERABLE WRETCHES!”</div>
+
+<p>But to go on, with Paris in the hands of an
+army of 150,000 men, was out of the question.
+Napoleon had to bow to the inevitable. He
+at length yielded to the protests of the others.
+He stopped beside the Fountains of Juvisy.
+“He sat down on the parapet of one of the
+fountains,” described Labédoyère, an eye-witness,
+“and remained above a quarter of an hour
+with his head resting on his hands, lost in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_324">324</span>
+most painful reflections.” Then he rose, went
+back to the post-chaise, and, telling General
+Belliard to rally all the men he could at Essonne,
+set off to drive to Fontainebleau. He reached
+there at six next morning.</p>
+
+<p>Between ten o’clock on Wednesday night and
+six o’clock on Thursday morning the tragedy
+at the Invalides was enacted. Its opening scene
+took place just as Napoleon’s post-chaise was
+drawing up in the village of Fromenteau. Its
+final scene took place just as the post-chaise was
+entering the courtyard of Fontainebleau.</p>
+
+<p>The Capitulation of Paris was signed before
+the Barrier of La Villette at five in the afternoon.
+Its first article laid down that the French army
+must evacuate Paris within twelve hours: before
+five o’clock next morning. The last clause recommended
+the city to the mercy of the Allied
+Sovereigns, and of the Czar Alexander in particular.</p>
+
+<p>All day long the booming of cannon and rattle
+of musketry had dinned in the ears of the
+trembling and terrified Parisians, ever steadily
+drawing nearer. The marshals, Marmont and
+Mortier, had made their last stand, and, resisting
+desperately to the last, in a struggle in which
+the Allies lost two to every one of the defenders,
+so ferocious was the contest, had been beaten
+back into the city. They carried back with
+them, so gallantly had they counter-attacked
+at one point, the standard of the Second Squadron<span class="pagenum" id="Page_325">325</span>
+of the Russian Garde du Corps—now a
+trophy in the present collection at the Invalides.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">BEYOND ALL HOPE NOW</div>
+
+<p>The outnumbered and exhausted troops could
+make no further fight, although, to the end,
+many of the soldiers were for holding out to the
+last cartridge. The <i lang="fr">Générale</i> had beaten to arms
+at two in the morning; at six, with sunrise, the
+enemy’s guns opened fire; from then until late
+in the afternoon the fighting had gone on incessantly.</p>
+
+<p>All was over by four o’clock. From east to
+west, from Charenton and Belleville, right round
+to Neuilly, the Allies, the Russians, Blücher’s
+Prussians, and the Austrians, had captured
+every position capable of defence, one after the
+other, by sheer weight of numbers, and had
+carried at the point of the bayonet every place
+of vantage held by the French. Woronzeff and
+the Prince of Würtemburg had stormed Romainville,
+La Villette, and La Chapelle. Langeron
+and the Russian Imperial Guard were masters
+of the heights of Montmartre and the Buttes
+Chaumont, looking down directly on Paris.
+Eighty-six guns had been taken from the
+marshals since the morning; nearly six thousand
+soldiers and National Guards had fallen, killed
+or wounded, facing the foe. A six-miles long
+line of batteries and battalions on the side of the
+Allies had closed in to within short musket
+range of the Paris barriers. Already the Russian
+cannon were opening fire on the city, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_326">326</span>
+their shells were bursting over the central streets
+of Paris; falling, some in the Chaussée d’Antin
+and on the Boulevard des Italiens.</p>
+
+<p>At four o’clock Marmont, who had been the
+soul of the defence, fighting, now on horseback,
+now on foot, using his sword at times—“the
+marshal was seen everywhere in the thickest of
+the fight, a dozen or more soldiers were bayoneted
+at his side, and his hat was riddled with bullets”—at
+four o’clock Marmont repassed within the
+barriers to announce that further defence was
+impossible. He was scarcely recognisable, we
+are told—“he had a beard of eight days’ growth;
+the great-coat which covered his uniform was in
+tatters; from head to foot he was blackened with
+powder-smoke.” Then had to be done the only
+thing that was left to do. Marmont and Mortier
+held a hasty conference, and after it a trumpeter
+and an aide de camp carrying a white flag rode
+out through the firing line to the nearest advanced
+post of the Allies. The officer was taken before
+the Czar Alexander on the plateau of Chaumont,
+and Paris surrendered. The last sounds that
+were heard on the French side as the firing
+ceased came from a battalion of the Imperial
+Guard which had been serving under Marmont,
+from a scanty remnant of veterans stubbornly
+resisting at bay to the last—shouts of “Vive
+l’Empereur!”</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE FLAG OF THE POLYTECHNIC</div>
+
+<p>The old pensioners of the Invalides manfully
+did their duty, and bore their part in the defence<span class="pagenum" id="Page_327">327</span>
+all day, as well as they were able. All who
+could carry a musket had gone out to the barriers;
+others did their best by helping to bring
+up ammunition. Most of them fought at the
+Barrière du Trône on the Vincennes road, assisting
+the brave lads of the Polytechnic School to
+hold the post and man a battery of eight-and-twenty
+cannon in front of the barrier; until a
+headlong charge of Russian cavalry, Pahlen’s
+dragoons with some Cossacks, swooped down
+from the flank, annihilating the devoted band of
+gunners. Those of the boys who were left,
+however, saved the school flag, presented to the
+Polytechnic just ten years before by the Emperor
+with his own hand, on the Day of the
+Eagles on the Field of Mars. With the Invalides’
+veterans and some of the National
+Guards, the survivors held the barrier throughout
+the day to the end, beating back repeated
+attempts of the Russians to storm the gate.
+The lads, finally, after learning that Marmont
+had capitulated, made their way back to the
+school, and there burned their precious standard
+to save it from falling into the enemy’s hands.
+Those who were left of the veterans hastened
+back to the Invalides at the same time, overcome
+with anxiety to learn what was to happen
+to their own priceless treasures within the
+Hospital, the trophy flags. There were at the
+Invalides at that time, by one account, 1417
+trophy flags; according to another account—which<span class="pagenum" id="Page_328">328</span>
+included apparently in the total the
+returned Battalion and Light Infantry and
+Cavalry Eagles—altogether 1,800 standards.</p>
+
+<p>Within the walls of the Invalides all was deep
+gloom and hopeless despondency among those
+in charge. Even at nightfall, as it would appear,
+the authorities had not made up their minds
+how the trophies were to be disposed of.</p>
+
+<p>It is a hapless and pitiful story from first to
+last. Some time previously, while the Allied
+armies were still being kept at bay on the plains
+of Champagne, the Governor of the Invalides, old
+Marshal Serrurier, a distinguished veteran of
+the Revolutionary Army, had applied to the
+Minister of War for instructions as to the disposal
+of the trophies at the Invalides in the event of the
+enemy advancing on Paris. The only answer he
+received was a formal letter to the effect that the
+matter would have to go before the Emperor. At
+that time Napoleon was in the midst of his last
+forlorn-hope attempt to stem the tide of invasion;
+in the midst of a life-and-death struggle, fighting
+desperately day after day at one place or another.
+The Ministry of War apparently pigeon-holed
+the application after that, and forgot all about
+the trophies at the Invalides until the actual day
+of the attack on Paris—until that Wednesday
+forenoon.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">FORGOTTEN UNTIL TOO LATE</div>
+
+<p>Then, when already Marmont’s outer line of
+defence had been forced, and the last fight for
+the inner heights overlooking the city was raging<span class="pagenum" id="Page_329">329</span>
+furiously, almost within sight from the Invalides,
+a letter from the War Minister was
+handed to Serrurier. It “trusted that the
+Marshal had taken steps for the safety of the
+trophies; especially for the preservation of
+Frederick the Great’s sword. The flags,” continued
+the letter, “had best be detached from
+their staves, and rolled up carefully. The War
+Minister is sure that your Excellency will do all
+that is possible. The road to the Loire is open.”
+Such were the instructions sent to the Invalides
+after the eleventh hour! Then, during the
+afternoon, when the enemy’s bombshells, fired
+from the plateau of Chaumont, were falling in the
+heart of the city, a single artillery wagon, or
+fourgon, a vehicle barely large enough to remove
+a small percentage of what there was to carry
+away, drew up at the main gates of the Invalides.
+It brought also ten more trophy flags, collected
+from somewhere in Paris. In the general confusion
+nobody, it would seem, even inquired
+what they were or where they came from. The
+driver’s instructions were merely that “they
+were to go away with the Invalides trophies.”
+The ten flags were taken out and stacked in a
+corridor for the time being, while the fourgon
+waited unheeded at the gate until after dark.</p>
+
+<p>What steps Marshal Serrurier took during the
+afternoon to secure adequate transport is unknown;
+or, indeed, what he did with himself all
+that time. The Governor was seen just before<span class="pagenum" id="Page_330">330</span>
+the dinner-hour in the Corridor d’Avignon, in
+an out-of-the-way part of the building, in conference
+with the Lieutenant-Governor and an
+adjutant-major. Another officer, Adjutant Vollerand,
+was with them, holding in his hands
+Frederick the Great’s sword and sash. Apparently
+they did not want to be observed, and
+were discussing how to hide the relics or bury
+them within the precincts of the Invalides.
+After that nothing more was seen of Serrurier
+at the Invalides until between nine and ten at
+night, some hours after the Capitulation, and
+when it had become known that the Allies intended
+to occupy Paris in force, and that their
+troops would enter and take possession of the
+city early next morning. Then the Governor
+reappeared.</p>
+
+<p>A few minutes after nine o’clock the veterans
+of the Invalides, who had been restlessly pacing
+about the halls and corridors during the evening,
+or standing about in dejected groups in the courtyards,
+not knowing what they were to do, were
+suddenly summoned to muster at once in the
+Grand Court, or Cour d’Honneur. All turned out
+from the wards and paraded, forming up by
+the light of lanterns. All but those who were
+bedridden were brought out, the maimed and
+cripples being led out, or hobbling out on their
+crutches, together with the survivors of those
+who had fought so gallantly at the barriers
+during the day, their faces still begrimed with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_331">331</span>
+powder-smoke, their clothes torn and stained,
+some without their hats, their arms in slings, or
+with bandages over recent wounds. Then the
+tall, spare figure of the Governor, a grim, hard-featured
+old warrior, white-haired, over seventy
+years of age, was seen emerging from his quarters,
+with the senior staff-officers of the Hospital
+following in rear. Serrurier harangued the
+pensioners briefly. He told them that the
+enemy would enter the city next day and would
+present themselves at the Invalides to enforce
+the giving up of the trophies. What did the
+men of the Invalides desire should be done?</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">“LET US BURN THEM HERE!”</div>
+
+<p>There was a pause for a moment; a dead
+silence, as the old soldiers gazed dumbfoundedly
+at one another. Then one man stepped out to
+the front and spoke up for the rest. A battle-scarred
+old sergeant-pensioner of the Grenadiers
+of the Old Guard answered the Governor
+on behalf of his comrades, his reply, greeted as
+it was by vociferous shouts of approval on
+every side, voicing the unanimous wish of the
+veterans. “If they will not let us keep our
+banners, let us burn them here! We will
+swallow the ashes!” The order to make a
+bonfire of the trophies then and there was issued
+forthwith.</p>
+
+<p>Anything that came to hand for fuel was
+eagerly seized, and a great pile speedily made of
+broken-up stools and mess-tables and forms,
+hauled out from the barrack-rooms withindoors.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_332">332</span>
+They were stacked in a heap just in front of
+the pedestal on which it had been intended
+to erect an equestrian statue of the heroic
+Marshal Lannes, who died from his wounds at
+Aspern in the arms of Napoleon. Meanwhile,
+parties of men ran inside with ladders, and set
+to work to strip the dining-halls and the Chapel
+of the rows of flags hanging up there. They bore
+them outside, roughly bundled together in their
+arms; some, silently, with frowning, stern-set
+faces and set teeth; others beside themselves
+with rage, and cursing savagely aloud; others
+sullenly muttering oaths; not a few of the old
+fellows with tears streaming down their cheeks.
+They carried the trophies out and heaped them
+up into an immense funeral pyre. The battalion
+and other Eagles shared the fate of the captured
+trophies—standards, some of these, that had
+been borne under fire in the thick of triumphant
+battle at Austerlitz, and Jena, at Auerstadt
+and Friedland—to save them on the morrow
+from falling into the hands of those in whose
+defeat and humiliation they had had their part.
+The fire was lighted and the masses of tattered
+silk blazed up furiously. When the flames
+were at their fiercest, Marshal Serrurier stepped
+forward and with his own hand flung into the
+midst of the fiery mass the sword of Frederick
+the Great.</p>
+
+<p>For half the night the veterans stood round and
+watched the flames complete the work of destruction.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_333">333</span>
+They stood massed round in a densely
+packed throng of sullen, gloomy, brokenhearted
+men. They stayed there until long after midnight,
+gazing, in a state of dull despair, at the
+fire; while some now and again stirred up the
+glowing fuel and made the flames leap up afresh,
+roaring and crackling and casting a dull red
+throbbing glare over the old walls and rows of
+windows all round, and gleaming on the lofty
+gilded dome of the Invalides, in itself an intended
+memento of victory. On first seeing the golden
+domes of the Kremlin as he approached Moscow,
+Napoleon had sent orders to Paris to have the
+dome of the Invalides gilded as a memorial of
+his achievement of the goal of the campaign!
+Most of the veterans stood there throughout
+the greater part of that cold March night,
+watching until the fire had died down and only
+a great heap of smouldering cinders remained;
+all that was left of the trophies of victorious
+France.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE TROPHIES OF TWO CENTURIES</div>
+
+<p>Among the vast array of foreign trophies at
+the Invalides that perished on that night were
+English flags nearly two centuries old, the remains
+of the spoil of some forty-four English
+banners of Charles the First’s soldiers, triumphantly
+carried to Paris from the Ile de Rhé
+in November 1627 and hung in Notre Dame.
+Others flags destroyed there, too, dated from the
+wars of the Grand Monarque; spoils won on
+the battlefield by the famous Condé and Turenne;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_334">334</span>
+also trophies taken from William the Third at
+Steenkirk and Landen and elsewhere; the
+British and Dutch and Danish and Bavarian
+ensigns won by Turenne’s great successor,
+Marshal Luxembourg, “le Tapissier de Notre
+Dame,” as they dubbed him at Versailles, for
+the almost innumerable trophies sent by Luxembourg
+to be hung up in the Cathedral of Paris,
+with State processions and Te Deums in the
+presence of the King. Other British battle-spoils,
+the trophies of France, which passed out
+of existence at the Invalides on that night were
+these: a flag taken at Fontenoy by the Irish
+Brigade; the regimental colours surrendered
+by the garrison of Minorca which Admiral
+Byng failed to rescue; those of another British
+garrison of Minorca of the time of the Great
+Siege of Gibraltar, when France, for the second
+time, wrested the island from England; four
+British and Hessian regimental flags surrendered
+to Washington at Yorktown and sent
+by Congress as a gift to the King of France;
+flags taken by the French from British West
+India garrisons in the same war; besides British
+naval ensigns also taken during the American
+War, with other British ship-flags, some of which
+indeed dated from the earlier battle times of
+Duguay Trouin and Jean Bart. Destroyed at
+the Invalides also on that Wednesday night
+was a British naval ensign from Trafalgar. It
+had been hoisted on board one of Nelson’s prizes,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_335">335</span>
+the <i lang="fr">Algéciras</i>. In the storm after the battle
+the ship was in imminent peril of wreck, and the
+French prisoners on board were liberated in
+order to help to save her. They used their
+freedom to overpower the small British prize-crew
+and carried the vessel off into Cadiz, whence
+the British ensign, hoisted originally in triumph
+over the French tricolor during the battle of
+two days before, on the <i lang="fr">Algéciras</i> being captured,
+was sent as a trophy to Paris. There were
+also destroyed at the Invalides at the same
+time the ensign of Lord Cochrane’s famous
+brig-of-war, the <i>Speedy</i>, captured in the Mediterranean
+in 1801, and those of three British line-of-battle
+ships, the <i>Berwick</i>, the <i>Swiftsure</i>, and
+the <i>Hannibal</i>, taken within the previous twenty
+years.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">SPOILS TAKEN IN NAVAL FIGHTS</div>
+
+<p>Most of the trophies won by Napoleon and the
+Grand Army all over Europe, and by the Armies
+of the Republic and Consulate before that,
+perished in the holocaust: the spoils of Valmy
+and Fleurus and Jemmapes; of Hohenlinden;
+of Dego and Mondovi; of Rivoli and Montenotte;
+of Castiglione, Lodi, and Arcola; of
+Zurich and Marengo, and other victories. On
+that night, too, passed out of existence the
+famous flag of the Army of Italy presented by
+Napoleon, and bearing inscribed on it the names
+of eighty triumphs on the battlefield and the
+detailed record of the taking of 150,000 prisoners,
+170 standards, 550 siege-guns, and 600 pieces<span class="pagenum" id="Page_336">336</span>
+of field artillery; the Horse-tail banners of the
+Mamelukes, taken by Napoleon at the battle
+of the Pyramids; the historic standard of the
+Knights of St. John, won in hand-to-hand fight
+outside the main gate of Valetta. Most of
+the 340 Prussian standards Napoleon sent to
+Paris after the Jena campaign, together with
+the sword and Black Eagle sash of Frederick
+the Great, as well as the recovered French
+trophies of the Seven Years’ War, originally
+won by Frederick at Rosbach, the standards
+of Frederick the Great’s Guards, and Austrian
+spoils taken by the Prussians at Leuthen, Kolin,
+and Hohenfriedburg, all of which had been
+carried off to Paris by Napoleon—these were
+among the war-treasures destroyed at the Invalides
+on that night. With them went into
+the flames the Grand Army’s Russian trophies
+from Eylau and Friedland, the Austrian trophies
+from Eckmühl and Wagram, besides many
+Spanish and Portuguese trophies taken before
+Wellington landed in the Peninsula to turn the
+tide of war.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">AFTER DUPONT’S SURRENDER</div>
+
+<p>One French Eagle which perished on that
+night was the survivor of a disaster: Dupont’s
+surrender at Bailen in Andalusia in 1808,<a id="FNanchor_36" href="#Footnote_36" class="fnanchor">36</a> at<span class="pagenum" id="Page_337">337</span>
+the outset of the Spanish insurrection; that
+cruel humiliation for the arms of France, the news
+of which came on Europe with all the startling
+effect of a thunderclap, and drove Napoleon
+nearly frantic in his furious indignation. It had
+been one of three Eagles taken by the Spaniards,
+that of the 24me Légère, and had been recovered
+by the daring of an officer of the regiment, one
+of the prisoners, Captain Lanusse. Confined in a
+prison-hulk at Cadiz, he escaped to shore one
+night, managed to find out where his regiment’s
+flag was kept, displayed as a Spanish trophy, got
+hold of it, and then made his way outside the city
+into the lines of the besieging French army.
+There he presented the Eagle to Marshal Soult,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_338">338</span>
+who forwarded it direct to Napoleon. Lanusse,
+as his reward, was promoted a <i lang="fr">chef de bataillon</i>
+of the 8th of the Line, and fell to the bayonet of
+a British soldier of the 87th Royal Irish Fusiliers
+at Barrosa. The recovered Eagle Napoleon
+sent to the Invalides.</p>
+
+<p>By morning all that remained of the proud
+trophies of France at the Invalides was a heap
+of grey ashes, fragments of charred flag-poles,
+and scraps of partly molten metal. The <i lang="fr">débris</i>
+was raked up at daylight, and shovelled into the
+artillery fourgon of the previous afternoon,
+which had been standing all night outside the
+main gate of the Invalides. The artillery wagon
+drove off with it to the Seine near by and emptied<span class="pagenum" id="Page_339">339</span>
+the heap into the river. That was the end of
+the night’s destruction.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">ALL THAT WAS DREDGED UP</div>
+
+<p>Some portion of the <i lang="fr">débris</i> was recovered from
+the Seine a year afterwards, and is preserved in
+the Chapel of the Invalides now. In June
+1815 a workman, doing some repairs by the
+riverside, discovered a portion of a flag under
+water, and on hearing of that, two patriotic
+young Frenchmen, an engineer and a journalist,
+privately set to work soon afterwards to see
+if they could fish up anything that might be
+worth preserving. At the time the Allies were in
+possession of Paris, during the second occupation,
+after Waterloo, and the two young men
+had to proceed cautiously. They were successful
+in the end in recovering portions of 183 trophies,
+metal spear-head ornaments, from ensign-staves
+mostly. Seventy-eight were later identified as
+of Austrian origin; one as part of a British flag;
+two as having belonged to Russian standards;
+various fragments as the remains of thirty-nine
+Prussian standards; four from Spanish flags
+with Bourbon fleurs-de-lis; and two fragments
+of Turkish standards from Egypt. The
+remainder of the salvage it was impossible to
+identify.</p>
+
+<p>That the great sacrifice had not been made in
+vain, was speedily apparent. In the course of
+the morning after the bonfire, a little before noon
+on Thursday, March 31, within two hours of the
+entry into Paris of the vanguard of the Allied<span class="pagenum" id="Page_340">340</span>
+armies, a Russian aide de camp presented himself
+at the Invalides, and, in the name of the
+Allied sovereigns, demanded a statement of the
+trophies kept there. The officer came up on
+horseback, accompanied by a mounted man of
+the National Guard, and an armed escort of
+Russian dragoons. The main gate was open as
+usual, and the Russian officer rode through without
+taking notice of the gate-sentry’s challenge.
+He was only stopped by a rush of the pensioners’
+day-guard, called out by the sentry’s shout of
+alarm—“Aux armes!” The guard turned out
+and faced the aide de camp with lowered halberds.
+The Russian colonel protested, but the
+officer on duty refused to let him pass without
+orders from his own chief, and General Darnaud,
+the Lieutenant-Governor, was sent for. That
+officer came, and the Russian dismounted and
+explained his mission. He had orders, he said,
+to “take cognisance” of the trophies of the
+Invalides. General Darnaud replied bluntly:
+“Very good, I will permit you to visit the Hôtel.
+Come with me!” The general added: “As to
+the trophies, sir, we have dealt with them according
+to the laws of war!” “On en avait agi
+suivant les lois de guerre!” were his words. The
+Russian did not seem to grasp the general’s
+meaning, and stood still for a moment, staring
+blankly at him. On that, Madame Darnaud, the
+Lieutenant-Governor’s wife, who had followed
+into the courtyard immediately after her husband,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_341">341</span>
+interposed. She addressed the officer,
+speaking volubly and angrily, but only to draw
+down on herself from the Russian the uncivil
+rejoinder that he had not come there to talk to
+a woman! After that, the general, accompanied
+by some of the men of the main guard
+with shouldered halberds, formally conducted
+the officer inside the Invalides, the party taking
+their way along the colonnade round the Court
+of Honour, in the midst of which could be seen
+the wide burnt-out space where the fire had been,
+the pungent smell of the fumes from which
+still hung about the place, and so into the Chapel
+of St. Louis. There the scene that met the
+Russian aide de camp’s eyes seemed to stagger
+him: bare blank walls, the gallery stripped and
+defaced; with empty and broken metal sockets
+here and there to show where the flags had been
+fastened up. The interior had been entirely
+cleared from end to end along the sides. It was
+absolutely unrecognisable to any who had seen
+it before. The Russian officer, who had visited
+the Invalides six or seven years previously, after
+Tilsit, could only gaze round dumbly, utterly
+taken aback. He muttered something, but did
+not speak aloud. Then, glaring round savagely
+into the eyes of those about him, he turned away
+abruptly, and was conducted to the Outer Court,
+where he remounted his horse, and rode off
+hastily in the direction whence he had come.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE WALLS STRIPPED AND BARE</div>
+
+<p>All Napoleon’s trophies, however, did not<span class="pagenum" id="Page_342">342</span>
+perish at the Invalides. Some of the Grand
+Army’s captured flags, as it so chanced, escaped
+destruction on that night, and are at the Invalides
+now. They are in the Chapel and in the Salle
+Turenne, besides half a hundred in the Crypt,
+grouped round Napoleon’s tomb. The forty-five
+Austrian flags taken at Ulm are beside Napoleon’s
+tomb, with nine other flags. Presented
+by the Emperor to the Senate, as has been told,
+the Ulm trophies, during the night of March 30,
+were hastily taken down from where they had
+been hung in the Grand Salon for the past nine
+years, and hidden in a vault below. They made
+a second public appearance on the occasion of
+Napoleon’s funeral at the Invalides in 1840, when
+they were placed at the head of the coffin. They
+have ever since been kept beside the tomb.</p>
+
+<p>The Austerlitz trophies met another fate.
+Kept at Notre Dame, they disappeared mysteriously
+from there in the early morning of the
+day of the entry of the Allies into Paris. At
+three in the morning of March 31 an urgent message
+from the Prefect of the Seine was delivered
+at Notre Dame, calling on the Cathedral authorities
+to take down and conceal the Austerlitz
+trophies at once. The Chapter met hastily in
+the Archbishop’s room, and the flags were all
+down within half an hour. They have never
+been seen since, nor was their fate ever accounted
+for.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">HOW FIFTY-ONE FLAGS WERE SAVED</div>
+
+<p>At the Luxembourg Palace were displayed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_343">343</span>
+110 trophies, the spoils of the Eagles, won from
+all the nations of Europe and presented to
+the <i lang="fr">Corps Legislatif</i> by Napoleon. They were
+safely removed on the night of March 30, and
+were hidden securely. Brought out and set up
+again a year later, on Napoleon’s return from
+Elba, the authorities forgot about hiding them
+again in the confusion after Waterloo. As the
+result more than half of them are now in Berlin.
+Blücher sent a party of staff officers to seize the
+entire collection, but a sharp-witted functionary
+hoodwinked the Prussians on their arrival.
+They went back to get written orders, and before
+they returned, as many as possible of the trophies
+had been pulled down and got out of the way.
+One of the attendants managed the affair on
+his own initiative, a hall-porter named Mathieu.
+He was able to save and hide as many as fifty-one
+of the flags, and they have since been forwarded
+to the Invalides. The other fifty-nine trophies
+the Prussians seized and carried off. Two
+Austrian standards taken by Napoleon at
+Marengo escaped destruction by having been
+previously lent from the Invalides to an artist,
+Charles Vernet, for a battle-picture he had been
+commissioned to paint for Napoleon. They
+were in Vernet’s studio in March 1814. His
+son, Horace Vernet, returned them in later days
+to the Invalides, where they now are.</p>
+
+<p>In addition, it would seem, at least a moiety
+of the Invalides trophies were kept back at the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_344">344</span>
+last moment by some of the veterans themselves.
+Several of the old soldiers, it would
+appear, after stripping down the flags from the
+walls, instead of carrying all out into the courtyard
+to the bonfire, retained and hid a few of
+them on their own account, to smuggle them
+outside afterwards and keep them in concealment.<a id="FNanchor_37" href="#Footnote_37" class="fnanchor">37</a></p>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_345">345</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XII">CHAPTER XII<br>
+
+<span class="subhead">THE EAGLES OF THE LAST ARMY</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class="in0"><span class="firstword">The</span> Eagles came back to France with the
+return of Napoleon from Elba; to lead the last
+Army to the campaign of the Hundred Days.</p>
+
+<p>They “flew from steeple to steeple across
+France,” in Napoleon’s expressive phrase,
+“from the shores of Fréjus until they alighted
+on the towers of Notre Dame.” The enthusiasm
+that greeted their reappearance spread like
+wild-fire; it blazed up like an exploding magazine.
+The rapturous acclamation and enthusiasm
+with which the Eagles were welcomed
+back was the measure of the prevailing
+discontent and resentment among the soldiers
+at the harsh and unworthy treatment they had
+received during the ten months of the restored
+<i lang="fr">régime</i>.</p>
+
+<p>The Army had come off badly by its change
+of masters. The Bourbons had done all in their
+power to alienate its regard; as much through
+malice in not a few cases, as through downright
+stupidity.</p>
+
+<p>“Of all the institutions of France the most
+thoroughly national and the most thoroughly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_346">346</span>
+democratic was the Army; it was accordingly
+against the Army that the <i lang="fr">noblesse</i> directed its
+first efforts. Financial difficulties made a large
+reduction in the forces necessary. Fourteen
+thousand officers and sergeants were accordingly
+dismissed on half-pay; but no sooner had this
+measure of economy been effected than a multitude
+of emigrants who had served against the
+Republic in the army of the Prince of Condé or
+in La Vendée were rewarded with all degrees
+of military rank.... The tricolor, under which
+every battle of France had been fought from
+Jemmapes to Montmartre, was superseded by
+the white flag of the House of Bourbon, under
+which no living soldier had marched to victory....
+The Imperial Guard was removed from
+service at the Palace, and the so-called Military
+Household of the old Bourbon monarchy revived,
+with the privileges and the insignia
+belonging to the period before 1775.”</p>
+
+<p>The abolition of the Eagles was the preliminary
+step of all. A justifiable measure, no
+doubt, from a political point of view, it touched
+to the quick the military instinct of the nation.
+And on that followed the abolition of the national
+tricolor in favour of the old Bourbon white flag.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">EVERY ONE TO BE DESTROYED</div>
+
+<p>Within three weeks of the Farewell of Fontainebleau
+the Eagles of the Army, with the
+tricolor standards, were officially proscribed;
+the order went forth to send them to Paris
+forthwith for destruction in the furnaces of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_347">347</span>
+artillery dépôt at Vincennes. On May 12 it
+was notified that the white Bourbon flag was
+again to be the standard of the Army, with a
+brass fleur-de-lis at the head of the colour-staff
+in place of the Eagle.</p>
+
+<p>Every regiment was required to send its Eagle
+to the Ministry of War in Paris on receipt of the
+order. No allowances or exceptions were made;
+although in several instances officers urgently
+petitioned to be allowed to retain their Eagles
+with the corps, if only as mementoes of feats of
+arms achieved by the regiments in battle.
+Every request was rejected, whatever the circumstances.
+There were reasons of State policy
+no doubt, as has been said, against the general
+retention as regimental standards of military
+insignia so intimately associated with Napoleon;
+but in certain instances, at least, indulgence
+might reasonably have been extended to the
+applications. There were personal and romantic
+associations connected with some of
+the Eagles, specially endearing them to the
+soldiers, for which privilege might well have been
+accorded. One very hard case may be cited
+as typical of others: that of the Eagle of the
+25th of the Line.</p>
+
+<p>The Eagle of the 25th had been carried under
+fire in some twenty battles and all through the
+Moscow campaign; and had notable battle-scars
+to show for its distinguished services. One
+leg and one wing of the Eagle had been shot<span class="pagenum" id="Page_348">348</span>
+away in action, and there were five bullet-holes
+in its metal body. Its maimed appearance,
+indeed, had attracted Napoleon’s attention at
+a review, and he had stopped while riding
+past the regiment and taken the Eagle into his
+hands, examining it with extreme interest and
+putting his fingers into the bullet-holes, finally
+returning it to the Porte-Aigle with a deep bow
+of respect. The regiment almost worshipped
+their Eagle on its own account, for what it had
+gone through; but it had further undergone
+yet more surprising adventures. The 25th had
+been in the garrison of Dresden in 1813 when
+Marshal St. Cyr had to capitulate to the Austrians.
+On the night before the surrender the
+Eagle-staff was broken up and burned, and the
+few strips of ragged silk that remained of the
+shot-torn regimental tricolor flag were tied
+under an officer’s uniform for secret conveyance
+out of the city. The shattered Eagle broke in
+two while being removed from its staff, and its
+two fragments were concealed under the petticoats
+of two vivandières who were to convey it
+in that manner to the regimental dépôt in France.
+Under the capitulation the garrison was granted
+the honours of war and a safe-conduct back to
+France. The terms, however, were annulled
+by the Allied Sovereigns then advancing, after
+Leipsic, to invade France, and in the outcome all
+the regiments, after they had started for France,
+were made prisoners and marched away to be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_349">349</span>
+interned in Hungary. The major of the 25th
+got back the two fragments of the Eagle, stowed
+them away under his uniform, and kept them
+about him by day and night for five months;
+until finally, on his release after Napoleon’s
+abdication, he brought the Eagle back across
+the Rhine, “wrapped up like contraband.”</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">“SEND IT TO PARIS FORTHWITH!”</div>
+
+<p>On the 25th receiving the order to send in its
+Eagle for destruction, he wrote personally to
+the Minister of War—General Dupont, of Bailen
+notoriety, as has been said—who had never
+forgiven Napoleon’s harsh usage of him, and now
+took every opportunity of paying back old scores
+on the heads of his former comrades in arms.
+The major wrote setting forth in detail the story
+of the regimental Eagle, relating its exceptionally
+interesting career and its battle damages,
+also how he had preserved it after Dresden, and
+implored the War Minister, in the name of the
+regiment, that they might retain the two fragments
+to be kept in the regimental “Salle
+d’Honneur” as an honoured relic. The reply
+was a peremptorily worded command to send
+the Eagle to Paris forthwith for destruction
+with the other Eagles of the Army. The major,
+in the circumstances, considered himself compelled
+to comply. He summoned the officers to
+his quarters, where they “paid their last adieux
+to the object of veneration, and then, in their
+presence, the Eagle fragments were packed in a
+box, and despatched to the Ministry of War.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_350">350</span></p>
+
+<p>The story, with others to the same effect, went
+the round of every barrack-room in France, and
+wherever it was told, there were angry murmurings
+and increased discontent.</p>
+
+<p>By no means all the Eagles of the Army, it
+would appear, were given up to the authorities
+in Paris. Not a few colonels flatly refused to
+comply with Dupont’s order, taking the risk
+of prosecution or of being turned out of the
+service summarily—a certainty in any event
+under the new <i lang="fr">régime</i>, as the majority of the
+senior regimental officers anticipated, and as
+actually came to pass. General Petit of the
+Grenadiers of the Old Guard, as has already been
+said, refused to give up that famous Eagle, and
+concealed it successfully; and not a few other
+officers did the same with the Eagles of their
+corps. Others destroyed their regimental Eagles
+and either burned the silken tricolor flags, or
+cut them up; dividing the ashes or fragments
+among their comrades.</p>
+
+<p>Their Eagles taken away, it was next made
+known to the Army, that the “battle honours”
+and war distinctions of the various corps, won
+under Napoleon, would not appear on the new
+regimental flags when issued. “Austerlitz,”
+“Jena,” “Friedland,” and the other names of
+pride to the Grand Army, were henceforward to
+be erased from military recognition. The new
+flags, when publicly distributed in September
+1814, showed each a blank white field, with on it<span class="pagenum" id="Page_351">351</span>
+only an oval shield, bearing the three fleurs-de-lis,
+the Royal Bourbon cognisance, and the name
+of the corps—its new name, revived from Army
+Lists of the Old Monarchy, a name long since
+forgotten and totally unfamiliar.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">NO MORE REGIMENTAL NUMBERS</div>
+
+<p>The regimental numbers of the Grand Army,
+ennobled by glorious campaigns, immortalised
+by their associations of victory and brilliant
+feats of arms, instinct with a renown acquired on
+a hundred battlefields all over Europe, were at
+the same time done away with by a stroke of the
+War Minister’s pen. That proved the most
+unpopular measure of all; the cruellest of blows
+to the <i lang="fr">esprit de corps</i> and pride of the former
+soldiers of Napoleon. It was felt as a gratuitous
+insult; it was perhaps the most deeply resented
+injury of all. In future, in place of their treasured
+regimental numbers, the various corps of the
+Army, horse and foot, were to be known by
+departmental or territorial names—meaningless
+to nine soldiers out of ten, and without traditions—or
+else by the names of royal princes and princesses,
+and titled personages, remembered only,
+some of them, as having fled on the battlefield
+before the national armies. Bercheney and
+Chamborant Hussars, Orléans Dragoons and
+Chasseurs, Regiments d’Artois, de Berri, d’Armagnac,
+d’Angoulême, de Monsieur, d’Anjou,
+and so forth—what traditions had designations
+such as these to compare with, to mention in the
+same breath with, the traditions immortally<span class="pagenum" id="Page_352">352</span>
+associated with the numbers, familiar as household
+words wherever French soldiers met together,
+of the dragoon and chasseur regiments which
+Murat had led at Austerlitz, of the dashing
+hussars of Lassalle, of the cuirassiers whose
+resistless onset had swept the field at Jena, of
+the horsemen at the sight of whose sabres before
+their gates Prussian fortresses had surrendered
+at discretion? It came with a sense of personal
+degradation, as a sort of desecration on the
+men of regiments like the 75th of the Line, or the
+32nd, the 9th Light Infantry or the 84th, or the
+35th, or “Le terrible 57me”—to be labelled and
+hear themselves officially addressed on parade
+as “Beauvoisis” or “Auxerre” or “Nivernais,”
+by the name of some prosaic locality, or the
+style of some ancient aristocrat, their titular
+colonel.<a id="FNanchor_38" href="#Footnote_38" class="fnanchor">38</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_353">353</span></p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">AT THE HEAD OF THE “ELBA GUARD”</div>
+
+<p>Napoleon announced the return of the Eagle
+in his first address to the Army, sent off on his
+landing to be distributed broadcast among the
+soldiers. “Come and range yourselves under
+the banners of your chief.... Victory shall
+march at the <i lang="fr">pas de charge</i>: the Eagle with the
+national colours shall fly from steeple to steeple
+to the towers of Notre Dame!”</p>
+
+<p>The first of the regimental Eagles to make its
+appearance in France accompanied Napoleon
+from Elba and landed with him. It was the
+Eagle of the six hundred veterans of the Old
+Guard who, as the “Elba Guard,” had volunteered
+to share Napoleon’s exile, and had formed
+his personal escort. It figured in the historic<span class="pagenum" id="Page_354">354</span>
+scene at Grenoble a week after the landing, where
+Napoleon, on meeting the first soldiers sent to
+arrest his advance, by the magic of his presence
+and the sight of the Eagle borne behind him, so
+dramatically won over to his side the former
+5th of the Line, the first regiment of the Army to
+throw in its lot with Napoleon after Elba. The
+Eagle that had its part on the historic occasion—with
+its silken tricolor flag, embroidered with
+silver wreaths and scrollery, and golden bees,
+crowns and Imperial cyphers, and inscribed
+“L’Empereur Napoléon à la Garde Nationale de
+l’Ile Elba”—is now in private possession in
+England. It fell by some means into the hands
+of a Prussian soldier at the occupation of Paris<span class="pagenum" id="Page_355">355</span>
+after Waterloo and was sold a few weeks later to
+a visitor to Paris. In the dramatic scene of the
+meeting of Napoleon with the 5th of the Line,
+General Cambronne, Commander of the Elba
+Guard, bore the Eagle a few paces behind
+Napoleon and held it up appealingly to the
+regiment.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">“LET ANY WHO WISHES—FIRE!”</div>
+
+<p>The 5th of the Line, says one story, vouched
+for by an eye-witness, was marching out to block
+a narrow gorge through which ran the road
+Napoleon was known to be taking. At some
+little way off, his party was seen approaching, he
+himself being readily recognised by his small
+cocked hat and <i lang="fr">redingote gris</i>. Immediately the
+men were formed up across the road, and, as
+Napoleon came nearer, they were ordered to
+make ready and present. They did so: the
+muskets came up and were levelled. Then came
+a pause; dead silence; an interval of breathless
+suspense. Napoleon’s own action decided the
+issue. Stepping rapidly forward, opening and
+throwing back his great-coat as he did so, he
+called aloud to the regiment: “Soldats, voilà
+votre Empereur! Que celui d’entre vous qui
+voudra le tuer, faire feu sur lui!” (“Soldiers, here
+is your Emperor! Let any one who wishes to
+kill him fire on him!”) A Royalist officer
+hastily called out the order: “Le voilà! donnez
+feu, soldats!” But not a shot came. The next
+instant, with shouts of “Vive l’Empereur!” the
+soldiers lowered their muskets, broke their<span class="pagenum" id="Page_356">356</span>
+ranks, and rushed forward to surround Napoleon
+and welcome him in a frenzy of enthusiasm.</p>
+
+<p>According to another story, this is what took
+place. Before the word “Fire!” could be given,
+Napoleon had stepped forward, close up to the
+muzzles of the levelled muskets. With a smile
+on his face he began in his usual colloquial,
+familiar way when talking to the men: “Well,
+soldiers of the 5th, how are you all? I am come
+to see you again: is there any one of you who
+wishes to kill me?” Shouts came in reply of
+“No, no, Sire! certainly not!” The muskets
+went down; Napoleon passed along the ranks,
+inspecting the men just as of old; after that the
+regiment faced about, took the lead of the party,
+and, with Napoleon in the middle and the “Elba
+Guard” bringing up the rear, all marched on
+towards Grenoble.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">MARSHAL NEY’S DILEMMA</div>
+
+<p>There, meanwhile, events had been moving
+rapidly. The commandant of the garrison was
+an <i lang="fr">émigré</i> officer, but most of the troops had
+been won over for Napoleon by Colonel Labédoyère,
+at the head of the 7th of the Line. The
+commandant ordered the gates to be closed,
+which was done; also the cannon on the ramparts
+to be loaded. That order was duly
+obeyed; “but the men rammed home the
+cannon-balls first, before putting in the powder,
+so that the guns were useless.” Labédoyère
+marched out with his regiment to meet Napoleon,
+the band playing, “and carrying the Eagle of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_357">357</span>
+regiment, which had been concealed and preserved.”
+They met Napoleon a short distance
+from Grenoble and, with the 5th, led the way
+in, arriving after dark. “On Napoleon’s approach,
+the populace thronged the ramparts with
+torches; the gates were burst open; Napoleon
+was borne through the town in triumph by a
+wild and intermingled crowd of soldiers and
+workpeople.”<a id="FNanchor_39" href="#Footnote_39" class="fnanchor">39</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_358">358</span></p>
+
+<p>Napoleon entered Paris on the night of
+March 20. The Eagles made their first appearance
+in the capital next day. They had been
+officially restored as the standards of the Army<span class="pagenum" id="Page_359">359</span>
+by an Imperial decree issued on March 13 from
+Lyons.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">AT THE FIRST REVIEW IN PARIS</div>
+
+<p>Paris saw them again first at the review of the
+garrison of the capital which Napoleon held<span class="pagenum" id="Page_360">360</span>
+within twenty-four hours of his arrival; on the
+Place du Carrousel, in front of the Tuileries.
+There too the Imperial Guard, reconstituted that
+same morning, made their public reappearance.
+In the midst of the brilliant scene, as Napoleon
+was ending the address of personal thanks for
+their loyalty that he made to the assembled
+troops in dramatic style, suddenly General
+Cambronne marched on to the parade at the
+head of the Elba Six Hundred, with drums
+beating and escorting the former Eagles of the
+Guard. Drawing up in line ceremoniously, the
+“Elba Guard” halted before Napoleon, saluting
+and dipping the Eagles forward. A frantic
+roar of enthusiastic cheering greeted the salute
+of the Eagles.</p>
+
+<p>Napoleon took instant advantage of the first
+pause as the cheering subsided. Pointing to the
+veterans just arrived, and standing with the
+Eagles ranged in front of them, held on high at
+arm’s-length by their bearers, he again addressed
+the assembled troops. “They bring back to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_361">361</span>
+you the Eagles which are to serve as your rallying-point.
+In giving them to the Guard, I give them
+to the whole Army. Treason and misfortune
+have cast over them a veil of mourning; but
+they now reappear resplendent in their old
+glory. Swear to me, soldiers, that these Eagles
+shall always be found where the welfare of the
+nation calls them, and those who would invade
+our land again shall not be able to endure their
+glance!” “We swear it! We swear it!”
+was the answer that came back amid tumultuous
+shouts from every side.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">ONCE MORE THE FIELD OF MARS</div>
+
+<p>The Eagles restored by proclamation as the
+standards of the Army, and the regiments reconstituted
+by their old numbers, to the unbounded
+gratification of the soldiers everywhere, another
+Imperial proclamation announced that Napoleon
+would once again personally distribute new Eagles
+to the regiments. The ceremony of the Field of
+Mars of ten years before would be repeated.
+The Emperor, with his own hand, would present
+each Eagle to a regimental deputation, which
+would specially attend in Paris to receive it. To
+give the utmost possible <i lang="fr">éclat</i> also to the proceedings
+on the occasion, just as the former
+presentation of the Eagles had been made an
+integral feature of the Coronation celebration, so
+now the forthcoming distribution would take
+place at the same time that Napoleon renewed
+his Imperial oath of fidelity to the Constitution,
+as reshaped by the “<i lang="fr">Acte Additionel</i>,” which<span class="pagenum" id="Page_362">362</span>
+had been drafted to comply with the political
+exigencies of the moment.</p>
+
+<p>The date provisionally fixed was towards the
+end of May. By that time the returns of the
+<i lang="fr">Plébiscite</i> voting, to authorise the re-establishment
+of the Empire, would be known. The
+historic event takes its name of the “<i lang="fr">Champ
+de Mai</i>” from the date proposed for it, although,
+in actual fact, the ceremony took place on
+June 1. The place appointed was where the
+former distribution of the Eagles had been made,
+the Field of Mars, the wide open space in front of
+the Military School, and the display was to be
+on no less grandiose scale than its predecessor.</p>
+
+<p>Immense wooden stands were erected all round
+the Field of Mars, with tiers of benches, to seat,
+it was calculated, as many as two hundred
+thousand people. In front of the Military School
+was set up an Imperial throne, under a canopy
+of crimson silk, and elevated on a gorgeously
+decorated platform. Napoleon was to take his
+new Imperial oath from the throne, and thereupon
+formally attach his signature to the “<i lang="fr">Acte
+Additionel</i>.” There was to be a religious service
+also, and for that an altar was erected at
+one side of the throne, raised on steps and
+draped in red damask, picked out with gold.
+The balconies and stands all round were draped
+and hung with tricolor flags, festooned amid
+gilded Eagles, and heraldic insignia, and emblematic
+figures meant to typify the prosperity<span class="pagenum" id="Page_363">363</span>
+and glory awaiting France under the returned
+Imperial <i lang="fr">régime</i>. As on the previous occasion,
+all the celebrities of France were invited, and
+had their allotted places on the stands nearest
+the throne. As before, too, the central arena
+was packed with a dense array of troops; the
+deputations called up to receive the Eagles, the
+massed battalions of the Imperial Guard, and
+detachments of all the regiments of the garrison
+of Paris. It was a radiantly fine summer’s day,
+and the display offered a spectacle of surpassing
+brilliance. Says one of the officers: “The sun
+flashing on 50,000 bayonets seemed to make
+the vast space sparkle!”</p>
+
+<p>A hundred cannon fired from the Esplanade of
+the Invalides ushered in the day of the “<i lang="fr">Champ
+de Mai</i>.” Again, at ten o’clock, the artillery
+thundered forth as Napoleon quitted the
+Tuileries in State to take his way to the Field
+of Mars, “amid prodigious crowds of spectators
+applauding enthusiastically,” along the Champs
+Elysées and across the Pont d’Jéna.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">NINE MARSHALS TAKE PART</div>
+
+<p>Nine of the marshals who had cast in their
+lot with the returned Emperor rode on either side
+of Napoleon’s coach: Davout, Minister of War,
+who had not yet sworn allegiance to the Bourbons;
+Soult, the newly appointed Chief of the
+Staff of the Army; Serrurier, Governor of the
+Invalides; Brune and Jourdan; Moncey and
+Mortier; Suchet and Grouchy. Ney was absent;
+Napoleon had refused to see him. Ney’s widely<span class="pagenum" id="Page_364">364</span>
+reported speech to Louis XVIII., that he would
+“bring the bandit to Paris in an iron cage,” had
+not been forgiven. Murat was in disgrace for
+his recent blundering move in Northern Italy,
+which had vitally affected Napoleon’s plans.
+His desertion during the closing campaign, when
+Napoleon was at bay after Leipsic, moreover,
+was beyond condonation. Of others who had
+been at Napoleon’s side on the Field of Mars ten
+years before, Lefebvre and Masséna professed
+to be too old and infirm for service in the field,
+although Masséna was still nominally on the
+Active List, and had been in command for King
+Louis at Toulon. He was due in Paris to meet
+Napoleon, but his fidelity was more than doubtful:
+“gorged with wealth, Masséna thought
+only of preserving it.” Augereau kept in the
+background, Napoleon refusing to have more to
+do with him. Berthier, on that very morning, was
+lying dead at Bamberg in Bavaria; whether
+victim of an accident or suicide has never been
+made clear. Lannes and Bessières were in their
+graves, fallen on the field of battle. Bernadotte,
+King of Sweden, was actively on the side of the
+enemy. Marmont, Oudinot, Macdonald, and
+Victor, marshals of later creation, had left
+France in company with the Bourbon princes.
+Old Kellerman and Perignon, “Honorary Marshals”
+of 1804, had not come forward again, remaining
+in seclusion; nor had St. Cyr, “the
+man of ice,” another marshal since the Field<span class="pagenum" id="Page_365">365</span>
+of Mars, who was staying at home with studied
+indifference, “occupying himself on his estate
+with his hay crops and playing the fiddle.”</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE “MAN OF SEDAN” WAS THERE</div>
+
+<p>Napoleon was accompanied in the State coach
+by three of his brothers—Lucien, Joseph, and
+Jerome. This time there was of course no
+Empress present. Josephine was dead: Marie
+Louise was holding back elsewhere. None of
+the Bonaparte princesses appeared in the procession.
+The only one attending the “<i lang="fr">Champ de
+Mai</i>” came as a spectator: Hortense Beauharnais,
+the daughter of Josephine and wife of Louis
+Bonaparte. She had gone on in advance to the
+Military School and was seated among the
+exalted personages awaiting Napoleon there;
+accompanied by her two boys (one the future
+Third Napoleon, the “Man of Sedan”). She
+seemed most interested, as we are told, in the
+sketch-book she brought with her to draw a
+picture of the scene.</p>
+
+<p>Napoleon alighted in the First Court of the
+Military School, being acclaimed on all sides as
+he made his appearance with vociferous shouts
+of “Vive l’Empereur!” Preceded by palace
+grandees and Court officials, who had alighted
+from their carriages in advance and formed up
+to receive him, he entered the building and
+passed on through to take his seat on the throne.
+“He had the air of being in pain and anxious,”
+describes an onlooker. “He descended slowly
+from his carriage while a hundred drums beat<span class="pagenum" id="Page_366">366</span>
+‘<i lang="fr">Au Champ</i>.’ Then, advancing quickly, returning
+the salutes of the assemblage at either
+side with bows, he proceeded to the throne, and
+sat down, gazing round at the people in their
+dense masses as he did so. Jerome and Joseph
+seated themselves on the right; Lucien on the
+left; all three clad in white satin with black
+velvet hats with white plumes. Napoleon himself
+had on his Imperial mantle of ermine and
+purple velvet embroidered with golden bees.”</p>
+
+<p>For a time the thundering cannon salutes
+and acclamations of the people that hailed
+Napoleon’s appearance on the daïs were deafening.
+Bowing repeatedly on every side, he took
+his seat on the throne, while all present stood
+and remained uncovered. The guns then ceased,
+the music of the bands and the drummings and
+trumpetings of the battalions died away into
+silence. On that the ceremony of the day
+opened with the celebration of High Mass by the
+Archbishop of Tours.</p>
+
+<p>The religious portion of the pageant, we are
+told, “seemed to arouse no interest in Napoleon.
+His opera-glass wandered all the time over the
+immense multitude before him.” His attention
+was not recalled until the Mass was over, when
+the delegates from the Electoral College, marshalled
+by the Master of the Ceremonies, ascended
+the platform, and ranged themselves
+before the throne. A Deputy stepped forward,
+and after deep obeisance, in a loud resonant<span class="pagenum" id="Page_367">367</span>
+voice read an address teeming with sentiments
+of patriotic attachment and expressing inviolable
+fidelity towards the Emperor personally.
+Napoleon seemed to listen with interest,
+“marking his approbation with nods and
+smiles.” The Deputy ceased speaking amidst
+rapturous applause, and then Arch-Chancellor
+Cambacérès, resplendent in a gorgeous orange-yellow
+robe, stood forward in front of Napoleon
+to notify officially the popular acceptance of the
+new national Constitution. He declared the
+total of the votes given in the <i lang="fr">Plébiscite</i> to show
+a clear million in favour of the restoration of the
+Empire. There was a flourish of trumpets, and
+forthwith the chief herald proclaimed that the
+“Additional Act to the Constitution of the
+Empire” had been agreed to by the French
+people.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">NAPOLEON SIGNS THE ACT</div>
+
+<p>Again from all round thundered out an
+artillery salute, and the whole assembly rose to
+their feet and cheered. A small gilded table
+was brought forward and placed before Napoleon,
+who, the Arch-Chancellor holding the parchment
+open, and Joseph Bonaparte presenting the pen,
+publicly ratified the Act with his formal signature.
+The air resounded once more with the cannon
+firing and noisy acclamations on all sides.</p>
+
+<p>Napoleon rose, when at length the cheering
+ceased, to address the assembly with one of his
+most impassioned dramatic harangues. “Emperor,
+Consul, Soldier, I hold everything from<span class="pagenum" id="Page_368">368</span>
+the people! In prosperity and in adversity; in
+the field, in the council; in power, in exile,
+France has been the sole and constant object of
+my thoughts and actions!” So he began. He
+closed in the same vein: “Frenchmen! my
+will is that of my people; my rights are theirs;
+my honour, my glory, my happiness, can never
+be separated from the honour, glory, and happiness
+of France!”</p>
+
+<p>Again came the outburst of rapturous applause.
+It subsided, and the Archbishop of Bourges, as
+Grand Almoner of the Empire, came forward.
+Kneeling before Napoleon he presented the
+Book of the Gospels, on which Napoleon solemnly
+took the Imperial Oath to observe the new
+Constitution. There only remained for Arch-Chancellor
+Cambacérès and the principal officers
+of State to take their oaths of allegiance to
+the Constitution and the Emperor, and after
+that a solemn Te Deum closed the political
+ceremony.</p>
+
+<p>It was now the turn of the Eagles and the
+Army. The civilian personages withdrew from
+the steps of the throne; the electoral deputations
+fell back; leaving a clear open space in
+front. Immediately, as if by magic, the Eagles
+suddenly appeared; long rows of them flashing
+and glittering in the brilliant sunshine. They
+were brought forward in procession, advancing
+in massed rows “resplendent and dazzling like
+gold.” Carnot, Minister of the Interior, the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_369">369</span>
+“Organiser of Victory” of the Armies of the
+Revolution, headed the procession, “clad in a
+Spanish white dress of great magnificence,”
+carrying the First Eagle of the National Guard of
+Paris. Next him came Marshal Davout, Minister
+of War, carrying the Eagle of the 1st Regiment
+of the Line, and then Admiral Decrès, Minister
+of Marine (as representing the French Navy),
+carrying the Eagle of Napoleon’s 1st Regiment
+of Marines. General Count Friant (he fell at
+Waterloo), as Colonel-in-Chief, bore the Eagle
+of the Imperial Guard. Other officers of exalted
+rank bore other Eagles.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">SPRINGING FORWARD TO MEET THEM</div>
+
+<p>Napoleon’s demeanour, hitherto, for most
+of the time, formal and apathetic, altered instantaneously
+at the appearance of the Eagles.
+“He sprang from the throne, and, casting aside
+his purple mantle, rushed forward to meet his
+Eagles”; amid a sudden hush that seemed
+to fall over the whole assembly at the sight.
+Then the momentary silence was broken. An
+enthusiastic shout went up as the Emperor,
+pressing forward impetuously, as though
+electrified with sudden energy, took up his
+station immediately in front of the array of
+soldiers, the <i lang="fr">élite</i> of the veterans of the old
+Grand Army left alive, as they stood there
+formed up in an immense phalanx. To the
+sound of martial music the regimental deputations
+forthwith moved up and advanced to pass
+before him. Napoleon, with a gesture of deep<span class="pagenum" id="Page_370">370</span>
+reverence, took each Eagle into his own hands
+from the officer who had been carrying it, and
+then delivered it with stately formality to its
+future regimental bearer as the deputations in
+turn filed past him.</p>
+
+<p>He had a word for the men of every corps as
+each set of ten officers and men drew up before
+him. To some he said, glancing at the number
+of their regiment on their shakos, “I remember
+you well. You are my old companions of
+Italy!” or, “You are my comrades of Egypt!”
+and so on. Others he reminded of past days of
+distinction. “You were with me at Arcola!”
+he said to one group, or “at Rivoli!” “at
+Austerlitz!” “at Friedland!” to others, as
+might be—his words, we are told, “inspiring
+the men with deep emotion.” For each of the
+National Guard deputations he had also their
+little speech. To one detachment for instance,
+as it came up, he said: “You are my old companions
+from the Rhine; you have been the
+foremost, the most courageous, the most unfortunate
+in our disasters; but I remember all!”</p>
+
+<p>The last Eagle presented, Napoleon called on
+the soldiers to take the Army Oath of fidelity
+to the Standard, using his customary Eagle
+oration formula.</p>
+
+<p>“Soldiers of the National Guard of the
+Empire!” he began, “Soldiers of my Imperial
+Guard! Soldiers of the Line on land and sea!
+I entrust to your hands the Imperial Eagle!<span class="pagenum" id="Page_371">371</span>
+You swear here to defend it at the cost of your
+life’s blood against the enemies of the nation.
+You swear that it will always be your guiding
+sign, your rallying point!”</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">AMIDST A TUMULT OF ENTHUSIASM</div>
+
+<p>Some of those nearest interrupted Napoleon
+with shouts of “We swear!” He went on:
+“You swear never to acknowledge any other
+standard!” The shouts of “We swear!” again
+broke in vociferously.</p>
+
+<p>Napoleon again went on: “You, Soldiers of
+the National Guard of Paris, swear never to
+permit the foreigner to desecrate again the
+capital of the Great Nation! To your courage
+I commit it!” Cries of “We swear!”
+repeated continuously amidst a tumult of
+clamour, once more burst forth.</p>
+
+<p>Napoleon continued and concluded, turning
+to his favourite Pretorians: “Soldiers of the
+Imperial Guard, swear to surpass yourselves in
+the campaign which is now about to open, to
+die round your Eagles rather than permit
+foreigners to dictate terms to your country!”
+He ceased after that, and once again the air
+vibrated with shouts of “We swear! We swear!”
+and ejaculations of “Vive l’Empereur!” from
+the soldiers and the throng of onlookers cramming
+the stands around.<a id="FNanchor_40" href="#Footnote_40" class="fnanchor">40</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_372">372</span></p>
+
+<p>The military <i lang="fr">finale</i> of the day was the march
+past of the assembled troops before the Emperor,
+in slow time, headed by the Eagles.
+“Nothing could have been more imposing,”
+says one of the spectators, “than this concluding
+display in the magnificent pageant.
+Amid the crash of military music, the blaze of
+martial decoration, the glitter of innumerable
+arms, 50,000 men passed by. The immense
+concourse of beholders, their prolonged shouts
+and cheers, the occasion, the Man, the mighty
+events which hung in suspense, all concurred
+to excite feelings and reflections which only
+such a scene could have produced.” On the
+other hand, we have this from a colder critic
+of the scene: “The display was without heart,
+and theatrical; the vows of the soldiers were
+made without warmth. There was but little
+real enthusiasm: the shouts were not those of
+future victors of another Austerlitz and Wagram,
+and the Emperor knew it!” Which are we to
+believe?</p>
+
+<p>According to Savary, who was close beside
+him, Napoleon, for his part, was satisfied with
+the enthusiasm of the soldiers. “The Emperor
+left the Field of Mars confident that he might
+rely on the sentiments then manifested towards
+him, and from that moment his only care was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_373">373</span>
+to meet the storm that was forming in
+Belgium.”</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">ON THE REGIMENTAL PARADES</div>
+
+<p>The new Eagles left Paris that night with their
+escorts. Each, on its arrival where its regiment
+was stationed, was received with elaborate
+ceremony, and formally presented on parade to
+the assembled officers and men; a religious
+service being held in addition in some cases, at
+which all were sworn individually to give their
+lives in its defence. This, for instance, is what
+took place with one regiment, the 22nd of the
+Line, stationed with the advanced division of
+Grouchy’s Army Corps on the Belgian frontier
+at Couvins, near Rocroy, in the Ardennes.
+“The new Eagle,” describes one of the officers,
+“all fresh from the gilder’s shop, was solemnly
+blessed in the church of Couvins; then each
+soldier, touching it with his hand, swore individually
+to defend it to the death. After the religious
+service the regiment formed in square, and the
+colonel delivered an address, in which he recalled
+the old glories of the 22nd of the Line, and
+expressed his conviction that the regiment would
+worthily uphold the old-time fame of the corps
+in the coming campaign. The glowing language
+was received with great emotion, and as of happy
+augury for the future.”<a id="FNanchor_41" href="#Footnote_41" class="fnanchor">41</a></p>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_375">375</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIII">CHAPTER XIII<br>
+
+<span class="subhead">AT WATERLOO</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<h3 id="toclink_375">“<span class="smcap">Ave Caesar! Morituri te Salutant!</span>”</h3>
+
+<p class="in0"><span class="firstword">The</span> Eagles figure in four episodes in the story
+of Waterloo.</p>
+
+<p>They had their part at the outset in that intensely
+dramatic display on the morning of the
+battle, when, before the eyes of Wellington’s
+soldiers, drawn up with muskets loaded and
+bayonets fixed, and guns in position ready to open
+fire, Napoleon passed his army in review; the last
+parade of the Last Army on the day of its last
+battle. Said Napoleon himself afterwards, in
+words that are in keeping with the resplendent
+spectacle: “The earth seemed proud to bear
+so many brave men!” (“La terre paraissait
+orgueilleuse de porter tant de braves!”)</p>
+
+<p>It was a little after nine in the morning that
+the Last Army of Napoleon moved out from its
+bivouacs of the night before to take up its station
+for the battle. This is how a British hussar,
+who was looking on, describes the opening of the
+wonderful show: “Marching in eleven columns
+they came up to the front and deployed with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_376">376</span>
+rapidity, precision, and fine scenic effect. The
+drums beat, the bands played, the trumpets
+sounded. The light troops in front pressed forward,
+and the rattle of musketry was followed
+by the retreat of our horsemen and foot soldiers.
+Light wreaths of smoke curled upwards into the
+misty air, and through this thin veil the dense dark
+columns of the French infantry and the gay and
+gleaming squadrons of French horse were seen
+moving into their positions. Before them was
+the open valley, yet green with the heavy crops;
+behind them dark fringes of wood, and a thick
+curtain of dreary cloud.</p>
+
+<p>“The French bands struck up so that we could
+distinctly hear them. Not long after, the
+enemy’s skirmishers, backed by their supports,
+were thrown out; extending as they advanced,
+they spread over the whole space before them.
+Now and then they saluted our ears with well-known
+music, the whistling of musket-balls.
+Their columns, preceded by mounted officers to
+take up the alignments, soon began to appear;
+the bayonets flashing over dark masses at different
+points, accompanied by the rattling of drums
+and the clang of trumpets.</p>
+
+<p>“They took post, their infantry in front, in
+two lines, 60 yards apart, flanked by lancers with
+their fluttering flags. In rear of the centre of
+the infantry wings were the cuirassiers, also in
+two lines. In rear of the cuirassiers, on the
+right, the lancers and chasseurs of the Imperial<span class="pagenum" id="Page_377">377</span>
+Guard, in their splendid but gaudy uniforms:
+the former clad in scarlet; the latter, like hussars,
+in rifle-green, fur-trimmed pelisse, gold lace,
+bearskin cap. In rear of the cuirassiers, on the
+left, were the horse-grenadiers and dragoons of
+the Imperial Guard, with their dazzling arms.
+Immediately in rear of the centre was the reserve,
+composed of the 6th Corps, in columns; on the
+left, and on the right of the Genappe road,
+were two divisions of light cavalry. In rear of
+the whole was the infantry of the Imperial
+Guard in columns, a dense dark mass, which, with
+the 6th Corps and cavalry, were flanked by their
+numerous artillery. Nearly 72,000 men, and
+246 guns, ranged with matches lighted, gave an
+awful presage of the approaching conflict.”</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">AS THEY MARCHED ON TO THE FIELD</div>
+
+<p>Napoleon rode out to watch them as they
+deployed into position. He took his stand at
+the point where the columns reached the field
+and wheeled off to right and left to form up in
+readiness for the signal that should launch their
+massed ranks forward across the intervening
+valley against the British position in front.
+Marshal Soult, Chief of the General Staff, rode
+close behind Napoleon on one side; Marshal
+Ney, in charge of the main attack that day, was
+on the other. In rear followed in glittering
+array the cavalcade of staff officers, with, dragged
+along after them, tied by a rope to a dragoon
+orderly, Napoleon’s Waterloo guide, the innkeeper
+De Coster.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_378">378</span></p>
+
+<p>Hardly had Napoleon himself ever witnessed
+before the like of the tremendous display of
+enthusiasm that greeted his presence on the
+field on the morning of that final day. “The
+drums beat; the trumpets sounded; the bands
+struck up ‘Veillons au salut de l’Empire.’ As
+they passed Napoleon the standard-bearers
+drooped the Eagles; the cavalrymen waved their
+sabres; the infantrymen held on high their
+shakos on their bayonets. The roar of cheers
+dominated and drowned the beat of the drums
+and the blare of the trumpets. The ‘<i lang="fr">Vive
+l’Empereurs!</i>’ followed with such vehemence
+and such rapidity that no commands could be
+heard. And what rendered the scene all the more
+solemn, all the more moving, was the fact that
+before us, a thousand paces away perhaps, we
+could see distinctly the dull red line [“la ligne
+rouge sombre”] of the English army.”</p>
+
+<p>So one French officer (Captain Martin of the
+45th of the Line) describes. The shouts of
+“Vive l’Empereur!” says another, a veteran
+of Count d’Erlon’s First Army Corps, “rose
+more vehemently, louder and longer than I ever
+heard before, for our men were determined that
+they should be heard among the brick-red lines
+which fringed the crest of Mont Saint-Jean.”</p>
+
+<p>It was for the Eagles the counterpart of the
+Day of the Field of Mars, the culminating act of
+homage to Napoleon from the soldiers of the
+Grand Army.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_379">379</span></p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">HIS IN LIFE AND DEATH</div>
+
+<p>“The sight of him,” if we may use the words
+of Lamartine, “was for some a recompense for
+their death, for others an incitement to victory!
+One heart beat between these men and the Emperor.
+In such a moment they shared the same
+soul and the same cause! When all is risked for
+one man, it is in him his followers live and die.
+The army was Napoleon! Never before was
+it so entirely Napoleon as now. He was repudiated
+by Europe, and his army had adopted him
+with idolatry; it voluntarily made itself the
+great martyr of his glory. At such a moment
+he must have felt himself more than man, more
+than a sovereign. His subjects only bowed to
+his power, Europe to his genius; but his army
+bent in homage to the past, the present, and the
+future, and welcomed victory or defeat, the
+throne or death with its chief. It was determined
+on everything, even on the sacrifice of
+itself, to restore him his Empire, or to render his
+last fall illustrious. Accomplices at Grenoble,
+Pretorians at Paris, victims at Waterloo: such
+a sentiment in the generals and officers of Napoleon
+had in it nothing that was not in conformity
+with the habits and even the vices of humanity.
+His cause was their cause, his crime their crime,
+his power their power, his glory their glory.
+But the devotion of those 80,000 soldiers was
+more virtuous, for it was more disinterested.
+Who would know their names? Who would pay
+them for the shedding of their blood? The<span class="pagenum" id="Page_380">380</span>
+plain before them would not even preserve their
+bones! To have inspired such a devotion was
+the greatness of Napoleon; to evince it even to
+madness was the greatness of his Army!”</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">SOME WHO HAD MET BEFORE</div>
+
+<p>They knew, too, not a few of them, the stamp
+of men they were about to meet. Never before
+that day, of course, had Napoleon met British
+soldiers on the battlefield; but there were
+others present who had, and a good many of
+them.</p>
+
+<p>Many a French regiment at Waterloo had old
+scores of their own to settle, past days to avenge.
+The 8th of the Line, the fate of whose “Eagle
+with the Golden Wreath” at Barrosa has been
+recorded, were on the field, and dipped their
+glittering new Eagle, received at the “<i lang="fr">Champ de
+Mai</i>,” in salute as they passed Napoleon that
+morning. So too did the 82nd, whose former
+battalion Eagles from Martinique are at Chelsea
+now; the 13th of the Line and the 51st, who lost
+their regimental Eagles in the Retiro arsenal of
+Madrid; the 28th, who met their fate, and lost
+their Eagle under the bullets of the British 28th
+in the Pyrenees. Others were there who had
+fought against Wellington in Spain, and, more
+fortunate, had preserved their Eagles. Among
+these were the 47th, who on the battlefield at
+Barrosa lost and regained their Eagle; and the
+105th, mindful yet of their terrible Salamanca
+experience of what dragoon swords in strong
+hands could do. The 105th were destined,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_381">381</span>
+soldiers and Eagle alike, to undergo a fate more
+fearful still, ere the sun should set that day.</p>
+
+<p>Two of the regiments that paraded before
+Napoleon to meet the soldiers of Wellington
+had met under fire the sailors of Nelson at
+Trafalgar: the 2nd of the Line, now in Jerome
+Bonaparte’s division of Reille’s Army Corps,
+and the 16th, serving with the Sixth Corps. A
+third regiment, the 70th, which did duty as
+marines at Trafalgar, was with Grouchy, not
+many miles away; as was the 22nd of the Line,
+whose Eagle, taken at Salamanca, is at Chelsea
+Hospital, and the 34th, whose drum-major’s staff
+is to this day a prized trophy of the British 34th
+(now the First Battalion of the Border Regiment),
+won in Spain, when, as it so befell, two
+regiments bearing the same number crossed
+bayonets on the battlefield.<a id="FNanchor_42" href="#Footnote_42" class="fnanchor">42</a></p>
+
+<p>The famous 84th of the Line were at Waterloo,
+with their proud legend, “Un contre dix,” restored
+at the “<i lang="fr">Champ de Mai</i>,” flaunting proudly
+on their new silken flag as the Eagle bent in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_382">382</span>
+salute to Napoleon; also, the hardly less widely
+renowned 46th, the corps of the First Grenadier
+of France, La Tour d’Auvergne, whose name was
+called at the head of the list at that morning’s
+roll-call and answered with the customary answer,
+“Dead on the Field of Honour”; also, too, Napoleon’s
+former-time favourite, the 75th, mindful
+still on that last day of their glorious youth when
+“Le 75me arrive et bât l’ennemi”—a motto
+that an earlier colonel of the corps had proposed
+once to replace on the flag by “Veni, Vidi, Vici.”</p>
+
+<p>The Old Guard paraded in their fighting kit,
+with, as usual, in their knapsacks their full-dress
+uniforms, carried in readiness to be put on for
+Napoleon’s triumphal entry into Brussels.</p>
+
+<p>Drouet d’Erlon rode past at the head of the
+First Army Corps; Count of the Empire in
+virtue of his rank as a general; once upon a
+time the little son of the postmaster at Varennes,
+where Louis Seize and Marie Antoinette so pitifully
+ended their attempted flight, harsh old
+Drouet, ex-sergeant of Condé dragoons, from
+whom he inherited his talent for soldiering.
+General Reille led past the Second Corps. He,
+curiously, had had something of a naval past.
+He had hardly forgotten that other battle-day
+morning, when he galloped on to the field of
+Austerlitz, and reported himself to the Emperor
+as having come direct from Cadiz, put ashore
+from the doomed French fleet of Admiral Villeneuve
+just a week before it sailed to fight Trafalgar.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_383">383</span>
+Both Reille and his men, above all others,
+were burning with excitement and eagerness
+that day to get at the enemy. They had missed
+taking part either at Ligny or Quatre Bras,
+through contradictory orders which had kept
+them marching and counter-marching between
+the two battlefields; unable to reach either
+in time. Smarting under the reproach that
+they had been useless in the campaign, though
+the pick of the Line was in their ranks, the
+men one and all were burning to retrieve their
+reputation.</p>
+
+<p>Count Lobau—he took his name from the island
+in the Danube which played so vital a part in
+the battle of Aspern—was at the head of the
+Sixth Corps, the third of Napoleon’s grand
+divisions of the army at Waterloo. Formerly
+General Mouton, Napoleon renamed him when
+he made him a Count for his skill and heroism
+at Aspern. “Mon Mouton,” said Napoleon
+of him once as he watched the general in action,
+“est un lion.”</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">NAPOLEON IN HIGH SPIRITS</div>
+
+<p>Napoleon himself was in the highest spirits,
+full of pride and confidence. In that mood had
+he announced his intention of holding the review.
+There was no need to hurry, he said; Blücher
+and Wellington had been driven apart. The
+parade would pass the time while waiting for the
+soaked ground to get dry, and make it easier for
+the guns to move from point to point. And
+there was also this. The spectacle would have<span class="pagenum" id="Page_384">384</span>
+assuredly a disquieting effect on the Dutch and
+Belgians in Wellington’s army. Many of the
+men in front of him had served with the Eagles
+in former days: all stood nervously in awe, it
+was notorious, of the mighty name and reputation
+of Napoleon. Hesitating, as some were
+known to be, between their fears and their patriotism,
+the influence of the imposing spectacle
+might well—believed Napoleon—turn the scale
+and induce them to come over.</p>
+
+<p>This was Napoleon’s plan for the battle, as
+outlined that morning to his brother Jerome.
+First would be the general preparation for attack
+by a tremendous cannonade all along the line
+from massed batteries. On that, the two army
+corps of D’Erlon and Reille would advance
+simultaneously and assault in front, supported
+by cavalry charges of cuirassiers. Then, if the
+English had not yet been beaten, would follow
+the final assault, the crushing blow that it would
+be impossible to resist; to be delivered by the
+remaining army corps of Lobau and the Young
+Guard, supported by the Middle Guard and the
+Old Guard. So Napoleon planned to fight and
+win at Waterloo.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">“THE GAME IS WITH US”</div>
+
+<p>Of the ultimate issue of the day he flattered
+himself there could be no two opinions. “At
+the last I have them, these English!” “(Enfin
+je les tiens, ces Anglais!”) he exclaimed
+jubilantly as he reconnoitred Wellington’s position
+in the early morning. At breakfast with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_385">385</span>
+the two Marshals, Soult and Ney, he declared that
+the odds were 90 to 10 in his favour. “Wellington,”
+he said to Ney, “has thrown the dice, and
+the game is with us.”</p>
+
+<p>He turned fiercely on Soult, who, knowing the
+mettle of the British soldier from experience,
+had entreated him to recall Grouchy’s 30,000
+men from watching the Prussians near Wavre.</p>
+
+<p>“You think because Wellington has defeated
+you, that he must be a very great general! I
+tell you he is a bad general, and the English are
+but poor troops! This, for us, will only be an
+affair of a <i lang="fr">déjeuner</i>—a picnic!”</p>
+
+<p>“I hope so,” was all that Soult said in reply.</p>
+
+<p>At that moment Reille and General Foy,
+experienced Peninsular veterans both, whose
+opinions should have had weight, were announced.
+Said Reille, in reply to Napoleon’s asking what
+he thought: “If well placed, as Wellington
+knows how to draw up his men, and if attacked
+in front, the English infantry is invincible, by
+reason of its calm tenacity and the superiority
+of its fire. Before coming to close quarters with
+the bayonet we must expect to see half the
+assaulting troops out of action.”</p>
+
+<p>Interposed Foy: “Wellington never shows
+his troops, but if he is yonder, I must warn your
+Majesty that the English infantry in close combat
+is the very devil!” (“L’infanterie Anglaise
+en duel c’est le diable!”)</p>
+
+<p>Napoleon lost his temper. With an exclamation<span class="pagenum" id="Page_386">386</span>
+of angry incredulity he rose hastily from
+the breakfast table, and the party broke up.</p>
+
+<p>He spent a great part of the day watching the
+battle from a little mound, a short distance from
+the farm of Rossomme; mostly pacing to and
+fro, his hands behind his back; at times violently
+taking snuff, occasionally gesticulating excitedly.
+Near by was a kitchen table from the farmhouse,
+covered with maps weighted down with stones,
+with a chair placed on some straw, on which at
+intervals he rested. Soult kept ever near at
+hand, and the staff remained a little in rear.
+It was not until the afternoon was well advanced
+that Napoleon got again on horseback.</p>
+
+<p>As related by the guide De Coster in conversation
+with an English questioner a few months
+after Waterloo, this is what passed:</p>
+
+<p>“He had frequent communications with his
+aides de camp during the day?”</p>
+
+<p>“Every moment.”</p>
+
+<p>“And when they reported what was going
+on?”</p>
+
+<p>“His orders were always ‘Avancez!’”</p>
+
+<p>“Did he eat or drink during the day?”</p>
+
+<p>“No!”</p>
+
+<p>“Did he take snuff?”</p>
+
+<p>“In abundance.”</p>
+
+<p>“Did he talk much?”</p>
+
+<p>“Never, except when he gave orders.”</p>
+
+<p>“What was the general character of his countenance
+during the day?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_387">387</span></p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">WHEN THE LAST CHARGE FAILED</div>
+
+<p>“<i lang="fr">Riante!</i>—till the last charge failed.”</p>
+
+<p>“How did he look then?”</p>
+
+<p>“<i lang="fr">Blanc-mort!</i>”</p>
+
+<p>“Did he say ‘<i lang="fr">Sauve qui peut</i>’?”</p>
+
+<p>“No! When he saw the English infantry rush
+forward, and the cavalry in the intermediate
+spaces coming down the hill, he said: ‘<i lang="fr">A present
+il est fini. Sauvons-nous!</i>’”<a id="FNanchor_43" href="#Footnote_43" class="fnanchor">43</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_388">388</span></p>
+
+<h3 id="toclink_388"><span class="smcap">How Wellington’s Trophies were won</span></h3>
+
+<p>It was in Napoleon’s second grand attack that
+our two Waterloo Eagle-trophies, the most
+famous spoils ever won by the British Army,
+came into Wellington’s hands.</p>
+
+<p>The first attack began about half-past eleven,
+when Reille’s corps, on the French left, made its
+opening effort against Hougoumont. Intended
+by Napoleon at the outset rather as a feint to
+mislead Wellington into fixing his attention on
+that side, the stubborn defence of Hougoumont
+involved the Second Corps in a struggle that
+kept it fully occupied for the whole day; unable
+to take part or be of use elsewhere.</p>
+
+<p>The second grand attack took place shortly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_389">389</span>
+after two in the afternoon, when Marshal Ney
+made his tremendous onslaught with thirty-three
+battalions of Drouet d’Erlon’s First Army
+Corps on the left-centre of the British position,
+to the east of the Charleroi road, where
+Picton’s men held the ground.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">A DARK OBJECT IN THE HAZE</div>
+
+<p>The launching of Ney’s attack just then came
+about as the result of Napoleon’s sudden and
+disquieting discovery that the Prussians were
+approaching. It was to have opened an hour
+earlier, but, because of that, had been held back
+at the last moment. Napoleon, while looking
+round with the idea that Grouchy’s troops might
+be in sight in that quarter, made the discovery
+with his own eyes. Those round him, indeed, at
+first doubted what the dark object—which appeared
+in the hazy atmosphere like a shadow on
+the high ground near Mont Saint-Lambert, some<span class="pagenum" id="Page_390">390</span>
+six miles off to the north-east—really was. Soult
+at first could make out nothing; then he was
+positive it was a column of troops—probably
+Grouchy’s. The staff, scanning the suspicious
+neighbourhood with their telescopes, asserted
+that what the Emperor saw was only a wood.
+The arrival of some hussars with a Prussian
+prisoner, whom they had just captured while
+trying to get round with a despatch from Bülow
+to Wellington to announce the approach of the
+Prussian Fourth Corps, settled the question.</p>
+
+<p>Napoleon paced backwards and forwards for
+a minute, taking pinches of snuff incessantly.
+Then he ordered off his Light Cavalry to reconnoitre;
+dictated to Soult an urgent message
+recalling Grouchy; and sent off an aide de
+camp to tell Lobau to wheel the Sixth Corps to
+the right, facing towards Saint-Lambert. After
+that he gave Ney orders to open his attack.</p>
+
+<p>Ney took in hand his work forthwith, and
+at once a terrific cannonade opened. Eighty
+French field-guns, a third of Napoleon’s artillery
+on the field, began firing together from the
+plateau in front of La Belle Alliance; storming
+furiously with shot and shell to break down
+the British resistance, and clear the way for
+the onset of the charging columns. Without
+slackening an instant the guns thundered incessantly
+for nearly an hour; getting back from
+the British artillery in reply a fire that was at
+least as vigorous and no less effective.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_391">391</span></p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">“EN AVANT!” “VIVE L’EMPEREUR!”</div>
+
+<p>Then Ney gave the word to advance.</p>
+
+<p>Immediately the French infantry were on the
+move. They went forward massed in four
+divisions; in four solid columns of from four to
+five thousand men each, advancing <i lang="fr">en échelon</i>
+from the left, with intervals between of about
+four hundred paces. Eight battalions made up
+each column, except that of the second division,
+which had nine. The battalions stood drawn
+up in lines, three deep, with a front of two hundred
+files. They were packed closely, one behind
+the other; with intervals between, from front
+to rear, of only five paces. So closely were they
+wedged together, that there was barely room
+between the battalions for the company officers.
+Two brigadiers, Quiot and Bourgeois, led the
+left column, General Allix, their chief, being
+elsewhere; General Donzelot, a keen soldier
+and universally popular as the best hearted and
+most genial of good fellows, headed the second
+column; Marcognet, a grim, hard-bitten veteran,
+a prime favourite with Marshal Ney for
+his dogged determination in action, had the
+third; General Durutte was in charge of the
+fourth, away to the right.</p>
+
+<p>With their battalion-drums jauntily rattling
+out the <i lang="fr">pas de charge</i>, amid excited cries and
+loud exultant shouts of “En avant!” “Vive
+l’Empereur!” the columns stepped off. Ahead
+of them raced forward at a run swarming
+crowds of <i lang="fr">tirailleurs</i>; extending fan-wise as they<span class="pagenum" id="Page_392">392</span>
+went, spreading out widely across the front in
+skirmishing array. The four massed columns
+surged quickly forward and over the edge of
+the plateau down the slope on to the space of
+shallow valley between the armies. As they
+did so, from the moment they crossed the crest-line
+and dipped below, a fierce hurricane of fire
+beat in their faces. Round-shot and shrapnel
+swept the columns through and through, tearing
+long bloody lanes through the densely packed
+masses of men.</p>
+
+<p>Marshal Ney accompanied the first column
+for some part of the way, riding by the side
+of Drouet d’Erlon.</p>
+
+<p>As they crossed the intervening ground below,
+the death-dealing British guns fired down on
+them incessantly, but in spite of all, they stoutheartedly
+moved forward, without checking
+their pace. It was terribly toilsome work in
+places: now they had to plough laboriously over
+sodden and slippery ground; now to trample
+their way through cornfields with standing grain-crops
+nearly breast-high, or, where trodden
+down, tangling round the men’s feet.</p>
+
+<p>Quiot’s brigade turned off to attack La Haye
+Sainte, but the rest of the division, Bourgeois’
+men and the three other columns, held on their
+way, moving in dense phalanxes of gleaming
+bayonets up the slopes.</p>
+
+<p>The second column, Donzelot’s, reached the top
+a little in advance of the others, and was met<span class="pagenum" id="Page_393">393</span>
+by Kempt’s brigade of Picton’s troops, which
+charged it and forced it to yield ground.</p>
+
+<p>A moment later Marcognet’s column reached
+the British line, coming up over the crest of the
+hill immediately in front of Picton’s Highland
+Brigade.</p>
+
+<p>Received with a furious outburst of musketry
+from all along the extended British line, Marcognet’s
+leading files were thrown into some
+confusion by the hail of bullets. They were,
+however, veterans, and though their ranks were
+shaken, they still pressed on, amid a tumult of
+fierce cries and shouts of “Vive l’Empereur!”
+and the wild clash and rattle of their drums.</p>
+
+<p>But they got no farther. The British brigadier
+on the spot, Sir Dennis Pack, called on the
+nearest Highland regiment, the 92nd, to charge
+them with the bayonet. A moment after that,
+all unexpectedly, the cavalry of the Union
+Brigade were on them.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE HIGHLANDERS DASH FORWARD</div>
+
+<p>The Highlanders dashed forward with exultant
+cheers and levelled bayonets, taking the French
+volley that met them without firing back a shot.
+They did not, however, get up to the French,
+nor actually cross steel on steel. As the Highlanders
+got within a dozen yards the column
+suddenly stopped short, and some of the men in
+front seemed suddenly to be panic-stricken. A
+moment before all were madly yelling out:
+“Forward!” “Victory!” Now they began to
+turn their backs in disorder.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_394">394</span></p>
+
+<p>It was not, though, at the sight of the bayonets.
+They had seen and heard something else. The
+thundering beat of approaching horse-hoofs
+shook the ground.</p>
+
+<p>With a trampling turmoil of horse-hoofs the
+cavalrymen of the British Union Brigade burst
+on the scene, galloping forward from their
+former post in rear of Picton’s infantry. The
+Scots Greys were on the left; the Inniskillings
+in the centre; the Royal Dragoons on the right.</p>
+
+<p>Marcognet’s men heard their approach, and
+the next moment saw the horsemen coming at
+them. The unexpected sight startled and staggered
+them; and some of those in the front line
+gave way. The alarm spread at once, as most
+of the rest realised what was approaching. The
+whole column swayed to and fro violently.
+Then it lost cohesion and began to roll back in
+mingled ranks down-hill.</p>
+
+<p>A moment later the Greys were among them.
+“The smoke in which the head of the French
+column was enshrouded had not cleared away
+when the Greys dashed into the mass.</p>
+
+<p>“Highlanders and Greys charged together,
+while shrill and wild from the Highland ranks
+sounded the mountain pipe, mingled with shouts
+of ‘Scotland for ever!’” So an officer describes.
+The men of the 92nd seized hold of the stirrup-leathers
+of the horsemen, and charged with them.
+“All rushed forward, leaving none but the disabled
+in their rear.”</p>
+
+<figure id="i_394" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 41em;">
+ <img src="images/i_394.jpg" width="3229" height="2166" alt="">
+ <figcaption class="caption">
+ <p class="larger">WATERLOO</p>
+ <p>The Charge of the Union Brigade</p>
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_395">395</span></p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">A SHOUT OF “ATTENTION! CAVALRY!”</div>
+
+<p>“The dragoons,” describes Captain Siborne,
+“having the advantage of the descent, appeared
+to mow down the mass, which, bending under
+the pressure, quickly spread itself outwards in
+all directions. Yet in that mass were many
+gallant spirits who could not be brought to
+yield without a struggle; and these fought
+bravely to the death.”</p>
+
+<p>Says some one on the French side: “We
+heard a shout of ‘Attention! Cavalry!’
+Almost at the same instant a crowd of red
+dragoons mounted on grey horses swept down
+upon us like the wind. Those who had straggled
+were cut to pieces without mercy. They did
+not fall upon our columns to ride through and
+break us up—we were too deep and massive for
+that; but they came down between the divisions,
+slashing right and left with their sabres and
+spurring their horses into the flanks of the
+columns to cut them in two. Though they did
+not succeed in this, they killed great numbers
+and threw us into confusion.”</p>
+
+<p>The foremost French battalion of Marcognet’s
+column was the 45th of the Line, one of Napoleon’s
+favourite corps, recruited in the capital,
+and always spoken of by him as “Mes braves
+Enfants de Paris.” Said he of them indeed
+once, when pointing them out to the Russian
+Envoy at the grand review of June 1810:
+“Mark those soldiers, Prince: that is my 45th—my
+brave children of Paris! If ever cartridges<span class="pagenum" id="Page_396">396</span>
+are burned between my brother the Emperor of
+Russia and me, I will show him the efficiency of
+my 45th. It was they who stormed your
+Russian batteries at Austerlitz. They are
+scamps [“des vauriens”] off duty, but lions on
+campaign; you should see their dash, their
+intrepidity; above all, their cheerfulness under
+fire!” Small men—“ideal voltigeurs” Napoleon
+also called the 45th—they stood a poor chance
+against the stalwart swordsmen of the Scots
+Greys.</p>
+
+<figure id="i_396" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 26em;">
+ <img src="images/i_396.jpg" width="2042" height="2583" alt="">
+ <figcaption class="caption">
+ <p>THE FIGHT FOR THE STANDARD.</p>
+ <p>Sergeant Ewart of the Scots Greys taking the Eagle of the 45th at Waterloo.</p>
+ <p>From the picture by R. Andsell, A.R.A., at Royal Hospital, Chelsea.</p>
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<p>It was they who were to yield up the first of
+our British Eagle-trophies of Waterloo. The
+prize fell to a non-commissioned officer of the
+Greys, Sergeant Charles Ewart, a Kilmarnock
+man, who achieved the feat of taking it single-handed.
+Ewart, an athletic fellow of splendid
+physique and herculean strength, six feet four
+in his stockings, and a notable <i lang="fr">sabreur</i>, was
+plunging through the struggling press of infantry,
+slashing out to right and left, when he
+caught sight of the Eagle of the 45th, with its
+gorgeous new silken flag, bearing the glittering
+inscription in letters of gold—“Austerlitz,
+Jena, Friedland, Essling, Wagram.” It was being
+hurried away to the rear for safety in the
+middle of a small band of devoted men who
+surrounded it, and were fighting hard with
+their bayonets to keep the British off. Sergeant
+Ewart saw that and rode straight for the Eagle-bearer.
+Parrying the bayonet-thrusts at him<span class="pagenum" id="Page_397">397</span>
+as he got up, he cut down the French officer
+who carried the Eagle, and then had a fight with
+two others. These, first one and then the other,
+were killed or disabled by the sergeant, who in
+the end carried off the splendid trophy triumphantly.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">HOW EWART TOOK THE EAGLE</div>
+
+<p>Ewart himself, in a letter to his father, tells
+his own story of the taking of the Eagle:</p>
+
+<p>“He and I had a hard contest for it. He
+thrust for my groin; I parried it off and cut him
+through the head, after which I was attacked by
+one of their lancers, who threw his lance at me,
+but missed the mark by my throwing it off
+with my sword, at my right side. Then I cut
+him from the chin upwards, which went through
+his teeth. Next I was attacked by a foot-soldier,
+who, after firing at me, charged me
+with his bayonet; but he very soon lost the
+combat, for I parried it and cut him down
+through the head. That finished the contest
+for the Eagle.”</p>
+
+<p>Napoleon was watching the progress of the
+fight through his glasses. He witnessed the
+charge of the Scots Greys—unaware, of course,
+that it was his pet “Enfants de Paris” who were
+undergoing their fate. “Qu’ils sont terribles
+ces chevaux gris!” was the exclamation that,
+according to the guide De Coster, fell from
+Napoleon’s lips at the sight. The Greys cut
+his unlucky 45th to pieces, and had overthrown
+the rest of Marcognet’s Division in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_398">398</span>
+three minutes. “In three minutes,” says a
+British officer in the charge, “the column was
+totally overthrown and numbers of them taken
+prisoners.”</p>
+
+<p>Sabring their way through the remnants of
+the 45th, and leaving the prisoners to be secured
+by the Highlanders, the Greys then charged the
+supporting regiment, the 25th of the Line.
+These, “lost in amazement at the suddenness
+and wildness of the charge and its terrific effect
+on their comrades on the higher ground in front,”
+were caught in the act of trying to form square.
+Some of them fired a few shots at the dragoons,
+but the impetus of the first charge carried the
+Greys in among them with a rush, driving in
+the foremost ranks and making the rest of
+the column in rear roll back and break up.
+In panic and despair they threw down their
+muskets and, according to a British officer,
+“surrendered in crowds.” The Eagle of the 25th,
+however, was saved. It was carried safely off
+the field, and is now one of the Napoleonic relics
+at the Invalides.</p>
+
+<p>Ewart was at once sent to Brussels with the
+trophy, and on his arrival carried it through the
+crowded streets “amidst the acclamations of
+thousands of spectators who saw it.” He was
+given an ensigncy in the 3rd Royal Veteran
+Battalion in recognition of his exploit. The
+sword he used at Waterloo is now among the
+treasures of Chelsea Hospital, and Ewart’s old<span class="pagenum" id="Page_399">399</span>
+regiment bears embroidered on its standard a
+French Eagle, with the legend “Waterloo.”<a id="FNanchor_44" href="#Footnote_44" class="fnanchor">44</a></p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE CHARGE OF THE “ROYALS”</div>
+
+<p>Within a few moments of Sergeant Ewart
+capturing the Eagle of the 45th, an officer of the
+Royal Dragoons, Captain A.&nbsp;K. Clark (afterwards
+Sir A.&nbsp;K. Clark-Kennedy) took, also in hand-to-hand
+fight, the other Eagle sent home by Wellington
+from Waterloo—that of the 105th of the
+Line, the leading regiment of Bourgeois’
+Brigade.</p>
+
+<p>The Royals, on the right of the Union Brigade,
+came down on the French left column. That, as
+yet, had had no enemy in front of it, and was
+advancing with cheers and shouts of triumph
+across the crest-line of the ridge. It overlapped
+and extended beyond the flank of what
+had been Picton’s line, and so far had only been
+fired at from a distance by artillery and part of
+the 95th. Suddenly the French were startled by
+the apparition of a mass of cavalry quite near;
+coming on within eighty or ninety yards of them—emerging
+from the battle-smoke at a gallop.</p>
+
+<p>The sight took them completely by surprise.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_400">400</span>
+The loud shouts of triumph stopped abruptly.
+“The head of the column,” describes one of the
+Royals, “appeared to be seized with a panic,
+gave us a fire which brought down about twenty
+men, went instantly about, and endeavoured to
+regain the opposite side of the hedges.” They
+had just crossed the Wavre road along the slope,
+about halfway up.</p>
+
+<p>It was the men of one corps, the 105th of the
+Line, who so turned back. They, of all in the
+regiments of Napoleon’s army, knew what it
+was to be charged by cavalry. They had had
+one fearful experience of what cold steel in
+strong hands could do, and wanted no second.
+They were the same 105th whom Wellington’s
+Hanoverian Dragoons, in the pursuit after Salamanca,
+had ridden down and slaughtered so
+mercilessly. Once more the fearful fate was
+about to overtake them—was at hand, was on
+them! In the ranks were many veterans who
+had served in the 105th in Spain before 1814,
+and had rejoined on Napoleon’s return from
+Elba. The slaughter after Salamanca was a
+grim and horrifying memory in the regiment
+that every man shuddered to recall. It all came
+back vividly to them now, as the flashing sabres
+of the Royal Dragoons burst into view, making
+for them across the ridge. The whole regiment
+gave back and broke, turning for help to the
+supporting 28th in rear.</p>
+
+<p>But they were not able to reach their refuge<span class="pagenum" id="Page_401">401</span>
+in time. Without drawing rein the Royals
+pressed home their charge. They were into the
+105th in a moment, cutting them down on all
+sides.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">HOW THE SECOND EAGLE WAS TAKEN</div>
+
+<p>In that <i lang="fr">mêlée</i> the Eagle of the 105th met its
+fate. Captain Clark-Kennedy himself describes
+how that came about—how he came to take the
+Eagle. He was in command of the centre
+squadron, leading through the thick of the
+ill-fated infantrymen.</p>
+
+<p>“I did not see the Eagle and Colour (for there
+were two Colours, but only one with an Eagle)
+until we had been probably five or six minutes
+engaged. It must, I should think, have been
+originally about the centre of the column, and
+got uncovered from the change of direction.
+When I first saw it, it was perhaps about forty
+yards to my left, and a little in my front. The
+officer who carried it, and his companions, were
+moving with their backs towards me, and endeavouring
+to force their way through the crowd.</p>
+
+<p>“I gave the order to my squadron, ‘Right
+shoulders forward! Attack the Colour!’ leading
+direct on the point myself. On reaching
+it I ran my sword into the officer’s right side,
+a little above the hip-joint. He was a little to
+my left side, and he fell to that side, with the
+Eagle across my horse’s head. I tried to catch
+it with my left hand, but could only touch the
+fringe of the flag; and it is probable it would
+have fallen to the ground, had it not been prevented<span class="pagenum" id="Page_402">402</span>
+by the neck of Corporal Styles’ horse,
+who came close up on my left at the instant,
+and against which it fell. Corporal Styles was
+standard-coverer: his post was immediately
+behind me, and his duty to follow wherever
+I led.</p>
+
+<p>“When I first saw the Eagle, I gave the order
+‘Right shoulders forward! Attack the Colour!’
+and on running the officer through the body
+I called out twice together, ‘Secure the Colour!
+Secure the Colour! It belongs to me!’ This
+order was addressed to some men close to me,
+of whom Corporal Styles was one.</p>
+
+<p>“On taking up the Eagle I endeavoured to
+break the Eagle off the pole, with the intention
+of putting it into the breast of my coat, but I
+could not break it. Corporal Styles said, ‘Pray,
+sir, do not break it,’ on which I replied, ‘Very
+well. Carry it to the rear as fast as you can. It
+belongs to me!’”</p>
+
+<p>Taking hold of the Eagle, Corporal Styles
+turned away. He had a fight to get through
+with it, and had, we are told, literally to cut
+his way back to safety.</p>
+
+<p>Captain Clark-Kennedy, who received two
+wounds and had two horses killed under him,
+was given the C.B. He was granted later, as
+an augmentation to his family arms, the representation
+of a Napoleonic Eagle and flag;
+with for crest a “demi-dragoon holding a flag
+with an Eagle on it.” Corporal Styles was appointed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_403">403</span>
+to an ensigncy in the West India Regiment.
+The Royal Dragoons wear the device of
+a Napoleonic Eagle as collar-badge, and bear
+an Eagle embroidered on their standard.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">WHERE ANOTHER FLAG WAS FOUND</div>
+
+<p>As with the 45th, so with the 105th—both
+battalions of each regiment lost their colours;
+the regimental Eagle and the “fanion” of the
+second battalion. The “fanion” of the 105th,
+described as “a dark blue silken flag, with on it
+the words ‘105me Régiment d’Infanterie de
+Ligne,’” came into British possession in a manner
+that is not clear. It was not taken in fight
+by the Royals. Was it picked up on the field
+after the battle by some camp-follower and
+sold? Its existence and whereabouts remained
+unknown until some twenty-four years afterwards.
+As it happened, curiously, General Clark-Kennedy,
+as he then was, himself lighted upon
+it by chance, hanging in the hall of Sir Walter
+Scott’s home at Abbotsford. How it got there,
+in spite of all inquiries, the general was unable
+to discover.</p>
+
+<p>Two other Eagles, it would appear, had adventures
+at Waterloo.</p>
+
+<p>One, according to an unconfirmed story, was
+taken and lost by the Inniskillings, who charged
+the 54th and 55th of the Line, stationed at the
+rear of Bourgeois’ Brigade, just after the Royals
+attacked the leading battalion of that column.
+A trooper named Penfold claimed to have taken
+the Eagle of one of the two regiments. “After<span class="pagenum" id="Page_404">404</span>
+we charged,” he said, “I saw an Eagle which I
+rode up to, and seized hold of it. The man who
+bore it would not give it up, and I dragged him
+along by it for a considerable distance. Then
+the pole broke about the middle, and I carried
+off the Eagle. Immediately after that I saw
+a comrade, Hassard, in difficulties, and, giving
+the Eagle to a young soldier of the Inniskillings,
+I went to his aid. The Eagle got dropped and
+lost.”</p>
+
+<p>The second of these two Eagles is said to have
+been captured by the Blues, the Royal Horse
+Guards, and then lost in much the same way.
+“A private in the Blues,” records Wellington’s
+Supplemental Despatches, “killed a French officer
+and took an Eagle; but his own horse being
+killed, he could not keep it.” A French officer
+also mentions the taking of the Eagle by the
+Blues and its recovery.</p>
+
+<p>About the time that the ill-fated 45th of the
+Line and the 105th lost their Eagles in front
+of Picton’s Division, another Eagle elsewhere
+had a narrow escape from capture, being saved
+by its colonel’s personal act. That took place
+in front of Hougoumont, with the Eagle of the
+1st of the Line. The regiment was in Jerome
+Bonaparte’s Division in front of Hougoumont,
+and had made an attack on the outbuildings
+of the château, which the defenders had beaten off.
+At the last moment, as the French assault recoiled,
+the Eagle-bearer and his two fellows<span class="pagenum" id="Page_405">405</span>
+were shot down together. The battalion fell
+back, leaving the Eagle lying on the ground in
+the open, beside its dead guardians. For the
+moment, apparently, the British defenders did
+not see the trophy thus left within their reach.
+Before they did so Colonel Cubières, of the 1st
+of the Line, discovered its loss and saw where it
+had fallen. He ran out by himself, picked up
+the Eagle, and, escaping harm of any kind, carried
+it back to the regiment. According to M.
+Thiers, “the English officers checked the fire
+of their men while the deed was being performed,
+in admiration of his courage”—an interesting
+detail in the story if true!</p>
+
+<h3 id="toclink_405"><span class="smcap">The Last Attack and After: The Eagles of the Guard</span></h3>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE EAGLES OF THE GUARD</div>
+
+<p>In the third episode in the story of Waterloo
+we strike another note. How the Eagles of the
+Guard fared in the closing hour of the battle,
+when Napoleon staked his last desperate throw
+and lost—that final phase remains to tell.</p>
+
+<p>Fourteen Eagles of the Guard were on the
+field. All came safely through the battle and
+survived the risks and perils of the night retreat
+that followed, to recross the frontier with the
+rallied remnants of the stricken host. Only
+three, however, are now in existence: one at
+the Invalides; the other two in private keeping
+in France. The remaining eleven were, some<span class="pagenum" id="Page_406">406</span>
+of them at any rate, destroyed by the officers
+on the final disbanding of the Grand Army,
+refusing to give them up to the emissaries of the
+Bourbon <i lang="fr">régime</i> sent to receive them for conveyance
+to Vincennes, where as many as could
+be got hold of among the regimental Eagles
+underwent their fate by fire.</p>
+
+<p>Five Eagles went forward in the great last-hope
+attack of the Guard against the centre of
+Wellington’s position, the overthrow of which
+cost Napoleon the battle. They were the Eagles
+of the 3rd and 4th Grenadiers of the Guard, and
+of three regiments of the Chasseurs of the Guard,
+the 1st, 3rd, and 4th. All five are among those
+that have disappeared since Waterloo.</p>
+
+<p>Close beside the Eagle of the 3rd Grenadiers
+it was that Marshal Ney fought so heroically, as
+he led in person the historic grand attack of the
+Imperial Guard. His fifth horse was shot under
+Ney in the advance, and he then drew his sword
+and strode forward on foot alongside the Eagle-bearer.
+So he led until the column reeled back
+and broke under the sudden attack of the British
+Guards across the crest-line of the slope. At
+that moment Ney lost his footing, and fell in the
+confusion. “He disappeared,” says a French
+officer, “just at the moment that the Guard gave
+way. But he was up again in a moment, and
+with voice and gesture strove his hardest to rally
+them.” It was to no purpose. The great
+column wavered, swayed, and then fell apart in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_407">407</span>
+disorder. “Mitraillée, fusillée, reduit à quinze
+ou seize cent hommes, la Garde recule!” Ney
+was swept off his feet in the retreat, and borne
+backwards; carried away in the rush of the
+fugitives, struggling helplessly in the crowd.
+“Bathed in perspiration, his eyes blazing with
+indignation, foaming at the mouth, his uniform
+torn open, one of his epaulets cut away by a
+sabre-slash, his star of the Legion of Honour
+dented by a bullet, bleeding, muddy, heroic,
+holding a broken sword in his hand, he shouted
+to the men, ‘See how a Marshal of France dies
+on the battlefield!’ But it was in vain: he
+did not die.”</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">NEY’S LAST HEROIC EFFORT</div>
+
+<p>Then Ney, mounting a trooper’s horse, made
+for a regiment near, whose men were falling
+back in fair order, with their Eagle borne defiantly
+in their midst—the 8th of the Line. With
+them was a battalion of the 95th, also displaying
+their Eagle gallantly as they, too, tried to withdraw
+in regular formation. Ney made them
+face about, and put himself at their head.
+He appealed to them in the words he had used
+just before, when trying to rally the Guard:
+“Suivez moi, camarades. Je vais vous montrer
+comment meurt un Maréchal de France sur le
+champ de bataille!” The men turned to face
+the enemy, with a shout of “Vive le Maréchal
+Ney!” They charged forward towards where
+some of the red-coats of Kempt’s and Pack’s
+infantry showed themselves in the van of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_408">408</span>
+pursuers. But at the same instant some horsemen
+of a Prussian hussar regiment dashed at
+them at a gallop. The sight of the horsemen
+was too much for their shattered nerves. They
+turned their backs and ran off panic-stricken.
+Ney’s last rallied band broke and fled, with cries
+of “Sauve qui peut!”</p>
+
+<p>Yet not quite all. A small band of the men
+of the 8th kept round their Eagle, and retired in
+order, still holding it up. <i lang="fr">Chef de Bataillon</i>
+Rullière, of the 95th, snatched the Eagle of that
+regiment from its bearer, broke the staff, and
+carried off the Eagle concealed under his coat.</p>
+
+<p>Ney’s sixth horse was shot under him as the
+men turned. Again getting to his feet he staggered
+on in the midst of the crowd of fugitives
+until he at last found his way into one of the
+rallying squares formed in rear by some of
+the survivors of the Guard. There now, beside
+the Eagle of the 4th Chasseurs of the Guard,
+Ney made his last stand at Waterloo—at bay,
+desperate. He fought in the square, “shoulder
+to shoulder with the rest, shooting and thrusting
+with a musket and bayonet he got hold of,” as
+the square slowly made its retreat off the field,
+until in the darkness it broke up, and the men
+dispersed. The devotion of a mounted officer
+who met the marshal on foot, utterly worn out
+and by himself, and gave up his horse to him,
+enabled Ney in the end to reach a place of safety.</p>
+
+<p>Napoleon was watching the Second Column<span class="pagenum" id="Page_409">409</span>
+of the Guard at the moment of its disaster.
+How the overwhelming catastrophe burst on his
+gaze, abruptly and all unexpectedly, makes one
+of the most dramatic of historic scenes. At
+that moment Napoleon was about to lead in
+person the reserve of the Guard, three battalions
+which he had retained near him throughout, to
+reinforce the fighting line.</p>
+
+<p>“While they were being marshalled for the
+attack—one battalion deployed, with a battalion
+in close column on either side—he kept his
+glass turned upon the conflict in which he intended
+to bear a part.</p>
+
+<p>“Suddenly his hand fell.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">NAPOLEON IS HORROR-STRICKEN</div>
+
+<p>“‘Mais ils sont mêlée!’ he ejaculated in a
+tone of horror, his voice hollow and quavering.
+He addressed his aide de camp, Count Flahault,
+who was under no illusion as to what troops were
+meant. The sun had just set. There was no
+radiance to prevent all men seeing what was
+going on out there in the north-west.”</p>
+
+<p>Immediately on that followed the general
+collapse: the almost instantaneous break up of
+the French army all along the line.</p>
+
+<p>“First the trampled corn in rear was sprinkled,
+then it was covered, with a confused mass of men
+moving south; behind and among them the
+sabres of Vivian’s hussars and Vandeleur’s
+dragoons rose and fell, hacking and hewing on
+every side.</p>
+
+<p>“‘La Garde recule!’ sounded like a sob in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_410">410</span>
+the motionless ranks of the Old Guard (the three
+battalions near Napoleon), and sped with astonishing
+swiftness to every part of the field.
+‘La Garde recule!’ cried the men of Allix,
+Donzelot, and Marcognet, and began to melt
+away from the vantage ground they had recently
+so nobly won. ‘La Garde recule!’ whispered
+Reille’s columns, still unbroken on the left.
+Far on the right, Durutte’s battalions, suddenly
+confronted by the heads of Ziethen’s columns,
+where they had been told to look for Grouchy’s,
+caught up the word. Next, the uneasy murmur,
+‘Nous sommes trahis!’ was heard—for was
+there not treason? Had not General Bourmont
+and his staff, and other officers, openly gone over
+to the enemy? ‘La Garde recule!’ Oh
+fatal cry! soon swelling into one still more
+dreadful—last tocsin of the soldier’s agony—‘Sauve
+qui peut!’ Papelotte and La Haye
+were abandoned, and from the east, as already
+from the west, the wreck of the Last Army
+rolled towards the Charleroi road.”</p>
+
+<p>The Eagle that was close beside Napoleon at
+that most awful moment of his life, as he saw
+his Guard break and fall back in confusion, is at
+the Invalides now. It is the Eagle of the 2nd
+Grenadiers of the Guard; one of the three reserve
+battalions that were forming up to go
+forward at the moment of the catastrophe.</p>
+
+<figure id="i_410" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 34em;">
+ <img src="images/i_410.jpg" width="2688" height="2698" alt="">
+ <figcaption class="caption">
+ <p class="larger">WATERLOO</p>
+ <p>THE FINAL PHASE</p>
+ <p class="smaller">Sketch Plan to show the attack and the defeat of
+ the columns of the Guard.</p>
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<p>Napoleon watched the panic begin to spread
+over the field for a brief moment. Then he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_411">411</span>
+roused himself to try to meet the impending
+crash. First he formed the Guard battalions
+nearest him into square. Then he sent off his
+last remaining gallopers, in the futile hope that
+it might be possible to rally the men of the nearest
+divisions to him before they had time to scatter.
+But the effort was hopeless: it was beyond
+possibility to stem the raging torrent of frantic
+soldiers, now in full flight on every side, racing
+past in the direction of Jemmapes. The lie that
+he had sent round just before the Guard started
+on its charge, that Grouchy had arrived, recoiled
+on his own head. The panic-stricken soldiers
+would not be stopped. “They had been told
+that Grouchy had arrived. They had found
+instead Ziethen’s terrible Prussians. Now they
+would listen to nothing. The fugitives streamed
+past, rushing on and bellowing as they went
+that they had been betrayed and that all was
+lost!”</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">NAPOLEON SHELTERS IN A SQUARE</div>
+
+<p>After that Napoleon rode into the nearest
+square, and took shelter in its midst. It was
+that of the Second Battalion of the 2nd Chasseurs
+of the Guard. The square moved off at once
+towards La Belle Alliance, and, turning there
+into the Charleroi road, took its way back towards
+Rossomme, half a mile in rear, where the
+two battalions of the 1st and 2nd Grenadiers
+of the Old Guard had remained all day.</p>
+
+<p>At Rossomme Napoleon passed to the square
+of the First Battalion of the 1st Grenadiers of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_412">412</span>
+Old Guard. The two battalions of the Guard
+there had already formed in squares of their
+own accord, with their Eagles held on high in
+their midst. They were joined by the 1st
+Chasseurs of the Guard, coming up from Caillou,
+a short distance in rear. The three squares held
+their ground firmly, beating off the headmost of
+the Prussian attacks. They remained halted
+until, on some of the Prussian artillery nearing
+the place, Napoleon himself gave the order to
+move away in retreat.</p>
+
+<p>At a slow step, the drums rolling out the
+stately “Grenadier’s March,” sullen and defiant,
+the Old Guard, with Napoleon in the midst of
+the square of the 1st Grenadiers, set forth on
+their last journey. Their Eagle was still borne
+on high in their midst—close beside Napoleon.
+It is the Eagle that is now treasured in Paris by
+the descendants of General Petit, the commander
+of the Grenadiers at Waterloo—the Eagle of the
+Adieu of Fontainebleau; the same Eagle that
+led the Guard at Austerlitz and Jena, at Eylau
+and Friedland, at Wagram, and throughout all
+the horrors of the retreat from Moscow. It
+escorted Napoleon off the field after Waterloo.</p>
+
+<figure id="i_412" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 29em;">
+ <img src="images/i_412.jpg" width="2302" height="1818" alt="">
+ <figcaption class="caption">
+ <p>THE SQUARE OF THE OLD GUARD AT BAY AFTER WATERLOO.</p>
+ <p>From the picture by H. Bellangé.</p>
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE OLD GUARD MARCH AWAY</div>
+
+<p>The Grenadiers of the Guard escorted Napoleon
+for four miles from the battlefield, beating
+back repeated efforts that were made by Prussian
+cavalry to break up their ranks. To
+maintain their formation to the last was their
+only hope of safety; and terrible were the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_413">413</span>
+measures they took to safeguard themselves
+and keep their ranks intact. Friend or foe who
+attempted to get in among them was mercilessly
+shot down. “Nous tirons,” describes General
+Petit, “sur tout ce qui presentaient, amis et
+ennemis, de peur de laisser entrer les uns
+avec les autres.” They took their way along
+the Charleroi road; the 2nd Grenadiers marching
+on the <i lang="fr">chaussée</i> itself, the 1st Grenadiers to the
+left of the road. With marvellous calmness and
+cool courage did the veterans proceed on their
+way. “Every few minutes they stopped to
+rectify the alignment of the faces of the square,
+and to keep off pursuit by means of rapid and
+well-sustained musketry.”</p>
+
+<p>Erckmann-Chatrian’s soldier of the 25th, who
+was amongst the fugitives streaming across
+country on either side of the high-road, tells
+how he heard from afar the stately drum-beat
+of their march. “In the distance <i lang="fr">La Grenadière</i>
+sounded like an alarm-bell in the midst of a
+conflagration. Yet, indeed, this was much more
+terrible—it was the last drum-beat of France!
+This rolling of the drums of the Old Guard
+sounding forth in the midst of disaster had in it
+something infinitely pathetic as well as terrible.”</p>
+
+<p>And of the scene with Napoleon in the square
+of the Grenadiers as it tramped its way along,
+we have this from Thiers: “With sombre but
+calm countenance, he rode in the centre of the
+square, his far-seeing glance as it were probing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_414">414</span>
+futurity and realising that more than a battle
+had been lost that day. He only interrupted
+his gloomy meditations to inquire now and again
+for his lieutenants, some of whom were among
+the wounded near him. The soldiers all round
+seemed stupefied by the disaster. The men
+moved stolidly on, almost without a word to one
+another. Napoleon alone seemed to be able to
+speak; occasionally addressing a few words to
+the Major-General (Soult), or to his brother
+Jerome, who rode beside him. Now and again,
+when harassed by the Prussian squadrons, the
+square would halt, and the side that was attacked
+fired on the assailants, after which the sad and
+silent march was resumed.”</p>
+
+<p>Throughout the march, keeping their position
+at a little distance from the squares of the Grenadiers,
+rode the Horse-Grenadiers and the Mounted
+Chasseurs of the Guard. One of the finest displays
+of soldierly endurance ever made, perhaps,
+was that given by the Horse-Grenadiers of the
+Guard as the magnificent regiment left the field,
+“moving at a walk, in close columns and in
+perfect order; as if disdaining to allow itself
+to be contaminated by the confusion that prevailed
+around it.” So describes a British officer
+who saw them ride away. They beat off all attacks
+and kept steadily and compactly together.
+“They literally walked from the field in the most
+orderly manner, moving majestically along, with
+their Eagle in their midst, as though merely<span class="pagenum" id="Page_415">415</span>
+marching to take up their ground for a field-day.”
+This, further, is what a British officer of
+Light Dragoons, who came up with them in the
+pursuit, says of their heroic demeanour: “Seeing
+the men of our brigade approach, they halted,
+formed line, and fired a volley—a rare thing for
+dragoons—and waited a few minutes, as much
+as to say, ‘We are ready to receive your charge
+if you are so disposed’; then finding we did not
+advance, they again continued their slow retreat.”</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">A FAMOUS EAGLE NOW IN FRANCE</div>
+
+<p>The Eagle of the Horse-Grenadiers has disappeared
+since Waterloo: that of the Mounted
+Chasseurs of the Guard is in existence, in France,
+in the custody of a member of the Bonaparte
+family. It was preserved by General Lefebvre-Desnouettes,
+Colonel-in-Chief of the regiment,
+who commanded the Chasseurs at Waterloo.
+Carried in safety to France, the Eagle was then
+taken to America, when the General, on whose
+head a price had been placed, escaped across the
+Atlantic in the autumn of 1815. He presented
+it later to Joseph Bonaparte, in the possession
+of whose representatives the Eagle is now. It
+still bears attached to the staff the green silk
+guidon-shaped flag, inscribed “Chasseurs de la
+Garde,” and embroidered with gold and silver
+laurel-leaves, which it bore at Waterloo.</p>
+
+<p>Napoleon quitted the square of Grenadiers
+about two miles from Jemmapes. By that time
+the Prussians had ceased their attacks on the
+Guard for easier prey elsewhere. He rode on<span class="pagenum" id="Page_416">416</span>
+at a little distance ahead; the battalions of the
+Guard at the same time re-forming into columns
+of march. They kept with the Emperor until
+the neighbourhood of Jemmapes was reached.
+There Napoleon and Soult and the others quitted
+the road, betaking themselves across the fields
+to make their way as best they could to Charleroi,
+whence Napoleon was able to continue his flight
+in a post-chaise.</p>
+
+<p>Yet another of the Waterloo Eagles of the
+Guard with a story to be told of it was that of
+the 2nd Chasseurs—one of the Eagles that have
+now disappeared. How the Eagle was saved
+from capture, and finally brought through to
+safety, recalls a remarkable and dramatic
+incident of the battle.</p>
+
+<p>The 2nd Chasseurs was one of the twelve
+battalions of the Young Guard detached by
+Napoleon late in the afternoon to assist General
+Lobau and the Sixth Army Corps to keep off
+the Prussian flank attack. Between them they
+saved the army from an even worse catastrophe
+than that which actually befell Napoleon
+at Waterloo—from having to surrender. For
+nearly an hour after the rout had become general,
+the Sixth Corps, and the battalions of the Young
+Guard assisting it, by their heroic resistance,
+prevented the Prussians from breaking in on the
+only line of retreat open to the defeated army,
+and enabled Napoleon to get clear away.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">TO SAVE THE REST OF THE ARMY</div>
+
+<p>“Lobau,” to quote the words of a modern<span class="pagenum" id="Page_417">417</span>
+military writer, “recognised to the full that he
+alone interposed between the Prussians and the
+French line of retreat. If he failed, retreat would
+be cut off, and the army taken in rear as well as
+in front and flank; not a man would get away.
+The fate of the Army, the Emperor, of France,
+rested on Lobau at the supreme moment, and
+splendidly he did his duty. Dusk had given way
+to dark, only illuminated by the blazing ruins of
+Planchenoit, before Lobau retired, but by that
+time the rear of the flying army had cleared the
+point of peril, and comparative safety was assured.
+Still steady, and in good order, he took post on
+the high-road to close the line of flight and block
+pursuit, and the gallant remnant of the Sixth
+Corps and the Young Guard had to bear the full
+fury of the combined advance of the enemy.
+Nothing at Waterloo can surpass for coolness,
+courage, and determination the heroic resistance
+of Lobau.”</p>
+
+<p>It was in the village of Planchenoit that the
+2nd Chasseurs fought side by side with the other
+battalions of the Guard in that quarter under
+the leadership of General Pelet, to whom Napoleon
+had specially entrusted the defence of the post.
+Planchenoit was defended foot by foot at the
+point of the bayonet against ever-increasing
+numbers of the Prussians. The 2nd Chasseurs
+were the last troops of all to quit, after contesting
+the village house by house, cottage by
+cottage, fighting the Prussians man to man<span class="pagenum" id="Page_418">418</span>
+among the bushes and walls of the gardens,
+and finally in the churchyard, where they made
+their last stand at bay, desperately combating
+among the tombstones. Fresh Prussians kept
+coming up to join in the attack, but the 2nd
+Chasseurs, their Eagle defiantly displayed in the
+midst of the battling throng, resisted stubbornly.
+When at the last they drew off, the whole of
+Planchenoit was a mass of flames, blazing from
+end to end.</p>
+
+<p>There remained a rough half-mile of open
+ground before they could get to the Charleroi
+road—the line of retreat along which, by that
+time, a large proportion of the fugitives from the
+main army had got away. The 2nd Chasseurs,
+in rear of all, as they left their last shelter in
+Planchenoit and were beyond the churchyard
+walls, were swept down on by a furious rush of
+Prussian cavalry, and half the regiment was
+cut to pieces. The moon was rising by that
+time, and the Prussians had sufficient light for
+their deadly work.</p>
+
+<p>The survivors, broken up, and thrown in
+irremediable disorder, could after that only run
+for their lives. But they still bore their Eagle
+among them. It was draped under a black cloth.
+Somebody, in some house in the village, as they
+were falling back to the churchyard, had, it
+would appear, caught up a strip of crape or black
+cloth, and hastily wrapped it round the
+Eagle to conceal it in that way from hostile<span class="pagenum" id="Page_419">419</span>
+eyes. The Eagle-bearer refused to break the
+Eagle from the staff, and hide it under his
+coat, as others had done elsewhere with other
+Eagles.</p>
+
+<p>With the Eagle so covered, a small party of
+devoted soldiers were accompanying their
+standard as the survivors of the Prussian
+charge hastened towards the Charleroi road,
+when there came yet another attack from the
+Prussian horse, who charged among them and
+trampled them down as the troopers slashed
+mercilessly at the fugitives. At that moment
+the Eagle and its guardians found themselves
+near the General. They were isolated and cut
+off in the midst of the wild <i lang="fr">mêlée</i>. Pelet caught
+sight of them, desperately striving to protect
+the Eagle-bearer, who was frantically clutching
+at the Eagle-staff as he held on to it and tried
+to get through.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">“SAVE YOUR EAGLE OR DIE ROUND IT!”</div>
+
+<p>Pelet made for the group, shouting at the top
+of his voice: “Rally, Chasseurs! Rally on me!
+Save your Eagle or die round it!” (“A moi,
+Chasseurs! A moi! Sauvons l’Aigle ou mourons
+autour d’elle!”)</p>
+
+<p>In the midst of the frenzied tumult his cry for
+help was somehow heard by the men ahead.
+They turned back in their flight and fought their
+way to the threatened Eagle. Others pressed
+round to join them, until by degrees was formed
+a compact body between two and three hundred
+in number, who with their bayonets kept the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_420">420</span>
+cavalry back as they fought their way towards
+the high-road step by step.</p>
+
+<p>More than once they had to halt and face
+about, as the Prussian horsemen in their repeated
+attempts to capture the Eagle circled
+round them, and dashed in at them again and
+again, but, “forming what is usually termed a
+rallying square, and lowering their bayonets,
+they succeeded in repulsing the charges of the
+cavalry.” At one point in the retreat “some
+guns were brought to bear upon them, and
+subsequently a brisk fire of musketry; but
+notwithstanding the awful sacrifice which was
+thus offered up in defence of their precious
+charge, they succeeded in reaching the main
+line of retreat, and saved alike the Eagle and
+the Honour of the Regiment.”</p>
+
+<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
+
+<p>The Eagles of the Guard all came safely
+through the turmoil and horrors of the night of
+the rout after Waterloo. And—it seems incredible,
+but the fact is vouched for by several
+officers—so did the other Eagles of the army.
+All at Waterloo, it is declared, were brought
+back to France, except the two taken from the
+ill-fated 45th and the 105th of the Line by the
+Scots Greys and the Royals. Those two only
+remained as trophies in the hands of the victors.
+General Charras, whose good faith we have no
+right to impugn, declares the fact in explicit
+language, and another officer relates how, on the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_421">421</span>
+day after the battle, when the rallied remains
+of the army assembled at Phillippeville and
+Maubeuge, “the soldiers wept tears of joy at
+learning how many of their Eagles had been
+saved.”</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">“MAKE WAY FOR THE EAGLE!”</div>
+
+<p>Says General Charras, describing how the
+Eagles were saved that night: “Two standards
+had been lost on the battlefield. There was
+none other lost. In the crowd of disbanded
+horsemen and foot-soldiers, marching and running
+pell-mell, some still armed, others having
+thrown away or broken their sabres and guns
+under the impulse of rage, of despair, of terror,
+there were to be seen, by the pale light of the
+moon, little groups of officers of every grade,
+and of soldiers, spontaneously collected round the
+standard of each regiment, and advancing sabre
+in hand, bayonet on the gun, resolute and imperturbable
+in the midst of the general disorder.
+‘Place au drapeau!’ cried they when the rout
+arrested their march, and this cry always sufficed
+to cause the very men who had become deaf to
+every word of command and to all discipline
+to stand aside before them and open a passage.
+They had often to endure peril, they had often
+to repulse the enemy’s attacks, but they saved
+their conquered flags from the attempts and
+hands of the conqueror.”</p>
+
+<p>Grouchy also saved all his Eagles—although
+one had its adventures in the attack on Wavre, and
+was nearly lost to the Prussians. The story<span class="pagenum" id="Page_422">422</span>
+this time is not exactly creditable to some of
+those concerned; but the regiment in question,
+it must be said, had but few old soldiers in its
+ranks, having been made up almost entirely of
+recently levied and half-trained conscripts. Also,
+it had just previously been very roughly handled
+by the Prussians on the battlefield of Ligny.
+There, indeed, it had been charged by cavalry,
+and had suffered severely. The unfortunate
+regiment was the 70th of the Line.</p>
+
+<p>In Grouchy’s fighting at Wavre they were in
+Vandamme’s Division, which had orders to carry
+the bridge over the Dyle and storm the town,
+held by the Prussians in considerable force. To
+give the 70th a chance of getting their revenge
+for Ligny, and winning back the old good name
+of the regiment, Vandamme specially chose them
+for the post of honour in the attack; appointing
+the 70th to lead the van in the preliminary
+storming of the bridge. They led the attack,
+dashing forward bravely enough at the outset,
+and got halfway across. Then they stopped
+short, their ranks decimated by the furious
+fire with which the Prussians received them from
+the houses on the opposite bank, hesitated,
+went on a few paces, stopped again, and finally
+ran back in panic.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">SAVED BY ANOTHER REGIMENT</div>
+
+<p>The sight of the sudden rout maddened their
+leader, Colonel Maury. Stooping from his charger,
+he snatched hold of the Eagle from its bearer,
+and held it up before the men. “What! you<span class="pagenum" id="Page_423">423</span>
+scoundrels! You dishonoured me two days
+ago; you are again disgracing me to-day!
+Forward! Follow me!” (“Comment, canaille!
+Vous m’avez deshonoré avant-hier, et vous
+recidiviez aujourdhui! En avant! Suivez
+moi!”) Brandishing the Eagle the colonel
+turned his horse to ride back across the bridge.
+The drums beat the charge: the regiment followed.
+But all was to no purpose. As fate
+willed it, the gallant colonel fell, shot dead before
+he could get across, and at the sight of his fall
+panic again seized the regiment. They ran
+wildly back again, leaving the dead colonel’s
+body and the Eagle lying halfway across the
+bridge. The Eagle was rescued and brought
+back by the men of another regiment. Had it
+not been for the sudden rush forward of the
+leading company of the 22nd of the Line, the
+regiment supporting the 70th in the attack, the
+Eagle would have been taken. Several Prussian
+soldiers had indeed already run forward to pick
+it up, and their leader was in the act of doing so
+when the foremost of the rescuers arrived, beat
+back the Prussians, and recovered the fallen
+Eagle.</p>
+
+<p>The failure of this one regiment at Wavre is
+the only recorded instance of bad behaviour
+before the enemy in the Waterloo campaign.
+And for it too, in view of the composition of the
+regiment in question, some allowance may surely
+be made.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_424">424</span></p>
+
+<h3 id="toclink_424"><span class="smcap">The Eagles announce Victory to London</span></h3>
+
+<p>The last of the four episodes is supplemental:
+the story of how Wellington’s Eagle-trophies
+themselves first announced Waterloo to London.</p>
+
+<p>The two Eagles were sent to England immediately
+after the battle, together with Wellington’s
+Waterloo despatch, by Major the Hon. Henry
+Percy, of the 11th Light Dragoons, who was
+almost the only member of Wellington’s staff
+who went through the battle unwounded. He
+arrived in London, displaying the Eagles from
+his post-chaise as he travelled through the streets,
+on the stroke of eleven o’clock on the night of
+Wednesday, June 21.</p>
+
+<p>Up to then not a word had come from Wellington:
+not a word of reliable news as to what
+had happened had reached England. Rumours
+of an early check to the French had arrived,
+from unofficial sources, during the previous day,
+but nothing more had been heard, and all London
+was on tenterhooks of suspense.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">THE FIRST RUMOURS IN LONDON</div>
+
+<p>The battle was fought on Sunday the 18th.
+But no news of it, or in regard to it, of any
+kind reached England during either Monday or
+Tuesday. There was no intelligence from the seat
+of war at all. On the Wednesday morning the
+<i>Times</i> announced vaguely that Napoleon had
+struck the first blow unsuccessfully. A Mr. Sutton,
+of Colchester, it said, the owner of packet-boats
+running between Harwich and Ostend, had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_425">425</span>
+forwarded a message to the effect that there
+had been fighting on the 15th and 16th and
+skirmishing on the 17th, and that a fresh battle
+was beginning on the morning of the 18th. His
+informant at Brussels had sent that news. There
+was no more news until Wednesday afternoon,
+when the <i>Sun</i> came out with a special edition
+stating that the Government had received no despatches,
+but that “a gentleman who left Ghent
+on Monday, and two others from Brussels, brought
+word that Sunday’s battle had been successful.”
+All London was in the streets until between ten
+and eleven that night, in a state of eager expectation;
+but repeated inquiries at the Horse
+Guards, at the War Office, and at the Mansion
+House only met with the answer—“No news
+yet.”</p>
+
+<p>It was just as the crowds were dispersing,
+tired of waiting, and taking it as certain that
+nothing could be known until the morning, as
+the clocks were on the stroke of eleven, that
+Major Percy arrived in London.</p>
+
+<p>“He left the Duchess of Richmond’s ball,”
+says his niece, Lady Bagot, in whose words the
+story may best be told, “on the night before the
+battle, and had no time to change his dress,
+or even his shoes, before going into action.
+When he received orders to go to England with
+the despatches, he posted to Antwerp, and there
+took the first sailing boat he could find to convey
+him to Dover, where he landed in the afternoon.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_426">426</span>
+He found that a report of the victory had preceded
+him there. The Rothschilds had chartered
+a fast sloop to lie off Antwerp, and bring
+the first news of the battle to the English shore—news
+which was to be used for Stock Exchange
+purposes.</p>
+
+<p>“My uncle’s confirmation of the rumour of a
+great victory was received with the greatest
+relief and enthusiasm. At that time the hotel-keeper
+at Dover, a certain Mr. Wright, had the
+monopoly of the posting arrangements between
+that port and London. He immediately placed
+his best horses at my uncle’s disposal, and despatched
+an express to order fresh relays all along
+the road. Besides the despatches my uncle
+took the two captured Eagles of the Imperial
+Guard with him. These, being too large to go
+into the carriage, were placed so as to stick out
+of the windows, one on each side. In this manner
+he drove straight to the Horse Guards,
+where he learnt that the Commander-in-Chief,
+at that time the Duke of York, was dining out.
+He next proceeded to Lord Castlereagh’s, and
+was told that he and the Duke of York were
+both dining with a lady in St. James’s Square.
+To this house he drove, and there learnt that the
+Prince Regent was also of the dinner-party.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">PRESENTED TO THE PRINCE REGENT</div>
+
+<p>“Requesting to be shown immediately into
+the dining-room, he entered that apartment
+bearing the despatches and the Eagles with him.
+He was covered with dust and mud, and, though<span class="pagenum" id="Page_427">427</span>
+unwounded himself, bore the marks of battle
+upon his coat. The dessert was being placed
+upon the table when he entered, and as soon as
+the Prince Regent saw him he commanded the
+ladies to leave the room. The Prince Regent
+then held out his hand, saying, ‘Welcome,
+Colonel Percy!’ ‘Go down on one knee,’ said
+the Duke of York to my uncle, ‘and kiss hands
+for the step you have obtained.’ Before the
+despatch could be read, my uncle was besieged
+with inquiries of various prominent officers
+engaged, and had to answer ‘Dead’ or ‘Severely
+wounded’ so often that the Prince Regent burst
+into tears. The Duke of York, though greatly
+moved, was more composed.</p>
+
+<p>“By this time my uncle was exhausted from
+fatigue, and begged the Prince’s permission to
+go to his father’s house in Portman Square.
+The crowd was so great in St. James’s Square,
+that he had the greatest difficulty in getting
+through it and reaching my grandfather’s house,
+which was soon surrounded by anxious multitudes
+begging for news of relations and friends.
+My uncle told them that the victory was complete,
+but that the number killed and wounded
+was very large. He told them that he would
+answer more questions next morning.”</p>
+
+<p>The Eagles themselves in fact announced the
+victory in London. People in the streets saw
+the chaise as it passed on its way with its horses
+at a gallop, racing at full speed along the Old<span class="pagenum" id="Page_428">428</span>
+Kent Road, across Westminster Bridge, and
+through Parliament Street to Whitehall, “the
+gleaming lamps showing a French Eagle and
+the French flags projecting from each window.”</p>
+
+<p>The news spread like wild-fire, and before
+Colonel Percy could reach the house where the
+Prince Regent was dining—Mrs. Boehm’s, in
+St. James’s Square—South London was
+flocking over Westminster Bridge to Whitehall.
+The West End heard the news immediately
+afterwards, and everybody hurried out again
+into the streets.</p>
+
+<p>It became quickly known where the chaise
+had gone after leaving the Horse Guards, and
+promptly an ever-increasing crowd hurried off
+there. Before the despatch had been read an
+enormous mass of people had assembled in St.
+James’s Square, outside the house. They were
+in time to hear the cheering by the company inside
+the house that greeted the reading of the
+despatch; the cheers were instantly echoed back,
+accompanied by an outburst of vociferous shouting
+followed by a tremendous chorus of “God
+save the King!” The windows of the dining-room
+were open, and a moment later the two
+Eagles with their tricolor flags were thrust
+through. They were held up, with candles at
+either side, to show them plainly, so that all
+might know that the victory had been decisive.</p>
+
+<p>“For a few minutes dustmen’s bells and
+watchmen’s rattles were sprung all over London.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_429">429</span>
+Liquor was produced at many a street-corner,
+and toasts were drunk to Wellington and confusion
+to Bonaparte.”<a id="FNanchor_45" href="#Footnote_45" class="fnanchor">45</a></p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">HOW PARIS HEARD THE NEWS</div>
+
+<p>The closing scene took place on Thursday,
+January 18, 1816—on the “General Thanksgiving<span class="pagenum" id="Page_430">430</span>
+Day for the Restoration of Peace.” The
+two Eagles were on that day publicly paraded
+at the Horse Guards and laid up in the Chapel
+Royal, Whitehall, with ceremonies similar to
+those that attended the reception of the Barrosa
+and Salamanca trophies. Again the battalions
+of the Brigade of Guards in England, with their
+bands “in State clothing,” turned out to take
+part in the display, the Eagles, as before, being
+made to march round the square and do formal
+obeisance to the British flag by being prostrated
+in the dust before the Colour of the King’s
+Guard of the day, at which sight, as on the
+former occasions, both the troops and the crowd
+of spectators “instantaneously gave three loud
+huzzas with the most enthusiastic feeling.”
+The Duke of York, as Commander-in-Chief, presided
+this time at the parade. Two sergeants
+of the Grenadier and Third Guards who had been
+wounded at Waterloo were selected to carry the
+Eagles; escorted by a picked company of eighty-four
+officers and men “drawn from among the
+heroic defenders of Hougoumont on the field of
+battle.” Lifeguardsmen and Blues just arrived
+from the Army of Occupation, in France, assisted
+the Foot Guards on parade.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">IN THE CHAPEL ROYAL, WHITEHALL</div>
+
+<p>The escort entered the Chapel Royal by
+the two doors in equal divisions, the band playing
+and marching up to the steps of the Communion
+Table, where they filed off to right and
+left. As soon as the band had ceased, the two<span class="pagenum" id="Page_431">431</span>
+sergeants bearing the Eagles approached the
+Altar and fixed upon it their consecrated banners.
+Both the Chaplain-General to the Forces (Archdeacon
+Owen) and the Bishop of London, with
+two Royal Chaplains (“the Rev. Mr. Jones and
+the Rev. Mr. Howlett”), officiated in the service;
+the Bishop preaching a special sermon, with for
+his text Psalm xx. verses 7 and 8:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+
+<p>“<em>Some trust in chariots and some in horses:
+but we will remember the name of the Lord
+our God.</em></p>
+
+<p>“<em>They are brought down and fallen: but
+we are risen and stand upright.</em>”</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>“After the customary blessing, the band
+played ‘God save the King!’ the whole congregation
+standing. Among those who attended were
+a considerable number of persons of fashion and
+distinction in public life, the Dukes of Gloucester
+and York, and the Earl of Liverpool, and several
+officers of the Army and Navy, with many
+elegant and distinguished females.”</p>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_432">432</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIV">CHAPTER XIV<br>
+
+<span class="subhead">AFTER THE DOWNFALL</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class="in0"><span class="firstword">The</span> remnant of the Waterloo army, as mustered
+and officially reported to Paris on July 1,
+1815, after it had been withdrawn by convention
+with the Allies beyond the Loire, numbered some
+23,000 of all arms.<a id="FNanchor_46" href="#Footnote_46" class="fnanchor">46</a> The soldiers had their
+Eagles with them. The Eagles were still the
+standards of the army, although all was over with
+Napoleon, and he had set out on his flight from
+Malmaison to the coast near Rochfort—to find
+the <i>Bellerophon</i> awaiting him there.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">PRESENTED AFTER WATERLOO</div>
+
+<p>The last occasion on which an Eagle of Napoleon’s
+Army had its part on parade was one day,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_433">433</span>
+near the Loire, with a regiment not at Waterloo.
+It was when the news of Napoleon’s abdication
+reached its colonel. He was Colonel Bugeaud
+of the 14th of the Line, in after years the famous
+Marshal who gained Algeria for France. As it
+happened, the 14th had not long received their
+Eagle from the “<i lang="fr">Champ de Mai</i>.” It had been
+brought by the deputation of the regiment sent
+to Paris to receive it at the hands of the Emperor,
+but had not yet been formally presented on
+parade, owing to the regiment being on the
+march from the south-eastern frontier of France.
+The 14th joined the rallied remnants of the
+Waterloo army to the south of the Loire, and
+there Colonel Bugeaud made the presentation
+of the Eagle. For the occasion he made use of
+the Napoleonic formula of address at such
+ceremonies, but with a variation to suit the
+altered situation. He took the opportunity to
+remind the regiment that, if the Chief had fallen,
+they yet owed allegiance to their country.
+“Soldiers of the 14th,” began the colonel, “here
+is your Eagle. It is in the name of the nation
+that I present it to you. If the Emperor, as it is
+stated, is no longer our Sovereign, France remains.
+It is France who confides this Eagle to
+you as your standard; it is ever to be your
+talisman of victory. Swear that as long as a
+soldier of the 14th exists no enemy’s hand shall
+touch it!” “We swear it!” responded the
+soldiers all together, and then the officers stepped<span class="pagenum" id="Page_434">434</span>
+forward in front of the ranks, waving their
+swords and again shouting, “We swear it!”</p>
+
+<p>The end for the Eagles of Napoleon came on
+August 3, 1815. On that day the Ministerial
+decree was promulgated, abolishing them and
+the tricolor flag, and disbanding the entire
+Army. The white Bourbon flag was restored
+once more, with a new form of Army organisation,
+which substituted “Departmental Legions”
+in the place of regiments. As in the year before,
+it was notified that all Eagles were to be sent to
+the Artillery dépôt at Vincennes for destruction
+there, according to law—the metal of the Eagles
+to be melted down, their silken tricolor flags
+to be burned.</p>
+
+<p>The date of the final disbandment was fixed
+for September 30, and in almost every case
+there was a pathetic scene when the hour came
+for the soldiers to take their last farewell of
+their Eagles. “On the day of the disbandment,”
+describes one officer, speaking of his own regiment,
+“we all paraded, and the roll was called
+for the last time. Then the Eagle was passed
+solemnly down along the line, the band playing
+a funeral march. The officers and soldiers, all
+in tears, after saluting it, embraced and kissed
+the Eagle. It was then escorted back to the
+colonel’s quarters to be packed up in a box and
+forwarded, according to the official instructions,
+by carrier to the Ministry of War, thence to go
+to Vincennes.”</p>
+
+<figure id="i_434" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 24em;">
+ <img src="images/i_434.jpg" width="1872" height="2648" alt="">
+ <figcaption class="caption">
+ <p>LA REVUE DES MORTS.</p>
+ <p>From a picture by R. Demoraine.</p>
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_435">435</span></p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">ON THE DAY OF THE LAST PARADE</div>
+
+<p>In a few cases, where the senior officers knew
+that they had nothing to hope for in the way of
+consideration from the new <i lang="fr">régime</i>, the Eagles
+were publicly broken up at the last parade by
+the colonels themselves, with a blacksmith’s
+hammer or pioneer’s hatchet, and the silken
+tricolor flags cut to pieces, after which the metal
+fragments, together with the shreds of the flags,
+were distributed as keepsakes among officers
+and men. That being done, all silently dispersed,
+never to reassemble. In some other cases, as
+had happened a twelvemonth previously, the
+Eagles disappeared before the last parade—the
+officers in the various regiments having
+arranged for one of themselves to retain the
+Eagle of the corps privately, either by agreement
+or after drawing lots.</p>
+
+<p>It was in this way that what Napoleonic
+Eagles and flags are now at the Invalides came
+to be there. They were kept hidden by their
+possessors until after the Revolution of July,
+1830, and then, on the formation of the present
+collection of standards and trophies being officially
+sanctioned, most of those at present exhibited
+were brought to light and presented,
+either by those who had been treasuring them
+in secret, or by their heirs and families.</p>
+
+<p>Three Waterloo Eagles are at the Invalides:
+those of the 2nd Grenadiers of the Guard, and
+of the 25th and 26th of the Line; these last two
+of the regiments in the columns charged by the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_436">436</span>
+Scots Greys and the Royals. In addition to the
+Eagles, there are at the Invalides several standards
+that saw service on the battlefield under Napoleon
+and survived the vicissitudes of war: seven
+flags of infantry, and as many of artillery, one
+cuirassier standard, and five other cavalry standards.
+Most of these originally bore Eagles on
+their staves, but those Eagles are now wanting.<a id="FNanchor_47" href="#Footnote_47" class="fnanchor">47</a></p>
+
+<figure id="i_436" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 50em;">
+ <img src="images/i_436.jpg" width="4980" height="3041" alt="General map of Central and Eastern Europe">
+ <figcaption>
+ <p class="p0 right smaller"><a href="images/i_436large.jpg">(<i>High-res</i>)</a></p>
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
+<div class="chapter footnotes">
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="FOOTNOTES">FOOTNOTES</h2>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p class="fn1"><a id="Footnote_1" href="#FNanchor_1" class="label">1</a> “The Eagle for each standard,” said Napoleon, going into
+details with Berthier, “must be made ‘strong and light’—‘<i lang="fr">Il
+convient de la rendre à la fois solide et légère.</i>’” “An Eagle
+looking to its left, with wings half expanded, and with its talons
+grasping a thunderbolt, as in the old Roman standard,” was the
+approved design: the bird measuring eight inches from head
+to feet, and in the spread of its wings from tip to tip, nine and
+a half inches. Below the thunderbolt, as base and support,
+was a tablet of brass, three inches square; bearing in raised
+figures the number of the regiment. The weight of the whole—the
+Eagle was to be of copper, gilded over—was just three and
+a half pounds avoirdupois, and a stout oaken staff was provided,
+eight feet long and painted <i lang="fr">bleu impérial</i>, to which the
+silken regimental colour was attached; the flag being thirty-five
+inches along the staff and thirty-three lengthwise, in the fly.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p class="fn1"><a id="Footnote_2" href="#FNanchor_2" class="label">2</a> The drawings made and laid before Napoleon at Saint-Cloud
+are in existence, preserved among the archives of the Ministry
+of War in Paris.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p class="fn1"><a id="Footnote_3" href="#FNanchor_3" class="label">3</a> All armies, as a fact, owe to Napoleon the introduction of
+the practice of inscribing on the colours of a regiment the names
+of battles in which that regiment has won honour; nowadays
+an essential feature of the war-flags of all nations. It originated
+after Napoleon’s first campaign as General Bonaparte, at the
+head of the Army of Italy; and, together with the inscriptions
+of quotations of passages from his despatches, was introduced
+by him as a device to aid in developing military spirit and a
+sense of <i lang="fr">esprit de corps</i> among the soldiers. The Directory
+promptly censured the innovating young general for acting
+without having first referred the matter to Paris. They sent
+orders that all such inscriptions were to be forthwith deleted
+from the flags. Napoleon, however, refused to obey; and the
+regiments of his Army supported him. One and all protested
+against the removal of their titles to fame, the first appearance
+of which on their flags had been hailed with enthusiasm. In the
+result the Directory deemed it advisable to accept the situation;
+and after that, in turn, the flags of the regiments of the other
+Republican armies elsewhere were authorised to display similar
+decorations of their own. The practice in due course was
+adopted in the other armies of Europe.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p class="fn1"><a id="Footnote_4" href="#FNanchor_4" class="label">4</a> The sending of an invitation to the Pope had been finally
+decided on in July, after a series of protracted discussions in
+the Imperial Council of State.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p class="fn1"><a id="Footnote_5" href="#FNanchor_5" class="label">5</a> One of the Eagles so presented by Napoleon on that afternoon
+is now at Madrid. It is a trophy that is absolutely unique.
+Upwards of a hundred and thirty of Napoleon’s Eagles, the
+spoils of war, now decorate cathedrals, chapels, and arsenals in
+the capitals of Europe; but there is only one French naval
+Eagle now in existence, the trophy at Madrid; the Eagle of a
+line-of-battleship named the <i>Atlas</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Every French line-of-battleship was represented on the Champ
+de Mars and received its Eagle. “Tous les vaisseaux,” to quote
+the words of M. Le Brun, in his <cite lang="fr">Guerres Maritimes de France</cite>,
+“étaient gratifiés d’une aigle et d’un drapeau à leur nom, donnés
+par l’Empereur à son couronnement, ou avaient assisté et prêté
+serment des députations du port et de l’Armée Navale; chaque
+vaisseau avait envoyé sa députation composée de trois officiers,
+trois officiers mariners, et quatre gabiers ou matelots.”</p>
+
+<p>The Eagle of the <i>Atlas</i> was received on the Field of Mars by
+the ship’s deputation of three officers, three warrant officers, and
+four seamen, sent from Toulon, where the <i>Atlas</i> then was in
+harbour with Admiral Villeneuve’s fleet, which Nelson was
+watching. The <i>Atlas</i> crossed the Atlantic in the Toulon fleet
+with Nelson in pursuit, returned to Europe, fought in the indecisive
+battle off Cape Finisterre in July 1805, and was so
+shattered in the fight, in which the ship only just escaped capture,
+that she was left behind for repairs at Ferrol when Villeneuve
+put to sea finally, to meet his fate at Trafalgar. The <i>Atlas</i> had
+to remain there and fell into the hands of the Spaniards in 1808,
+at the time of the national uprising against Napoleon. Thus
+the naval Eagle passed into Spanish possession.</p>
+
+<p>The crew of the <i>Atlas</i> were taken by surprise, while the ship
+was in dock at Ferrol, by the Spanish regiment of Navarre in
+garrison there when the news of the Rising of May 2 at Madrid
+reached Galicia. They were trapped and pounced down upon.
+The ship was seized by a sudden assault, the officers and men
+being made prisoners to the provincial Junta, before they had a
+chance of concealing or making away with their Eagle.</p>
+
+<p>In other cases elsewhere, undoubtedly, the naval Eagles were
+somehow disposed of surreptitiously. It is very remarkable
+that not a single French naval Eagle came into British hands on
+board the thirty odd ships of the line which we captured between
+1805 and 1814 during the war with Napoleon. At Trafalgar,
+according to a French officer on board the French flagship, the
+<i>Bucentaure</i>, they had one. Describing the approach of the
+<i>Victory</i>, at the outset of the battle, says the officer: “A collision
+appeared inevitable. At that moment Villeneuve seized the
+Eagle of the <i>Bucentaure</i> and displayed it to the sailors who surrounded
+him. ‘My friends,’ he called out, ‘I am going to
+throw this on board the English ship! We will go and fetch
+it back or die!’ (‘Mes amis, je vais la jetter à bord du vaisseau
+Anglais! Nous irons la reprendre ou mourir!’) Our seamen
+responded to these noble words by their acclamations.” Admiral
+Villeneuve, all the same, did not throw any Eagle on board the
+<i>Victory</i>; nor was one found in the <i>Bucentaure</i> during the forty-eight
+hours that the ship was in our possession after the battle,
+previous to her wreck in the storm at the entrance to Cadiz
+harbour. None too were found on board any of Nelson’s other
+prizes. As to that, also, what was done with, or became of, the
+Eagles of the five battalions serving as marines in the French
+fleet at Trafalgar, officers and men of which were taken prisoners
+by us—those of the 2nd of the Line, the 16th, 67th, 70th, and
+79th?</p>
+
+<p>At the Field of Mars all eyes were on the six hundred and
+fifty officers and men of the Naval Brigade as they marched round
+the arena to receive their Eagles. Soldiers everybody was
+familiar with. There was nothing particular about them which
+had not been seen before. But a French sailor was not often seen
+away from his port; and to Paris man-of-war’s men were things
+quite new and strange. And, besides, were they not “nos braves
+marins,” who were going to clear the way for the “Invasion
+Flotilla” and the “Army of England”; to strike the blow that
+should sweep from the path of the Emperor “ce terrible Nelson!”
+One and all gazed in wonder at the sailors: the captains in their
+long, swallow-tailed blue coatees barred with gold lace, white
+breeches, and high top-boots; the sprightly “<i lang="fr">aspirants</i>,” or
+midshipmen, in cut-away jackets and little round hats with
+turned-up brims; the showy “Marins de la Garde,” wearing
+broad-topped shakos edged with yellow braid, over which tall
+red tufts nodded, red-cuffed and yellow-braided blue jackets,
+and blue trousers striped with yellow; the other sailors of the
+fleet in massed squads, in shiny black flat-brimmed hats, blue
+jackets studded with brass buttons, red waistcoats, red, white,
+and blue striped pantaloons, wide in the leg, “a l’Anglaise,” and
+shoes with round steel buckles. Such a sight the good people
+of Paris had never witnessed before, and they gazed at it rapturously
+with all their eyes, and shouted their loudest “Vive la
+Marine!”</p>
+
+<p>There was too, in addition to the sailors, one Eagle deputation
+the strange appearance of which attracted special curiosity and
+interest that afternoon. Everybody gazed in wonder at a
+group of strapping-looking foreigners of all ages who marched
+along by themselves, got up as light infantrymen, with green
+tufted shakos and bright green uniforms. They belonged to
+one of the Emperor’s newest creations; and were the Eagle
+escort of Napoleon’s “Irish Legion.” They had come to the
+Field of Mars to receive the only Eagle that Napoleon ever
+gave to a foreign regiment in his service, with a flag designed
+specially for them, of “Irish Green,” as it was described, of
+silk, fringed with gold cord, inscribed on one side in letters
+on gold: “Napoléon, Empereur des Français, à la Legion
+Irlandaise,” and bearing on the other a golden harp, uncrowned,
+and the words “L’Indépendance d’Irlande.” Two ex-patriated
+men of good Irish family, refugees escaped from the penalty
+of treason under English law for their part in the Rising
+of ’98, seven years before, headed the deputation; a Captain
+Tennant and a Captain William Corbet. In the ranks of
+the regiment the deputation represented marched other
+Irish refugees, who had shed English blood at Wexford and
+Enniscorthy; fugitives from political justice before that who
+had had a part in the attempted raids of Hoche and Humbert;
+“Wild Geese” who had made their flight overseas after the
+fiasco of 1803; and a sprinkling of French-born Irish, some of
+whom had worn the red coat of the old Irish Brigade in the
+Royal Army of France, grandsons of the men of Fontenoy.
+Napoleon had enrolled his Irish Legion just a twelvemonth
+before, in view of a descent on Ireland from Brest simultaneously
+with the crossing of the Straits of Dover from Boulogne. At
+the request of those who first came forward to enlist, he had
+uniformed the corps in the “national” green, in place of the
+former red coat which had been the historic colour of the old
+French-Irish regiments ever since James the Second, under the
+Treaty of Limerick, carried over to France the remains of the
+army that had fought for him at the Boyne. The Eagle the Irish
+Legion received on the Field of Mars faced Wellington in Spain,
+and narrowly escaped falling into Blücher’s hands in Germany in
+1813. It was hidden away after Fontainebleau, and reappeared
+during the “Hundred Days,” finally to disappear after Waterloo.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p class="fn1"><a id="Footnote_6" href="#FNanchor_6" class="label">6</a> Pigtails, too, were missing; for the first time at a military
+display of the kind in Paris. Even the soldiers of the Revolution,
+the rank and file, had kept up the old style of clubbed-hair. The
+new <i lang="fr">régime</i>, however, had altered all that. “Le petit tondu”
+(“The little shorn one”), a camp-fire nickname for Napoleon,
+from his close-cropped head, had made every soldier cut his
+hair short; by a general order of six months before. The order,
+it may be mentioned incidentally, at first nearly raised a riot
+in the Imperial Guard, and led to a number of duels between
+“les canichons,” the “lap-dogs” or “poodles,” as the men
+who obeyed the order at the outset were sneeringly dubbed by
+comrades who refused to do so, and the others.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p class="fn1"><a id="Footnote_7" href="#FNanchor_7" class="label">7</a> Ney rode up to head the 6th Light Infantry at the outset,
+immediately after a chaffing challenge to Murat. The two,
+who had been operating together during the previous days, had
+had some difference over their methods of attack. Said Murat
+arrogantly on one occasion, after Ney had been laboriously trying
+to get into his brother-marshal’s head an elaborate scheme of
+his proposed tactics: “I don’t follow your plans. It is my
+way not to make mine till I am facing the enemy!” Ney, on
+the morning of Elchingen, got his chance to pay Murat back.
+They were together, riding close to Napoleon, with all the staff
+near by, and not far from the Danube bank. As the guns began
+to open, Ney suddenly turned and laid hold of Murat’s arm.
+Giving his colleague a rough shake, before the Emperor and
+everybody, Ney exclaimed: “Now, Prince, come on! Come
+along with me! and make your plans in the face of the enemy!”
+The astonished Murat drew himself back, whereupon Ney spurred
+up his horse and dashed forward; “galloping off to the river-bank,
+he plunged into the water up to his horse’s belly amidst a
+shower of cannon-balls and grape, to direct the mending of the
+bridge.” That done, he galloped on to head the leading column
+of attack across the bridge.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p class="fn1"><a id="Footnote_8" href="#FNanchor_8" class="label">8</a> Napoleon himself, it so chanced at the outset, heard the
+fierce cannonading from afar, and, becoming suddenly alarmed
+at what might be happening, was thrown into a fever of anxiety
+over it; into a state of violent agitation. It was on the evening
+of November 11. Napoleon just then was on his way to take up
+his quarters at the Abbey of St. Polten, whence only a few miles
+intervened between him and Vienna. As he was nearing St.
+Polten he was suddenly alarmed by “the smothered, distant
+echo of heavy firing, which was not even interrupted by night.”
+So one of the aides de camp on the Emperor’s staff, De Ségur,
+describes. “What unforeseen danger could suddenly have
+overtaken Mortier? It was almost certainly he who, going
+forward with an advanced guard of five thousand men, had
+unexpectedly come across Kutusoff with forty thousand. It was
+impossible, though, at first, to imagine the destruction of the
+marshal and his unhappy division.”</p>
+
+<p>At St. Polten they listened, and in the end feared for the worst.</p>
+
+<p>“One could only offer up prayers and await the decision of
+fate! The wide and deep Danube separated us from the marshal.
+This stream had just delivered over to the enemy one of Mortier’s
+generals, who in despair had tried to make his escape in a boat.
+Everything announced a catastrophe: the Emperor no longer
+doubted it. In his anxiety, as he drew nearer to the sound of
+the combat, while advancing from Moelkt to St. Polten, the fear
+of a reverse usurped the place of Napoleon’s former confidence of
+victory. Now, his agitation increasing with the noise of the
+firing, he despatched everybody for news: officers, aides de
+camp; every officer who happened to be near him. With his
+mind full of Mortier’s peril he suspended the progress of the
+invasion. He stopped Bernadotte and the flotilla behind at
+Moelkt. He recalled Murat, dashing on for the gates of Vienna;
+and Soult, following Murat. Not indeed until three on the next
+afternoon, the 12th of November, was Napoleon’s anxiety allayed
+by the arrival of an aide de camp from Mortier.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p class="fn1"><a id="Footnote_9" href="#FNanchor_9" class="label">9</a> It was to one of these retreating columns that the historic
+“Ice Disaster” happened. Every one knows the story, as related
+in Napoleon’s Austerlitz Bulletin, and mentioned also by
+Ségur, Marbot, and Lejeune in their memoirs, how a column
+from the Russian left wing tried to escape over the frozen surface
+of the lake of Satschan, how Napoleon turned a battery on them
+while in the act of crossing the ice and broke it, and how “thousands
+of Russians, with their horses, guns, and waggons, were
+seen slowly settling down into the depths.” The actual facts are
+recorded in the recently discovered report of the “Fischmeister”
+(or overseer) of the Carp Fishery of Satschan Lake, setting forth
+the results of draining off the water in the spring of 1806. There
+were found at the bottom, recorded the Fischmeister, twenty-eight
+cannon, one hundred and fifty dead horses, but only three
+human corpses. The column, it would appear, had been composed
+of five batteries of artillery, and when the ice was broken,
+the guns, all but the two nearest the shore, sank through and
+dragged the horses with them to the bottom; but the gunners,
+it would seem, were all able to scramble out, except the three
+unfortunates who had been either hit by French round-shot, or
+were entangled in the harness of their teams. The loss of human
+life was therefore, presumably, only three men out of the five
+hundred or so who must have been riding on, or with, the guns.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_10" href="#FNanchor_10" class="label">10</a> Incidentally, that Christmas Day morning of the Schönbrunn
+review has an interest for us in this country. Napoleon left
+the palace for the review in a vile temper, which no doubt was
+one reason why he vented his spleen so savagely on the unfortunate
+soldiers of the 4th in his speech of censure. This
+was probably the prime cause. Late on the night before, on
+Christmas Eve, a courier from Paris had arrived at the Imperial
+head-quarters, bringing the defeated Admiral Villeneuve’s
+Trafalgar despatch, his “Compte Rendu,” written while Villeneuve
+was a prisoner on his way to England, and dated from “A bord de
+la frégate Anglaise <i>Euryalus</i>—le 15me Novembre 1805.” It had
+been sent to France under a flag of truce, as an act of international
+courtesy, and the Minister of Marine forwarded it to
+Napoleon. The news of the disaster had reached the Emperor
+some five weeks before, at Znaim in Moravia, a fortnight before
+Austerlitz; first, from some Austrian officers taken prisoners
+by Augereau in the Tyrol, then from the English papers. It
+had been enough then to give him a bad night, and make him
+morose for a week. Now that he learned the story from his
+own admiral, it made him more furious than ever. The original
+despatch received by Napoleon at Schönbrunn that Christmas
+Eve exists, with its pathetic closing appeal, the pitiless response
+to which sent Admiral Villeneuve to a suicide’s grave. “Profondément
+pénétré,” it ran, as written by Villeneuve’s own hand,
+“de toute l’etendue de mon malheur et de toute la responsibilité
+que comporte un aussi grand désastre, je ne désire rien tant que
+d’être bientôt à même d’aller mettre aux pieds de S.M. ou la
+justification de ma conduite ou la victime qui doit être immolée,
+non a l’honneur du pavillon, qui, j’ose le dire, est demeuré intact,
+mais aux manes de ceaux qui auroient péri par mon imprudence,
+mon inconsidération ou l’oubli de quelqu’un de mes devoirs.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_11" href="#FNanchor_11" class="label">11</a> The spectacles which Marshal Davout wore at Auerstadt—an
+extremely primitive-looking pair of goggles in thick-rimmed
+frames—were picked up on the field, and are treasured to this
+day by the family of the present Duc d’Auerstadt.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_12" href="#FNanchor_12" class="label">12</a> Gudin’s division was officially returned as having lost 124
+officers and 3,500 men.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_13" href="#FNanchor_13" class="label">13</a> Davout’s cocked hat, with one end shot away and a bullet-hole
+through the crown, is now one of the battle relics of Napoleon’s
+wars kept at the Invalides.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_14" href="#FNanchor_14" class="label">14</a> In his instructions to Ney in regard to the trophies taken,
+Napoleon wrote this, specially with reference to a number of
+flags belonging to Prussian regiments elsewhere which had been
+temporarily stored at Magdeburg: “Les drapeaux prussiens
+pris dans l’arsenal de Magdeburg ne signifient rien: donnez
+l’ordre qu’ils soient brûlés, mais vous ferez porter en triomphe
+par votre premier division les drapeaux pris à la garnison,
+pour être remis par vous à Berlin à l’Empereur. On ne doit
+porter en triomphe que les drapeaux pris les armes à la main,
+et brûler ceux pris dans les arsenaux.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_15" href="#FNanchor_15" class="label">15</a> The <i>Moniteur</i> made this notification in addition: “The
+Emperor has ordered a series of eight pictures, sixteen feet by
+ten, each, with life-size figures, from MM. Gérard, Lethière,
+Gautherot, Guérin, Hennequin, Girodet, Meynier, and Gros.
+The pictures are intended for the galleries of the Tuileries, and
+will depict the most memorable events of the campaign in Germany.”
+They are now in the Louvre, badly “skied,” and only
+paid heed to by the batches of recruits who from time to time
+are conducted round to see them under the guidance of under-officer
+instructors as lecturers.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_16" href="#FNanchor_16" class="label">16</a> The hat that Napoleon wore at Eylau is kept in the little
+crypt beside Napoleon’s tomb in the Invalides. It is the identical
+one represented in the colossal picture of the battle by Gros,
+to be seen at the Louvre, and was given to Gros for the picture.
+At the second Funeral of Napoleon in 1840, it figured beside the
+coffin, with the Emperor’s decorations and the sword Napoleon
+wore at Austerlitz.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_17" href="#FNanchor_17" class="label">17</a> A gallant young officer of the Guard was the first man to
+break through the Russian line in front. With half a dozen
+grenadiers he made a dash forward, just as the chasseurs made
+their attack. Captain Ernest Auzoni—that was the young
+officer’s name—caught sight of a Russian flag a few paces from
+him, and, calling on the men of his company, led straight at it,
+cutting his way through. “Courage!” he shouted. “Brave
+comrades! Follow me!” Auzoni, describes Caulaincourt,
+“rushed forward sword in hand, followed by his company, and
+penetrated the compact centre of the Russian column: his
+sudden assault broke their ranks, and our grenadiers burst in
+through the passage opened to them by the brave Auzoni.”</p>
+
+<p>Napoleon, from his post near at hand, was also an eye-witness
+of the captain’s daring. On the Russians falling back
+after the routing of the column, as the Guard were re-forming
+for a fresh advance, he summoned Auzoni and the men of his
+company before him. “Captain Auzoni,” began Napoleon as
+they stood in front of him, “you well deserve the honour of
+commanding my ‘veteran’ <i lang="fr">vieux moustaches</i>; you have most
+nobly distinguished yourself. You have won an officer’s cross
+and an annuity of two thousand francs. You were made captain
+at the beginning of the campaign, and I hope you will return
+to Paris with still higher rank. A man who earns his honours
+on the field of battle stands very high in my estimation!”
+Turning then to the soldiers, Napoleon added: “I award ten
+crosses to your company!” With an enthusiastic cheer the
+company marched off to rejoin their comrades, and as Caulaincourt
+puts it, “the same men advanced to meet the enemy’s
+fire with a degree of courage and enthusiasm which is impossible
+to describe.”</p>
+
+<p>The brave young Guardsman captain, though, did not see
+Paris again. Auzoni met his fate at Eylau. He fell later in the
+day, in another charge, in which he took a second Russian flag.
+Napoleon himself discovered him, lying at the last gasp among
+the mortally wounded on the field. It was next day, as Napoleon,
+in accordance with his invariable practice, was riding over the
+scene of the battle.</p>
+
+<p>“Near a battery which had been abandoned by the enemy,”
+to use again the words of Caulaincourt, “about 150 or 200 French
+grenadiers were lying dead, surrounded by four times their
+number of Russians. They were lying weltering in a river of
+blood, amid broken gun-carriages, muskets, swords, and other
+<i lang="fr">débris</i>. They had plainly fought with the most determined
+fury, for every corpse showed numerous and horrible wounds.
+A feeble cry of ‘Vive l’Empereur!’ was heard as we rode up.
+It came from the middle of this mountain of dead, and all eyes
+were turned instantly to the spot whence the voice proceeded.
+Half concealed beneath a tattered flag lay a young officer whose
+breast was decorated with an order. He was still alive, and,
+though covered with many wounds, as we stopped by him he
+managed to raise himself so as to rest on his elbow. But his
+handsome face was overcast with the livid hue of death. He
+recognised the Emperor, and, in a feeble, faltering voice, exclaimed:
+‘God bless your Majesty! Farewell, farewell! Oh,
+my poor mother!’ He turned a look of supplication towards
+the Emperor, and with that, with the words on his lips, ‘To my
+country, to dear France—my last thoughts!’ he fell back dead.</p>
+
+<p>“Napoleon seemed riveted to the spot. ‘Brave men!’
+he exclaimed. ‘Brave Auzoni! Noble young fellow! Ah,
+this is a frightful scene! The annuity shall go to his mother:
+let the order be presented for my signature as soon as possible!’
+Then, turning to Surgeon Ivan, who accompanied him, he said:
+‘Examine poor Auzoni’s wounds and see what can be done for
+him!’ Nothing however, could be done: the brave youth was
+beyond medical aid.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_18" href="#FNanchor_18" class="label">18</a> The Old Guard was recruited from the <i lang="fr">élite</i> of the Line.
+After every battle soldiers who had been particularly prominent
+in the fighting were specially transferred to the Old Guard; a
+form of advancement much coveted among the rank and file.
+At all times there was great competition to enter the Guard,
+and every regimental colonel kept “waiting lists,” in anticipation
+of vacancies, on which names were sometimes down for years.
+Service in the Old Guard meant, in addition to the prestige of
+enrolment in so favoured a corps, life amid the gaieties and pleasures
+of Paris, with increased pay and personal privileges; and
+the highly estimated honour of a special weekly inspection by
+the Emperor himself in the Courtyard of the Carrousel, at which
+Napoleon invariably walked in and out among the ranks, talking
+to the men; and any Guardsman who had a grievance might then
+personally lay it before the Emperor. The private in the Guard
+drew seven sous a day as compared with the one sou pay of the
+private of the Line. Off duty, the private of the Guard ranked
+on an equality with a sergeant of the Line, and in army social
+circles was entitled to be addressed by the Linesmen he met as
+“Monsieur.”</p>
+
+<p>Only men of unblemished record were qualified for admission
+to the Old Guard. A colonel of a Line regiment on one occasion
+sent a man into the Guard who turned out a <i lang="fr">mauvais sujet</i>.
+Napoleon ordered the unfortunate colonel to be publicly reprimanded
+on parade, and confined to his quarters for three days;
+and further had his name and offence put in General Army
+Orders, issued for universal circulation from the War Office,
+and posted up at the head-quarters of every regiment throughout
+the service.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_19" href="#FNanchor_19" class="label">19</a> Baron Lejeune, on the Imperial staff at Wagram, who was
+clever with his pencil, was specially desired by Napoleon to
+design the costume for the Eagle-Guard, as he himself relates.
+“Anxious to confer distinction on those brave fellows who had
+taken part in the actual defence of the flag, the Eagle of their
+regiment, Napoleon conceived the idea of giving them a costume
+and equipment which should mark them out as specially honoured,
+and at the same time be suitable to the duties they had to perform.
+The Emperor therefore sent for me and asked me to make
+a sketch of a costume such as he wished to give to what he called
+his ‘Eagle-Guard,’ or those non-commissioned officers whose
+office it was to surround and defend the actual standard-bearers.
+The chief weapons of each were to be a pistol, a sword, and a
+lance, so that in the heat of the battle they would never have to
+trouble themselves about loading a gun. There was to be gold
+on their epaulettes, sword-belts, and helmets. I made a drawing
+and took it to the Emperor, and he sent it to the Minister of
+War with his own instructions on the subject.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_20" href="#FNanchor_20" class="label">20</a> Colonel Lejeune was again called in to design the decoration
+for the Order, and has recorded what Napoleon said to him.
+“‘The Order of the Golden Fleece,’ he said, ‘is typical of
+victory; my Eagles have triumphed over the Golden Fleeces
+of the King of Spain and the Emperors of Germany, so I mean
+to create for the French Empire an Imperial Order of the Three
+Golden Fleeces. The sign of this order shall be my own Eagle
+with outspread wings, holding in each of its talons one of the
+ancient Golden Fleeces it has carried off; whilst hanging from its
+beak it will proudly display the Fleece I now institute.’ He
+then took a pen and roughly marked out the size I was to make
+my drawing.... I made the drawings as desired, and he issued
+the order accordingly. The institution of the new Order was
+duly announced in the <i>Moniteur</i>; but the terms of the treaty
+of peace compelled him to suppress a distinction the chief aim
+of which had been to humiliate the conquered countries of
+Spain and Austria.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_21" href="#FNanchor_21" class="label">21</a> They were to be merely identifying tokens. “If by misfortune,”
+Napoleon went so far as to say, “fanions should fall
+into the enemy’s hands, it will be apparent from their plain
+appearance that their capture is a matter of no account.” “Une
+affaire sans conséquence” were Napoleon’s words.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_22" href="#FNanchor_22" class="label">22</a> It was during the battle at Ratisbon that Napoleon, according
+to the story, was wounded for the only time in his life,
+and had to dismount, and, in the sight of the dismayed soldiers,
+have his wound dressed by a surgeon, the news causing consternation
+through the ranks of the whole army far and wide.
+Indeed, only this year there was placed in the Army Museum at the
+Invalides, as an historic relic of the highest interest, “the fragment
+of a shell that struck Napoleon at Ratisbon on the 23rd of April,
+1809, and gave him the only wound he ever received in battle.”
+The truth is revealed in M. Combes’ journal, which, after telling
+how Napoleon carefully concealed everything which might detract
+from his reputation among his soldiers for invulnerability, enumerates
+his wounds in detail. After his death half a dozen scars
+were found on his body. There was the mark of a wound on his
+head, a hole above his left knee, either from a bayonet or a lance,
+the mark of the injury received at Ratisbon, another on one
+hand, and on the body the scars of sword cuts and slashes.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_23" href="#FNanchor_23" class="label">23</a> As to this last trophy, it was unfortunate from our point of
+view—since Fate willed that the 5th of the Line should lose its
+colours to an enemy—that one of the original Battalion Eagles
+of the corps had previously, in accordance with Napoleon’s order
+of 1808, been returned to Paris. The half-winged Eagle of the
+5th would have made a notable trophy for Chelsea Hospital.
+While heading an attack on an Austrian field-work in Masséna’s
+battle at Caldiero on the Venetian frontier in November 1805,
+the Eagle was smashed from its staff by a grape-shot and dashed
+violently to the ground, with one wing shattered. At the same
+time the battalion recoiled before the terrific fire with which its
+charge was met. The Eagle saved the honour of the corps.
+Picking its battered remains up and waving it at arm’s-length
+above his head, with a shout of “Come on, comrades! follow the
+Eagle,” one of the officers rushed with it through the <i lang="fr">mêlée</i> to
+the front and led the forlorn-hope onset that stormed the post.
+After that, the Eagle, lashed to the stump of its broken pole,
+went through the battle to the end, doing its part in rallying the
+battalion round it, to keep at bay greatly superior numbers of
+the enemy until relief arrived. There had been almost a mutiny
+in the 5th in 1808 when they were ordered to return their battle-scarred
+ensign to the Invalides, but the order was obeyed. Otherwise
+the half-winged Eagle would have been at Chelsea now.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_24" href="#FNanchor_24" class="label">24</a> The present imitation Eagle at Chelsea was specially cast in
+brass from a mould of one of other trophies; one of the Eagles
+of the 82nd being used as the model. The imitation wreath was
+made from a sketch by an old officer of the Hospital staff. The
+Eagle and wreath were specially reproduced in order that the
+Barrosa Eagle trophy should be represented among the Peninsular
+and Waterloo Eagles displayed together at the head of the
+catafalque on the occasion of the lying-in-state at Chelsea of the
+remains of the Duke of Wellington, seven months after the
+theft. The dummy is in the Chapel at Chelsea now, with a brass
+tablet beneath it notifying that it is not the original Eagle, set
+up where the Barrosa Eagle used to be, in front of the organ-loft.
+The existing staff, however, is genuine. It is the Eagle-pole that
+the thief threw away in his fright; the staff actually borne by
+the Porte-Aigle of Napoleon’s 8th of the Line under fire at
+Austerlitz and Friedland; the identical staff inclined in salute
+with the Eagle to Napoleon on the throne on the Day of the
+Eagles on the Field of Mars.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_25" href="#FNanchor_25" class="label">25</a> In a letter from an officer of the 87th, published in the London
+papers, it is stated that the regiment also captured the Eagle of
+the French 47th, but “the man who had charge of it was obliged
+to throw it away, from excessive fatigue and a wound. We had
+been under arms for thirty-two hours before the action began.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_26" href="#FNanchor_26" class="label">26</a> The successor to the 8th of the Line of the Grand Army in
+the Army of the Third Napoleon was, in its turn, no less unfortunate
+than its predecessor. The Eagle of the 8th of the Line
+of the Army of the Second Empire is now at Potsdam, one of
+the spoils of the war of 1870–1. It was carried through the
+streets of Berlin in the triumphal parade of the Prussian troops
+on their return home after the war, and after that, was deposited
+over the vault of Frederick the Great in the Church at
+Potsdam in the presence of the old Kaiser Wilhelm, Moltke,
+Von Roon, and other leaders of the victorious host. It bears
+these “battle-honours,” inscribed on its silken flag, among them
+“Talavera”:</p>
+
+<p class="in0 center">
+“<span class="smcap">Austerlitz</span><br>
+1805.<br>
+<span class="smcap">Friedland</span><br>
+1807.<br>
+<span class="smcap">Talavera</span><br>
+1809.<br>
+<span class="smcap">Anvers</span><br>
+1832.<br>
+<span class="smcap">Zaatcha</span><br>
+1849.<br>
+<span class="smcap">Solferino</span><br>
+1859.”
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_27" href="#FNanchor_27" class="label">27</a> Southey, in his <cite>History of the Peninsular War</cite>, makes this
+ugly suggestion in regard to the Eagle trophies of Salamanca:
+“It is said that more than <em>ten</em> were captured, but that there
+were men base enough to conceal them and sell them to persons
+in Salamanca who deemed it good policy, as well as a profitable
+speculation, to purchase them for the French.” It may be,
+as to that, that Marmont’s army lost more than the two Eagles
+now at Chelsea. It is of course possible that camp followers
+and Spanish peasants of the locality, wandering over the battlefield
+to strip and plunder the dead on the day after the battle,
+when Wellington and the army were miles away, picked up
+Eagles on the scene of so tremendous a disaster for the French.
+They might easily traffic in them with French agents at Salamanca,
+well aware of their value if they could be secretly restored
+to their regiments. It is, however, inconceivable that British
+soldiers could have acted as alleged and been guilty of the
+dastardly crime that Southey hints at. Four Eagle-poles, with
+screw tops and the Eagles gone, were found on the field by British
+burying-parties; but those were all, and one of the four may
+have been the pole of the Eagle of the 62nd.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_28" href="#FNanchor_28" class="label">28</a> As to Napoleon’s opinion in regard to the preservation of
+trophies so acquired, see his memo to Ney at Magdeburg, quoted
+in Chapter V., as <a href="#Footnote_14">footnote to page 141</a>.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_29" href="#FNanchor_29" class="label">29</a> Napoleon had given permission to his marshals in Spain to
+grant colonels of regiments, in certain circumstances, discretionary
+powers as to the disposal of their Eagles. Colonels were authorised,
+when their regiments were proceeding on what might be
+considered “exceptionally hazardous service,” or when operating
+in difficult country, to keep the Eagles back, and leave them in
+camp or in a fortress. That is how Wellington in 1812 came to
+find the Eagles of the 13th and 51st of the Line at Madrid.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_30" href="#FNanchor_30" class="label">30</a> On July 28, 1813, in a skirmish in the Pyrenees, the 40th
+(now the 2nd Somersetshire Regiment) surrounded and captured
+the French 32nd of the Line, rounding its First Battalion up in
+a valley and charging it with the bayonet, 24 officers and 700
+men being taken. The Eagle had been thrown into a rapid
+mountain torrent in sight of our men, during the retreat of the
+32nd, but it was impossible to prevent it, or to recover the Eagle
+afterwards.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_31" href="#FNanchor_31" class="label">31</a> Others of the Eagles had narrow escapes during the Peninsular
+War. In the fighting south of the Douro, near Grijon, on the
+day before Wellington’s passage of the river at Oporto, the
+31st Light Infantry all but lost their Eagle on being charged by
+the British 14th and 20th Light Dragoons. The 31st broke in
+confusion before the British onset, and only rallied some miles
+from the battlefield. “Our losses,” described one of the officers,
+“were very heavy, but our Eagle, which had been in extreme
+peril in the encounter, was happily saved.” Again, in the pursuit
+up the mountain side after the defeat of Girard’s Division
+at Arroyo dos Molinos, the Eagles of the 34th and 40th of the
+Line escaped capture—although both regiments were all but
+annihilated—to Marshal Soult’s expressed relief. In reporting
+the reverse to Napoleon, Soult added this by way of solatium:
+“L’honneur des armes est sauvé; les Aigles ne sont pas tombés
+au pouvoir de l’ennemi.” After Talavera, the Eagle of the
+25th of the Line was picked up on the battlefield by a party of
+the King’s German Legion—it was sent to Hanover and is now
+in Berlin; also, during the battle, the British 29th took two
+Eagle-poles in a charge, but with the Eagles unscrewed from the
+tops and removed by the Eagle-bearers at the last moment and
+carried out of the fight under their coats.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_32" href="#FNanchor_32" class="label">32</a> Elsewhere are other permanent trophies of the campaign,
+spoils of another kind. Nine hundred and twenty-nine of
+Napoleon’s cannon fell into Russian hands, mostly abandoned
+during the retreat, without attempt at defence. Of these, most
+are fittingly kept at Moscow; they number 875, and are exhibited
+in the arsenal, or mounted as trophies in the public
+squares in the Holy City. As with the flags, they are not all
+French. Those bearing the French Imperial cypher, the letter
+“N” surmounted by the Eagle and Napoleonic crown, number
+less than a half of the total. The French guns number 365; the
+bulk of the collection being made up of artillery from allied and
+vassal states: 189 Austrian cannon, 123 Prussian, 70 Italian,
+40 Neapolitan, 34 Bavarian, 22 Dutch, 12 Saxon, 8 Spanish,
+5 Polish, with 7 Westphalian, Würtemburg, and Hanoverian
+pieces. The Prussian and Austrian guns, most of them, it is
+fair to say, were not captured from the contingents serving with
+the Grand Army in Russia: they formed part of the artillery
+marching with Napoleon’s main column; they belonged to the
+French army, and were manned by French gunners, being
+spoils from the Austerlitz, Wagram, and Jena campaigns, turned
+to account to form field batteries for the French army. Innumerable
+other reminders of the fate of the Grand Army are
+preserved all over Russia: soldiers’ arms and accoutrements,
+personal belongings and decorations of French officers and men,
+fragments of uniforms, helmets, swords and lances, pistols and
+muskets; relics mostly picked up on battlefields or by the
+wayside along the route of the retreat. The muskets serve to
+illustrate incidentally, in the variety of the woods used for their
+stocks, the makeshifts to which, some time before 1812, the
+demands of Napoleon’s armaments had reduced France: the
+musket-stocks of oak, chestnut, elm, beech, maple, of even
+poplar and deal, tell a tale of exhausted supplies of the walnut
+and ash woods ordinarily used in the manufacture of firearms.</p>
+
+<p>The total of 75 Eagles and other standards is no extravagantly
+large array of trophies, remembering the overwhelming nature
+of the catastrophe to the Grand Army in Russia. Of the 600,000
+soldiers who mustered round their regimental colours at the
+crossing of the Niemen at the outset of the campaign, 125,000
+were killed in fight, and 193,048, according to the Russian official
+returns, were taken prisoners. In round numbers 250,000 died
+on the line of march during the retreat, from cold, hardships,
+and starvation, or were killed as stragglers by the Cossacks and
+peasants. The mementoes also of their grim fate exist to-day in
+Russia. The graves of most of them may be seen all along the
+railway line from Wilna to Moscow, which follows closely the route
+of Napoleon and the Grand Army, over country the same in
+appearance now as then; a dreary, wind-swept, lonesome plain,
+broken only by vast stretches of dark, monotonous birch and
+pine forests, with here and there narrow ravines, and strips of
+hilly ground, amid which wind chill and sluggish rivers. At
+intervals huge mounds, looking like embankments or ancient
+barrows of enormous size, rise over the flat expanse of plain.
+They are the graves of the French dead. It took three months
+to destroy the remains of the dead soldiers and of some 150,000
+horses which perished in the campaign. The ghastly task was
+carried out locally by the peasantry, under an urgent Government
+order, so as to prevent the outbreak of pestilence in the
+spring from the vast numbers of unburied corpses that strewed
+the track of the ill-fated host. The bodies, when the snow
+thawed, were dragged together and collected in heaps each “half
+a verst long and two fathoms high,” over 500 yards long and some
+14 feet high. At first, efforts were made to burn them, but the
+supply of firewood failed, and the stench all over the country
+was unbearable. The corpses were then hauled into shallow
+trenches alongside, and quicklime and earth heaped over them,
+making the mounds now to be seen along the railway, on either
+side of the old post-road from Wilna to Moscow, the route of
+Napoleon’s retreat. In the province of Moscow, 50,000 dead
+soldiers and 29,000 dead horses were so disposed of before the
+middle of February; in the province of Smolensk, by the end
+of the month, 72,000 dead soldiers and 52,000 horses; in the
+province of Minsk, 40,000 human corpses and 28,000 horses;
+to which, later on, when the ice had melted, 12,000 more dead
+soldiers were added, the bodies found in the Beresina; in the
+province of Wilna, also by the end of February, 73,000 dead
+soldiers, with 10,000 dead horses. There were, in addition, very
+many never accounted for: dead stragglers who had perished
+in the forests, their remains being devoured by the wolves; and
+those who were massacred—beaten to death, or buried alive,
+or burned alive—by the peasants in places away from the line
+of march. Such was the appalling loss of life that attended
+the Moscow campaign, and which the trophies represent. In the
+circumstances, in proportion, the toll is hardly a large one.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_33" href="#FNanchor_33" class="label">33</a> The wolves killed many of the stragglers as they wandered
+in search of food or shelter from the cold, away from the retreating
+columns. They followed in the track of the Grand Army to the
+last, across Germany to the Rhine. It is the fact, indeed, that
+the presence of wolves to-day in the forest lands of Central
+Europe is largely due to the tremendous incursion of ravenous
+brutes from Russia which swept in huge swarms in rear of
+Napoleon’s ill-fated host.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_34" href="#FNanchor_34" class="label">34</a> Coignet, then a lieutenant of the Old Guard, thus speaks
+of the horrors of those latter days immediately following the
+Beresina: “The cold continued to grow more intense; the
+horses in the bivouacs died of hunger and cold. Every day
+some were left where we had passed the night. The roads were
+like glass. The horses fell down, and could not get up. Our
+worn-out soldiers no longer had strength to carry their arms.
+The barrels of their guns were so cold that they stuck to their
+hands. It was twenty-eight degrees below zero. But the
+Guard gave up their knapsacks and guns only with their lives.
+In order to save our lives, we had to eat the horses that fell upon
+the ice. The soldiers opened the skin with their knives, and
+took out the entrails, which they roasted on the coals, if they
+had time to make a fire; and, if not, they ate them raw. They
+devoured the horses before they died. I also ate this food as
+long as the horses lasted. As far as Wilna we travelled by
+short stages with the Emperor. His whole staff marched along
+the sides of the road. The men of the demoralised army marched
+along like prisoners, without arms and without knapsacks.
+There was no longer any discipline or any human feeling for one
+another. Each man looked out for himself. Every sentiment
+of humanity was extinguished. No one would have reached
+out his hand to his father; and that can easily be understood.
+For he who stooped down to help his fellow would not be able to
+rise again. We had to march right on, making faces to prevent
+our noses and ears from freezing. The men became insensible
+to every human feeling. No one even murmured
+against our misfortunes. The men fell, frozen stiff, all along the
+road. If, by chance, any of them came upon a bivouac of other
+unfortunate creatures who were thawing themselves, the newcomers
+pitilessly pushed them aside, and took possession of their
+fire. The poor creatures would then lie down to die upon the
+snow. One must have seen these horrors in order to believe
+them.... But it was at Wilna that we suffered most. The
+weather was so severe that the men could no longer endure it:
+even the ravens froze.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_35" href="#FNanchor_35" class="label">35</a> One of those who presented arms before Napoleon at the
+Rheims review died, just twenty years ago, as the last French
+survivor of Trafalgar—André Manuel Cartigny. At Trafalgar
+he had been a powder-boy on board the celebrated <i>Redoutable</i>,
+from the mizen-top of which the bullet was fired which killed
+Nelson. He paraded at Rheims among the remnant of survivors
+of Napoleon’s last battalion left of the Seamen of the Guard,
+and was present a month later at the historic farewell at Fontainebleau.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_36" href="#FNanchor_36" class="label">36</a> General Dupont, an officer of the highest promise and with
+an exceptionally brilliant record, Ney’s right-hand man, and
+chief divisional leader on many battlefields, a special favourite
+also with Napoleon (“a man I loved and was rearing up to be
+a marshal,” were Napoleon’s words of him), while on the expedition
+which was to win him the bâton, at the head of 25,000
+men, let himself be surrounded and cut off; trapped among the
+gorges of the Sierra Morena by a horde of peasants backed up
+by Spanish regulars; and then, in spite of a final chance that
+offered for him to force his way through, surrendered to the
+enemy. He had committed “<i lang="fr">une chose sans exculpe; une
+lacheté insultante</i>,” declared Napoleon in savage fury on hearing
+of the surrender. Those who had had part in it, declared the
+Emperor, should “die on the scaffold”—“ils porteront sur
+l’échaffaud la peine de ce grand crime national!” He had
+Brigadier Legendre, Dupont’s Chief of the Staff, who had been
+released on parole, brought before him at Valladolid, and heaped
+on the wretched, broken man the bitterest reproaches and
+revilings; beside himself in his wrath. Not a word in reply, in
+explanation, would he listen to. Before the Imperial Guard
+on parade, and the assembled Imperial Staff, Napoleon finally
+gripped the general by the wrist and shook it passionately.
+An onlooker, another officer, describes the scene: “A nervous
+contraction of the muscles seemed to seize the Emperor. ‘What,
+General!’ he ejaculated, his voice quivering with fury. ‘Why
+did not your hand wither when it signed that infamous capitulation!’”
+Legendre was cashiered: Dupont (who had been
+ill and was wounded during the battle) was cashiered, degraded
+from the Legion of Honour, and kept under police <i lang="fr">surveillance</i> as
+long as the Empire lasted.</p>
+
+<p>What became of the other two Eagles, those of the “Garde
+de Paris” and of the Second Battalion of the 5th Light Infantry,
+and the fourteen Reserve Battalion flags that were taken at
+Bailen is unknown. They are not in Spain, although one trophy
+indirectly associated with the disaster is now at Madrid, the
+admiral’s flag of Admiral Rosily, who was at Cadiz with the
+French squadron which Dupont was marching to rescue. It is
+kept as a trophy in the Museo Naval of Madrid. Rosily had
+charge of the five French ships of the line which escaped into
+Cadiz after Trafalgar. When Spain rose against Napoleon, they
+were placed in danger from the garrison of Cadiz; being at the
+same time unable to put to sea because a British fleet blockaded
+the port. Dupont’s army was specially sent to bring away the
+4,000 soldiers and sailors on board, who were then to abandon
+the ships. Just before Dupont reached Bailen, the Spaniards
+attacked Rosily, bombarding his ships with heavy cannon, and
+mortars and a gunboat flotilla, and he had to surrender, his
+admiral’s flag being carried off by the Spaniards, ultimately to
+find its way to its present resting-place.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_37" href="#FNanchor_37" class="label">37</a> Years later these trophies were again brought to light, and
+by degrees, one at a time, or two or three together, found their
+way once more to the Hôtel, where they form part of the present
+collection. Among those now in the Invalides are six of
+Frederick the Great’s trophies annexed at Berlin by Napoleon
+in 1806; six Austrian and Bavarian flags, also of the Seven
+Years’ War period, removed by Napoleon from Vienna; an old
+German flag taken by Marshal Turenne, and in earlier times hung
+in Notre Dame; five Austrian colours of unknown origin; one
+Russian flag-trophy from Austerlitz; one Prussian standard
+from Jena; and a number of Spanish and Portuguese flags from
+the Peninsular War.</p>
+
+<p>Three British regimental flags, originally captured by Napoleon’s
+Polish lancers at Albuera, found their way back in this
+manner to the Invalides. They were taken at Albuera in the
+first part of the battle, when, under cover of mist and rain squalls,
+the French cavalry, circling round one flank, swooped down on
+the leading British brigade before its regiments could form in
+square. Of the five other British flags at present in the Invalides,
+four were taken on March 8, 1814, just three weeks before
+the burning of the trophies, and had not yet reached Paris.
+They were taken from us in very tragic circumstances—at the
+disastrous attempt to storm the fortress of Bergen-op-Zoom;
+but the details of that painful story nor the identification of the
+flags do not concern us here. One of the four flags is kept beside
+Napoleon’s tomb. The fifth flag purports to have been a British
+sloop-of-war’s red ensign and to have been captured in the
+Baltic in December 1813, in an action of which the British
+Admiralty has no record, and the French account is only a
+tradition. It again, apparently, had not reached Paris by March
+1814.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_38" href="#FNanchor_38" class="label">38</a> To the Army, Louis XVIII. was only a King imposed on
+them by their enemies; by the triumphant enemies of France,
+the European Coalition. He was merely the “<i lang="fr">protégé</i> of foreign
+bayonets,” placed over them by the English and Prussians;
+“l’émigré rentré en croupe derrière un cosaque!” To the
+soldiers he only personified defeat and disaster; and the memories
+that they gloried in had been of set purpose obliterated by him
+and his creatures. The very charter under which he had assumed
+authority was dated the 19th year of his reign, as though
+Napoleon had never been. He had proscribed their Eagle
+standards before which all Europe had trembled. By his ordinances
+he had abolished and insulted the memory of their victories.
+In addition he had disbanded and turned adrift their
+officers, and had left them to starve, without the pay that was
+their due, in wretchedness and rags.</p>
+
+<p>Fuel was added to the fires of disaffection in the ranks by the
+tales that went round of every barrack-room of personal ill-usage
+of and affronts to officers who had won the respect of all
+on campaign, and before the enemy under fire. <i lang="fr">Ci-devant</i> colonels
+and captains in long-forgotten corps of the old-time Royal Army
+were appointed at one stride Lieutenant-Generals and Major-Generals
+on the Active List, ousting and sending into unemployment
+men, whom Napoleon himself had picked out for command,
+whose names were household words to the Army. In almost
+every regiment officers who had grown grey in war-service before
+the enemy, who had won distinction on a hundred battlefields,
+were shelved; set aside for <i lang="fr">émigrés</i>, who, a quarter of a century
+before, had been boy subalterns in the army of the <i lang="fr">ancien
+régime</i>, and had not set foot in France since they fled the country
+at the outbreak of the Revolution. These were brought back
+and posted wholesale as colonels and <i lang="fr">chefs de bataillon</i> all
+through the Army, superseding and driving into poverty veterans
+who had raised themselves to their ranks and positions through
+personal merit and war-service, and had qualified step by step
+in the different grades. At a <i lang="fr">levée</i> one day, after a review before
+the Duc de Berri, a grey-headed old regimental officer stepped
+forward, according to custom, and made a request to have
+granted to him for his services the Cross of St. Louis. “What
+have you done to deserve it?” was the Prince’s reply, uttered
+in a cold and sneering tone. “I have served in the Army of
+France for twenty years, your Royal Highness!” “Twenty
+years of robbery!” was the cruel and insolent answer as the
+Duc de Berri turned his back on the veteran. The words were
+repeated everywhere among the soldiers and had the worst
+effect. Another tale that caused deep resentment throughout
+the Army was that of the treatment which Marshal Ney had
+received at Court when protesting against rudeness which had
+been shown by certain ladies of title to his wife one day at the
+Tuileries. They had openly insulted the Maréchale Ney by
+making sarcastic and contemptuous comments on her comparatively
+lowly birth. Marshal Ney personally complained to the
+King, but was coldly referred to the Court Chamberlain. He
+laid his complaint before that functionary and was personally
+rebuffed “in a harsh and insolent manner”—as the only reply
+to which the Marshal with his wife had withdrawn from Paris
+altogether. And more than one other officer of eminence, it
+was told, had in like manner been forced to cease attendance
+at Court. When the moment came for the reappearance of
+Napoleon in their midst, the Army was more than ready to receive
+their old leader with open arms and rally once more to the
+Eagles.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_39" href="#FNanchor_39" class="label">39</a> It was the action of Marshal Ney that sealed the fate of the
+Bourbon <i lang="fr">régime</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Ney had accepted the Restoration as bringing peace to exhausted
+France; he had given in his allegiance to the Bourbons.
+Angry and sick at heart as he was over the ill-treatment meted
+out to his brother officers, and the humiliations that the new
+<i lang="fr">régime</i> had inflicted on the Army, and sore over personal grievances
+of his own, he had, in spite of all, loyally held back from
+intriguing against the restored dynasty. Napoleon’s leaving
+Elba, when he first heard the news, he condemned outspokenly
+as a crime against France. Impulsive and headstrong by nature,
+he forgot his grievances, and hastened to Paris to offer his sword
+to the King. Napoleon, he said to the King at the interview
+at the Tuileries, which was immediately granted him, was a
+madman and deserved to be brought to Paris “like a bandit in
+an iron cage.” So hostile witnesses at Ney’s court-martial
+declared, though Ney himself emphatically denied using any
+words of the kind. His services were accepted gladly, for Ney
+was the most popular of all the marshals with the soldiers, and
+he was sent to lead the army against Napoleon. Besançon was
+proposed as his head-quarters, and he betook himself there.</p>
+
+<p>Almost at once, however, anxieties and doubts beset Ney.
+On taking up his command he found but few regiments available.
+He was promised reinforcements, but none arrived, and while
+he waited, no news of the rapidly altering situation reached him
+from Paris. Meanwhile the news came steadily in from all
+sides that the soldiers could not be trusted to oppose Napoleon.
+Ney was still loyal to the Bourbons, and he moved his troops
+nearer the line of advance Napoleon was taking; to Lons le
+Saulnier, midway between Besançon and Lyons. To officers
+who hinted that the soldiers would not fight if Napoleon appeared,
+Ney answered angrily: “They <em>shall</em> fight. I will take
+a musket and begin the firing myself! I will run my sword
+through the first man who hesitates!”</p>
+
+<p>But events were moving too fast: the tide of Bonapartism
+was rising visibly on all sides. Napoleon, Ney heard, was being
+received everywhere with acclamation; the soldiers were said
+to be declaring for him by thousands. Already in every garrison
+the soldiers were displaying their old Eagle cap-badges and
+tricolor cockades. “Every soldier in the Army,” relates Savary
+in his Memoirs, “had preserved his tricolor cockade and the
+Eagle-badge of his shako or cap. It was needless for any order
+to be given for their resumption; that had been done on the
+first intelligence of the Emperor’s landing in France.” Everywhere
+too, officers who had kept back and hidden the old regimental
+Eagles and tricolor standards, were bringing them out
+openly. In regiments where the Ministerial order had been
+obeyed and the Eagles sent to Paris for destruction, the soldiers
+now took out the Bourbon arms from the white flags, substituting
+a tricolor shield for the royal shield with the three fleurs-de-lis.</p>
+
+<p>Ney next began to doubt what line of conduct he ought to
+adopt. On one side was his oath of allegiance to the King. On
+the other was the prospect of a civil war which would be ruinous
+to France, which he, at the head of his army, had it in his power
+to prevent. It became borne in on him as his duty to the country
+in the circumstances to throw his influence on the side of
+his old comrades and Napoleon. His personal grievances against
+the Bourbons rankled in his mind, and self-interest urged him
+to go with the stream; but it was rather a sense of duty and
+patriotism, to avert a civil war, that impelled Ney to take the
+action that he did. His final decision was influenced by an insidiously
+worded letter from Napoleon, playing on Ney’s personal
+feelings and calling him by his old name of “the Bravest of the
+Brave.” The letter was brought to him by two secret emissaries
+on the night of March 13, who urged on the marshal that his
+soldiers were about to abandon him, and that it was impossible
+for him single-handed to hope to stem the current of national
+feeling. That and the letter turned the scale. Ney decided to
+abandon the cause of the Bourbons.</p>
+
+<p>Assembling his troops on parade next day, he publicly declared
+for Napoleon in a fiery proclamation addressed to the
+Army. “Officers, under-officers, and soldiers,” Ney began,
+reading out the proclamation from on horseback in front of
+the assembled battalions, “the cause of the Bourbons is lost
+for ever! The dynasty adopted by the French nation is about
+to reascend the throne. To the Emperor Napoleon, our
+Sovereign, alone belongs the right of reigning in our dear country.”
+The proclamation concluded with these words: “Soldiers,
+I have often led you to victory. I will now conduct you to that
+immortal phalanx which the Emperor Napoleon is leading towards
+Paris. It will arrive there within a few days, when our
+hopes and our happiness will be for ever realised. Long live
+the Emperor!”</p>
+
+<p>The declaration came as fire to a train of gunpowder. Ney
+had hardly uttered a dozen words before frantic exclamations
+and shouts burst forth; shakos and caps and helmets were raised
+and waved on muskets and swords, amid tumultuous cries of
+“Vive l’Empereur!” “Vive le Maréchal Ney!” The men
+broke their ranks and rushed headlong round Ney, catching hold
+of him and kissing his hands and feet and uniform: “those
+not near enough kissing his embarrassed aides de camp.”
+Shouted some: “We knew you would not leave us in the hands
+of the <i lang="fr">émigrés</i>!” The marshal at the close was escorted back
+to his quarters amid a crowd of excited soldiers cheering frantically.</p>
+
+<p>The scene there was very different. Arrived in his quarters,
+Ney found himself at once surrounded by a group of anxious
+and nervous staff-officers and aides de camp. Said some: “You
+should have informed us of it before, M. le Maréchal! We
+ought not to have been made witnesses of such a spectacle!”
+One or two officers protested and resigned on the spot. One
+aide de camp, indeed, a former <i lang="fr">émigré</i>, broke his sword in two
+and flung the pieces at Ney’s feet. “It is easier,” he exclaimed
+passionately, “for a man of honour to break iron than to break
+his word.”</p>
+
+<p>“You are children,” was the marshal’s answer. “It is
+necessary to do one thing or the other. What would you have
+me do? Can I stop the advancing sea with my hands? Can I
+go and hide like a coward to avoid the responsibility of events I
+cannot alter? Marshal Ney cannot take refuge in the dark!
+There is but one way to deal with the evil—to take one side and
+avert civil war. So we shall get into our hands the man who has
+returned, and prevent his committing further follies. I am not
+going over to a man, but to my country.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_40" href="#FNanchor_40" class="label">40</a> The silken standard flags attached below the Eagles were
+plainer in design than the flags of 1804 and 1808. They were of
+the ordinary pattern of the national banner, three vertical bands
+of colour, edged with golden fringe. Lettered in gold on the
+white central band of the flag was the Imperial dedication,
+worded similarly to the inscription on the older flags, and on
+the reverse the names of the battles in which the corps had taken
+part—“Austerlitz,” “Jena,” etc.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_41" href="#FNanchor_41" class="label">41</a> Napoleon left Paris for the front on the early morning of
+June 12, after spending several hours in his cabinet, issuing
+orders and making arrangements for the carrying on of the
+Government in his absence. Caulaincourt, acting for the time
+being as Foreign Minister, was with Napoleon until the last
+moment, and witnessed his departure. “The clock struck three,
+and daylight was beginning to appear. ‘Farewell, Caulaincourt!’
+said the Emperor, holding out his hand to me, ‘Farewell!
+We must conquer or die!’ With hurried steps he passed
+through the apartments, his mind being evidently fully taken up
+with melancholy thoughts. On reaching the foot of the staircase,
+he cast a lingering look round him, and then threw himself into
+his carriage and drove away.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_42" href="#FNanchor_42" class="label">42</a> Trafalgar, on the French side, it may be added by the way,
+had a distinguished representative at Waterloo in the person of
+the officer at the head of the Artillery of the Imperial Guard,
+General Drouot. He had fought against Nelson as a major of
+artillery doing duty in the French fleet. His ship was one of the
+few that escaped into Cadiz after the battle, whence he was
+recalled to join the Grand Army in the Jena campaign. Drouot
+was the officer who, during the retreat from Moscow—where he
+brought the artillery of the Guard through without losing a gun—“washed
+his face and shaved in the open air, affixing his looking-glass
+to a gun-carriage, every day, regardless of the thermometer!”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_43" href="#FNanchor_43" class="label">43</a> Napoleon—it may be of general interest to add—passed the
+whole of the day, between the review in the forenoon and late
+in the afternoon when he rode forward to witness the Guard
+start for the last charge, on the ridge of high ground near Rossomme,
+So the memoirs of the officers of his staff unanimously
+record. At no time was he near the so-called “observatory,” in
+regard to which there has recently been a controversy, based on
+the publication of a letter by the eminent surgeon, Sir Charles
+Bell, who was at Waterloo, and rendered very valuable service to
+the wounded. This is the story as told in his letter by Dr. Bell:</p>
+
+<p>“About half a mile of ascent brought us to the position of
+Bonaparte. This is the highest ground in the Pays Bas. I
+climbed up one of the pillars of the scaffolding, as I was wont
+to do after birds’ nests.... We got a ladder from the farm-court;
+it reached near the first platform. I mounted and climbed with
+some difficulty; none of the rest would venture.... The view
+was magnificent. I was only one-third up the machine, yet it
+was a giddy height. Here Bonaparte stood surveying the field.</p>
+
+<p>“This position of Bonaparte is most excellent; the machine
+had been placed by the side of the road, but he ordered it to be
+shifted. The shifting of this scaffolding shows sufficiently the
+power of confidence and the resolution of the man. It is about
+sixty feet in height. I climbed upon it about four times the
+length of my body, by exact measurement, and this was only the
+first stage. I was filled with admiration for a man of his habit
+of life who could stand perched on a height of sixty-five feet
+above everything, and contemplate, see, and manage such a
+scene.”</p>
+
+<p>Mention of the scaffold-platform is also made by Sir Walter
+Scott, who rode over the field in August 1815. Sir Walter gives
+this version, in a letter to the Duke of Buccleuch:</p>
+
+<p>“The story of his (Napoleon’s) having an observatory erected
+for him is a mistake. There is such a thing, and he repaired to
+it during the action; but it was built or erected some months
+before, for the purpose of a trigonometrical survey of the country,
+by the King of the Netherlands.”</p>
+
+<p>Thomas Kelly, an enterprising London publisher, went further.
+He had a picture of the erection drawn, and brought it out as a
+popular print in October 1815, under the title of “Bonaparte’s
+Observatory to view the Battle of Waterloo.” The print shows
+a three-tiered structure, apparently quite lately constructed,
+with three platforms, and ladders leading from one platform to
+the other. Napoleon himself is depicted on top, his spy-glass at
+his eye, and with two staff officers in attendance.</p>
+
+<p>There certainly was a structure of the kind on the field.
+Such a thing, in a dilapidated condition, is to be seen in miniature
+on the Siborne model of the battlefield at the Royal United
+Service Institution. It is made to scale, and in its essential
+features bears out Dr. Bell’s description. It stands close to the
+“wood of Callois” by the Nivelle road, rather more than a mile
+to the south of Hougoumont. It has only one platform, whence
+it would overlook the trees and give a good view of the battle.</p>
+
+<p>On the other hand, in addition to the silence of all Napoleon’s
+officers on the subject, we have this plain statement
+from Frances Lady Shelley, an intimate friend of the Duke of
+Wellington, who was in Paris during the occupation after the
+battle and was also taken over the battlefield by the Duke of
+Richmond some three months after Waterloo. It appears in her
+recently published Diary, at p. 173, and may be taken as settling
+the fate of the story of “this towering and massive perch,”
+“that wonderful scaffold,” “that huge scaffolding,” “part of
+Napoleon’s equipment at Waterloo,” as a modern historical
+writer calls it.</p>
+
+<p>This is what Lady Shelley wrote at the time:</p>
+
+<p>“Throughout the battle of Waterloo Napoleon remained
+on a mound, within cannon shot, but beyond the range of musketry
+fire. He certainly was not in the observatory after the battle
+began; nor could he have from that spot directed the movements
+of his troops. That observatory was built for topographical
+reasons by a former Governor of the Netherlands
+something like a century ago.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_44" href="#FNanchor_44" class="label">44</a> The “fanion” of the second battalion of the 45th shared
+the fate of the regimental Eagle. It fell to Private Wheeler
+of the 28th, the “Slashers,” the present 1st Battalion of the
+Gloucestershire Regiment. The 28th, on the left of Picton’s
+line, had, like the Highlanders, charged forward among the
+French, following close after the Greys. Wheeler, after a fierce
+fight with the bearer of the “fanion,” in which he was severely
+wounded, bayoneted the French sergeant and carried off the
+trophy. It disappeared in an unexplained manner some days later,
+during Wellington’s march on Paris, while being forwarded to
+the Duke’s head-quarters.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_45" href="#FNanchor_45" class="label">45</a> The news of Waterloo reached Paris just twenty-four hours
+earlier than it reached London—during the night of Tuesday,
+June 20. How it was broken to the French capital forms a
+story little less dramatic than the other story of how the news
+of Waterloo arrived in London. In Paris they had had news
+of the successful opening of the campaign. On the 18th, just
+as Napoleon was holding his last review, before Waterloo opened,
+the “triumphal battery” of the Invalides was firing a <i lang="fr">feu de joie</i>
+in honour of victory over Blücher at Ligny. On Monday and
+Tuesday, the 19th and 20th, Napoleon’s Ligny Bulletin, with
+details, was published in the <i>Moniteur</i>. When the cafés closed
+that evening, there was as yet no word of Waterloo. But at that
+same moment the news was arriving—in a private message to
+Carnot, the Minister of the Interior. What had happened
+leaked out first at his house.</p>
+
+<p>“On that evening,” describes M. Edgar Quinet, “several
+persons were assembled at the house of M. Carnot, and they
+vainly asked him for news. To evade these importunate questions,
+Carnot went to a card-table and sat down with three of
+his friends. He from whom I have this story sat opposite the
+Minister. By chance he raised his eyes and looked at Carnot;
+he saw his countenance, serious, furrowed, with tears pouring
+down it. The cards were thrown up; the players rose. ‘The
+battle is lost!’ exclaimed Carnot, who could contain himself
+no longer.” The news spread through Paris like wild-fire. It
+was not believed at first; the catastrophe was too stunning, too
+terrible. To that succeeded a gloomy stupor (une morne stupeur).</p>
+
+<p>“They had not long to wait. All was known next morning.
+The astounding news of the rout of the army in Belgium, and
+the still more astounding news of the arrival of Napoleon in
+Paris, were spread through the great city almost simultaneously,
+and stirred to the depths its restless and volatile population.
+Twice before had Napoleon suddenly returned to Paris—from
+Moscow, from Leipsic—and each time alone, without an army.
+Thus had he again presented himself.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_46" href="#FNanchor_46" class="label">46</a> The Campaign of the Hundred Days, it has been estimated,
+from first to last cost Napoleon in round numbers, in killed,
+wounded, and prisoners taken in the field:</p>
+
+<table id="t432">
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl">Ligny (Killed and wounded)</td>
+ <td class="tdr">10,000</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl">Quatre-Bras (Killed and wounded)</td>
+ <td class="tdr">4,300</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl">Waterloo (Killed and wounded)</td>
+ <td class="tdr">29,500</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl">Waterloo (Prisoners unwounded)</td>
+ <td class="tdr">7,500</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl">Wavre (Killed and wounded)</td>
+ <td class="tdr">1,800</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl">Lesser actions (Killed and wounded)</td>
+ <td class="tdr"><span class="bb">2,100</span></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdr l1">Total</td>
+ <td class="tdr"><span class="bbd">55,200</span></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>Out of the 126,000 men with whom Napoleon took the field,
+he lost some 43 per cent. of his army in the week between June
+15 and 22.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_47" href="#FNanchor_47" class="label">47</a> Five Eagles were on show in London in the autumn of
+1815, in the so-called “Waterloo Museum,” having been acquired
+somehow on the occupation of Paris. Two were described as
+the Eagles of the 5th of the Line and of the Seamen of the
+Guard, and two as National Guard Eagles—all four having
+been presented at the <i lang="fr">Champ de Mai</i>. The fifth purported to
+be the Eagle of the “Elba Guard.” None of the five had ever
+been in action.</p>
+
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_437">437</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="INDEX">INDEX</h2>
+
+<div class="index">
+<ul class="index">
+<li class="ifrst">Alexander, Czar of Russia, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_292">292</a>, <a href="#Page_318">318</a>, <a href="#Page_324">324</a>, <a href="#Page_326">326</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Aspern, Battle of, <a href="#Page_204">204–10</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Eagle buried on the battlefield, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">two Eagles lost at, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">at bay in the burning village, <a href="#Page_207">207</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Napoleon demands to see both Eagle and colonel, <a href="#Page_208">208</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Auerstadt, Battle of, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>, <a href="#Page_133">133–6</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Davout under fire at, <a href="#Page_134">134–5</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Eagles under fire at, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Napoleon and the Third Corps, <a href="#Page_136">136</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Augereau, Marshal, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_158">158</a>, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">wounded at Eylau, <a href="#Page_158">158</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">sends Marbot to save a regiment, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">in disgrace, <a href="#Page_364">364</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Austerlitz, Eagles in the battle:</li>
+<li class="isub1">Eagle of the 15th Light Infantry rescued by the Commandant, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Eagle of the 111th rallies the regiment, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Eagle of the 108th in peril, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Eagle of the 10th Light Infantry rescued, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Eagle of the 24th Light Infantry lost, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">fate of Eagle of 4th, <a href="#Page_108">108–10</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Eagle of the Chasseurs of the Guard saved by a dog, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">trophies sent to Notre Dame, <a href="#Page_120">120–121</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">trophies disappear in 1814, <a href="#Page_342">342</a></li>
+
+<li class="ifrst">Barrosa, Battle of, trophy stolen from Chelsea Hospital, <a href="#Page_227">227–8</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Colonel Vigo-Roussillon’s narrative, <a href="#Page_229">229–31</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">how the 87th advanced, <a href="#Page_229">229</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">fighting with their fists, <a href="#Page_231">231</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">French colonel and General Graham, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">French account of taking of “Eagle with Golden Wreath,” <a href="#Page_232">232–3</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">as reported in the <i>Moniteur</i>, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Napoleon refuses to replace lost Eagle, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">the “Aiglers,” <a href="#Page_235">235</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Battalion Eagles, abolished, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>, <a href="#Page_187">187–8</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Napoleon’s anger at the Amsterdam review, <a href="#Page_188">188</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">some supplied surreptitiously, <a href="#Page_188">188</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">final orders issued, <a href="#Page_189">189</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">“Battle-honours,” as first authorised by Napoleon, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">adopted in other armies, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">only selected names allowed, <a href="#Page_191">191</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">on the flag of the Old Guard, <a href="#Page_315">315</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">abolished at the Restoration, <a href="#Page_350">350</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Beauharnais, Eugène, Viceroy of Italy, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>, <a href="#Page_88">88</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Berlin, insolence of Prussian officers, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">their fate, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Napoleon’s triumphant entry, <a href="#Page_144">144–6</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">in the uniform of a French general, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">demeanour of the citizens, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">French soldiers in the streets, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">march through, of Davout’s corps, <a href="#Page_143">143–4</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">parade of captured Prussian flags in, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_438">438</span>deputation of Senate carries trophies to Paris, <a href="#Page_147">147</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bernadotte, Marshal, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_151">151</a>, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>, <a href="#Page_295">295</a>, <a href="#Page_364">364</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">surprised at Möhringen, <a href="#Page_150">150</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Berthier, Marshal, chief of the general staff of Grand Army, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>, <a href="#Page_188">188</a>, <a href="#Page_194">194</a>, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>, <a href="#Page_288">288</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_296">296</a>, <a href="#Page_322">322</a>, <a href="#Page_323">323</a>, <a href="#Page_364">364</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">on campaign with Napoleon, <a href="#Page_39">39–41</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">at an Eagle presentation, <a href="#Page_194">194</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bessières, Marshal, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_364">364</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Borodino, in the battle, <a href="#Page_269">269–72</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Eagles have several narrow escapes, <a href="#Page_270">270–2</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">soldier’s personal narrative, <a href="#Page_270">270</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Boulogne Camp, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>, <a href="#Page_61">61</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">British trophies, destroyed at the Invalides, <a href="#Page_333">333–5</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">naval flags among them, <a href="#Page_335">335</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">the trophies now there, <a href="#Page_344">344</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Brune, Marshal, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_363">363</a></li>
+
+<li class="ifrst">Caesar, Eagle of, adopted by Napoleon, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_10">10</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Cambronne, General, <a href="#Page_355">355</a>, <a href="#Page_60">60</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Campaign of 1813, fate of Eagles in: at the battles of the Katzbach, Dennewitz, Kulm, Grossbeeren, <a href="#Page_298">298</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Irish Legion saves its Eagles, <a href="#Page_294">294–5</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">heroic feat of a soldier, <a href="#Page_295">295–6</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">a short-sighted colonel, <a href="#Page_297">297</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">the Eagle of the 17th escapes, <a href="#Page_297">297–302</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">one lost in first day’s fighting at Leipsic, <a href="#Page_303">303</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Eagles buried or flung into the Elster, <a href="#Page_304">304–305</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">dashing rescue by young officer, <a href="#Page_306">306</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Eagles after the capitulation of Dresden, <a href="#Page_306">306–307</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Eagle lost in a river in Eastern France, <a href="#Page_307">307–8</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">“One against eight,” <a href="#Page_308">308</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Caulaincourt, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>, <a href="#Page_305">305</a>, <a href="#Page_322">322</a>, <a href="#Page_323">323</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_373">373</a>, <a href="#Page_373">374</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">“<i lang="fr">Champ de Mai</i>,” 1815, <a href="#Page_362">362–72</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">distribution of Eagles to the Last Army at, <a href="#Page_369">369–72</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">why so called, <a href="#Page_362">362</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">varying opinions on effect of, <a href="#Page_372">372</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Champ de Mars, presentation of Eagles on, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>, <a href="#Page_20">20–1</a>, <a href="#Page_22">22–3</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_43">43–59</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">personages who were there, <a href="#Page_28">28–9</a>, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>, <a href="#Page_35">35–42</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">taking the oath, <a href="#Page_46">46–7</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">the final contretemps, <a href="#Page_56">56–7</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Chapel Royal, Whitehall, reception of Wellington’s trophies in, <a href="#Page_226">226</a>, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>, <a href="#Page_430">430–1</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Charlemagne, Eagle and Insignia of, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_44">44</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Chasseur Eagles ordered to be withdrawn, <a href="#Page_182">182</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Chasseurs, 4th, deputation to Napoleon, <a href="#Page_31">31</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Chasseurs of the Guard, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>, <a href="#Page_416">416–20</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Chelsea Hospital, trophies, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>, <a href="#Page_227">227</a>, <a href="#Page_243">243</a>, <a href="#Page_255">255</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Barrosa trophy stolen, <a href="#Page_227">227–8</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Clark-Kennedy, Sir A.&nbsp;K., takes an Eagle at Waterloo, personal narrative, <a href="#Page_399">399</a>, <a href="#Page_401">401</a>, <a href="#Page_402">402</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_403">403</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Cock proposed as National Emblem, Napoleon objects to it, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_6">6</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">“Cou-cous,” barrack-room nickname for the Eagles, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">adventure of one at Jena, <a href="#Page_133">133</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Cüstrin, surrender of fortress, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_142">142</a></li>
+
+<li class="ifrst">Danube flotilla in Austerlitz campaign, <a href="#Page_82">82–3</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Davout, Marshal, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_103">103</a>, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_145">145</a>, <a href="#Page_166">166</a>, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>, <a href="#Page_268">268</a>, <a href="#Page_269">269</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_275">275</a>, <a href="#Page_363">363</a>, <a href="#Page_369">369</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Decoration of “Trois Toisons d’Or” proposed for Eagles, <a href="#Page_186">186</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">De Coster, Napoleon’s Waterloo guide, <a href="#Page_377">377</a>, <a href="#Page_386">386</a>, <a href="#Page_397">397</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">D’Erlon, General Drouet, at Waterloo, <a href="#Page_381">381</a>, <a href="#Page_382">382</a>, <a href="#Page_384">384</a>, <a href="#Page_388">388</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_392">392</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_439">439</span>Disbandment of the Grand Army, Eagles at, <a href="#Page_434">434–5</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Donzelot, General, at Waterloo, <a href="#Page_391">391</a>, <a href="#Page_392">392</a>, <a href="#Page_410">410</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Dragoon Eagles ordered to be withdrawn, <a href="#Page_182">182</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Dresden, surrender of, 1813, fate of the Eagles at, <a href="#Page_307">307</a>, <a href="#Page_348">348–349</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Dupont, General, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86–91</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_93">93</a>, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">surrender of Bailen, fate of, <a href="#Page_336">336</a>, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>, <a href="#Page_338">338</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Minister of War at the Restoration, harsh conduct of, <a href="#Page_349">349</a>, <a href="#Page_350">350</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Dürrenstein, combat at: Napoleon’s alarm on hearing sudden cannonade, <a href="#Page_81">81–2</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">forlorn-hope charge of the 100th and 103rd to save the Eagles, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">heroism of Marshal Mortier at, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Eagles of the 9th and 32nd taken and retaken, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">just saved at the last, <a href="#Page_93">93</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Durutte, General, at Waterloo, <a href="#Page_391">391</a>, <a href="#Page_410">410</a></li>
+
+<li class="ifrst">Eagle lost in Masséna’s retreat found in a river in Spain and now at Chelsea, <a href="#Page_259">259–60</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">of Chasseurs of the Guard at Waterloo, <a href="#Page_415">415</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">captured at Bailen recovered at Cadiz by French officer, <a href="#Page_337">337</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">“Eagle with the Golden Wreath,” taking of, at Barrosa, <a href="#Page_231">231–3</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">fate of, at Chelsea, <a href="#Page_227">227</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">origin of the Wreath, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>, <a href="#Page_6">6</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">“Eagle Guard,” institution of, after Eylau, <a href="#Page_183">183–6</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">why Napoleon created it, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">costume designed for Napoleon by Baron Lejeune, <a href="#Page_185">185</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Eagles, allowed by Napoleon to be kept back on occasions, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">ordered to be withdrawn from Spain, <a href="#Page_261">261</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">proscribed at the Restoration, <a href="#Page_246">246</a>, <a href="#Page_350">350</a>, <a href="#Page_434">434–6</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">those now at Invalides, <a href="#Page_307">307–8</a>, <a href="#Page_435">435</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">two that were taken and retaken at Waterloo, <a href="#Page_403">403–4</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">how all but two got through in the end, <a href="#Page_420">420–1</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">“Elba Guard,” Eagle of the, <a href="#Page_353">353–5</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Elchingen, Ney’s heroism at, <a href="#Page_66">66–8</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Elephant proposed as National Emblem, <a href="#Page_5">5</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Ewart, Sergeant Charles, of the Scots Greys, takes an Eagle at Waterloo, personal account, <a href="#Page_396">396</a>, <a href="#Page_397">397</a>, <a href="#Page_398">398</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Eylau Campaign, twelve Eagles lost, <a href="#Page_166">166</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Eagle of the 9th Light Infantry lost at Möhringen and found in a Russian ammunition wagon, <a href="#Page_151">151–3</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">two Eagles taken on first afternoon of Battle of Eylau, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">the 14th and 24th annihilated, and their Eagles carried off by Cossacks, <a href="#Page_155">155–63</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Marbot’s daring ride and narrow escape, <a href="#Page_158">158–63</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">10th Light Infantry and 28th also annihilated and Eagles lost, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">the 25th saves its Eagle, but loses all its officers, <a href="#Page_165">165–7</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Eagles of the 18th and 51st taken, <a href="#Page_166">166–7</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">narrow escapes of the Eagles of the 17th and 30th, <a href="#Page_168">168–9</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">four cuirassier regiments lose their Eagles, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Eagle of the Old Guard shot down, <a href="#Page_172">172–3</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">two more Eagles lost at Friedland, <a href="#Page_175">175–6</a></li>
+
+<li class="ifrst">“Fanions,” institution of, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>, <a href="#Page_190">190</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">ordered for all second and third and extra battalions, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">regulation colours of, <a href="#Page_190">190</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Napoleon’s opinion of their value, <a href="#Page_190">190</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">“First Grenadier of France,” Heart of the, narrow escapes in battle, <a href="#Page_164">164–5</a>, <a href="#Page_382">382</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Flag on the Eagle, design and details of, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>, <a href="#Page_12">12–14</a>, <a href="#Page_191">191–3</a>, <a href="#Page_371">371</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_440">440</span>Flags lost under the Republic recovered in arsenal at Innsbrück, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Marshal Ney presents on parade, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Napoleon’s special Bulletin, <a href="#Page_80">80</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Fleur-de-lis proposed as National Emblem, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_7">7</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Fontainebleau, Eagle of the Old Guard at, <a href="#Page_312">312–14</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Frederick the Great, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>, <a href="#Page_137">137</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_144">144</a>, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>, <a href="#Page_239">239</a>, <a href="#Page_292">292</a>, <a href="#Page_293">293</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_330">330</a>, <a href="#Page_332">332</a>, <a href="#Page_336">336</a>, <a href="#Page_344">344</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">his sword seized by Napoleon at Potsdam, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>, borne through the streets of Paris, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">fate at the Invalides, <a href="#Page_330">330</a>, <a href="#Page_332">332</a>, <a href="#Page_336">336</a></li>
+
+<li class="ifrst">Garcia Hernandez, action at, French square broken by the Hanoverian Dragoons, <a href="#Page_255">255–8</a>, <a href="#Page_400">400</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Gazan, General, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_232">232</a>, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>, <a href="#Page_262">262</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Golden Wreaths voted by Paris municipality for Eagles of Jena and Friedland, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>, <a href="#Page_235">235–8</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Napoleon orders the Austerlitz Eagles to be also decorated, <a href="#Page_236">236</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Gough, Major Hugh, commanding 87th at Barrosa, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>, <a href="#Page_235">235</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Graham, General, at Barrosa, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>, <a href="#Page_229">229</a>, <a href="#Page_233">233</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Grätz, combat at, special inscription, “One against ten,” placed on Eagle of the 84th, <a href="#Page_202">202–4</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Grouchy, General, <a href="#Page_363">363</a>, <a href="#Page_385">385</a>, <a href="#Page_389">389</a>, <a href="#Page_390">390</a>, <a href="#Page_410">410</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_411">411</a>, <a href="#Page_421">421</a>, <a href="#Page_422">422</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Guillemin, Porte-Aigle, of 8th of the Line, killed at Barrosa, <a href="#Page_232">232</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Günsburg, storming of the bridge of, in the Ulm Campaign, heroism of Eagle-bearer of the 59th, <a href="#Page_63">63–5</a></li>
+
+<li class="ifrst">Halle, rearguard, action at, after Jena, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>, <a href="#Page_136">136–7</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Haslach, brilliant defence by Dupont, <a href="#Page_65">65–6</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Horse Grenadiers after Waterloo, British officer’s tribute to, <a href="#Page_414">414–415</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Horse Guards Parade, display of captured Eagles on, <a href="#Page_217">217–27</a>, <a href="#Page_241">241–2</a>, <a href="#Page_429">429–31</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hussar Eagles ordered to be withdrawn, <a href="#Page_182">182</a></li>
+
+<li class="ifrst">Ice disaster at Austerlitz, <a href="#Page_114">114–15</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Invalides, on the day of the destruction of the Eagles, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Frederick the Great’s sword and Jena trophies sent to, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">destruction of trophies at, in 1814: no orders till too late, <a href="#Page_328">328–9</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">holocaust in the Court of Honour, <a href="#Page_331">331–9</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Russian officer sent to demand an account, <a href="#Page_339">339–42</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">dome gilded by order of Napoleon from Moscow, <a href="#Page_338">338</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">attempt at salvage of trophies, <a href="#Page_339">339</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Napoleonic trophies now at, <a href="#Page_344">344</a>, <a href="#Page_435">435</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Irish Legion Eagle, presented by Napoleon on the Field of Mars, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">narrow escape of coming to Chelsea, <a href="#Page_293">293</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">saved from the Prussians in 1813, <a href="#Page_294">294</a></li>
+
+<li class="ifrst">Jena Campaign, in the battle, <a href="#Page_127">127–133</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Napoleon and the Eagle of the 64th at Jena, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Eagle of the 76th at bay, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Eagle pocketed by a soldier, <a href="#Page_132">132–3</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Eagle of the 111th of the Line at Auerstadt, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Eagle of the 32nd at Halle, <a href="#Page_136">136–7</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Eagles paraded at the surrender of Magdeburg, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">in the triumphal march through Berlin, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">trophies paraded in Paris, <a href="#Page_147">147–9</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">half trophies recovered in 1814, <a href="#Page_343">343</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Jourdan, Marshal, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_363">363</a></li>
+
+<li class="ifrst">Katzbach, incident in battle at the, colonel sacrifices his life for his Eagle by mistake, <a href="#Page_296">296–7</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_441">441</span>Kazan Cathedral, St. Petersburg, Napoleonic trophies in, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>, <a href="#Page_263">263–5</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_292">292</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Kempt, General, at Waterloo, <a href="#Page_393">393</a>, <a href="#Page_407">407</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Keogh, Ensign Edward, 87th Royal Irish Fusiliers, heroic attempt to capture Eagle at Barrosa, <a href="#Page_232">232</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Kleist, General, Governor of Magdeburg, surrenders to Ney, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140–1</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">insulted by his officers, <a href="#Page_143">143</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Kulm, defeat of Vandamme at, 1813, Eagle of the 17th saved after extraordinary adventures, personal narrative, <a href="#Page_297">297–302</a></li>
+
+<li class="ifrst">Lannes, Marshal, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_131">131</a>, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>, <a href="#Page_137">137</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_332">332</a>, <a href="#Page_364">364</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Last Eagle presented to a regiment, <a href="#Page_433">433–4</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Lefebvre-Desnouettes, General, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_288">288</a>, <a href="#Page_364">364</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Legion of Honour decoration affixed to a regimental standard, <a href="#Page_186">186–7</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Leipsic, Battle of, fate of the Eagles cut off on right bank of the Elster, <a href="#Page_303">303–6</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Light Infantry Eagles ordered to be withdrawn, <a href="#Page_182">182</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Lion proposed as National Emblem of France, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>, <a href="#Page_8">8</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Lobau, Count, at Waterloo, <a href="#Page_383">383–384</a>, <a href="#Page_390">390</a>, <a href="#Page_416">416–17</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Lübeck, Blücher’s surrender at, and spoils from, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a></li>
+
+<li class="ifrst">Macdonald, Marshal, at Wagram, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>, <a href="#Page_283">283</a>, <a href="#Page_293">293</a>, <a href="#Page_294">294</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_318">318</a>, <a href="#Page_364">364</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Mack, General, in Ulm Campaign, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>, <a href="#Page_82">82</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Magdeburg, surrender of, to Marshal Ney, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139–143</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Mamelukes of the Guard, <a href="#Page_24">24–5</a>, <a href="#Page_110">110</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Marbot and the Eagle of 14th at Eylau, <a href="#Page_158">158–63</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Marcognet, General, at Waterloo, <a href="#Page_391">391</a>, <a href="#Page_393">393</a>, <a href="#Page_394">394</a>, <a href="#Page_395">395</a>, <a href="#Page_397">397</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_410">410</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Marmont, Marshal, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>, <a href="#Page_246">246</a>, <a href="#Page_255">255</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_317">317</a>, <a href="#Page_318">318</a>, <a href="#Page_319">319</a>, <a href="#Page_320">320</a>, <a href="#Page_323">323</a>, <a href="#Page_324">324</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_326">326</a>, <a href="#Page_327">327</a>, <a href="#Page_328">328</a>, <a href="#Page_364">364</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Masséna, Marshal, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_259">259</a>, <a href="#Page_364">364</a>, <a href="#Page_415">415</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">heroic defence of Aspern, <a href="#Page_206">206–10</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Masterton, Sergeant, 87th Royal Irish Fusiliers, captor of Eagle at Barrosa, <a href="#Page_232">232–3</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">“Mes braves Enfants de Paris,” Napoleon and 45th of the Line, <a href="#Page_395">395–6</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Möhringen, surprise of Bernadotte at, <a href="#Page_150">150–3</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Moncey, Marshal, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>, <a href="#Page_363">363</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Morlay, Lieutenant, Eagle-bearer of the Old Guard at Eylau, <a href="#Page_171">171</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Mortier, Marshal, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_81">81–7</a>, <a href="#Page_90">90–4</a>, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>, <a href="#Page_288">288</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_317">317–19</a>, <a href="#Page_320">320</a>, <a href="#Page_324">324</a>, <a href="#Page_326">326</a>, <a href="#Page_363">363</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Moscow Campaign, Russian trophies, spoils, and other mementoes of the retreat, <a href="#Page_263">263–266</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">fate of Eagles at Borodino, <a href="#Page_270">270–1</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Cuirassier regiment loses its Eagle and finds it again, <a href="#Page_272">272</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">surprise of Murat, at Vinkovo, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">at Wiasma, the only survivor of a regiment, <a href="#Page_276">276–7</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">after Wiasma, midnight ride of two officers, <a href="#Page_282">282</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Ney orders the Eagles to be destroyed, <a href="#Page_284">284</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">at Krasnoi, loss of the Eagle of the 18th, <a href="#Page_285">285</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">concentrated near the Imperial Guard, <a href="#Page_287">287</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">at the Beresina, Eagle broken up and buried, <a href="#Page_289">289</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">after the Beresina, Eagles buried in the snow, <a href="#Page_290">290</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">“Moustache,” dog of Chasseurs of Guard, at Austerlitz, <a href="#Page_112">112–13</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Murat, Prince, King of Naples, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_125">125</a>, <a href="#Page_128">128</a>, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_182">182</a>, <a href="#Page_274">274</a>, <a href="#Page_283">283</a>, <a href="#Page_288">288</a>, <a href="#Page_352">352</a>, <a href="#Page_364">364</a></li>
+
+<li class="ifrst"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_442">442</span>Napoleon: with Berthier on campaign, <a href="#Page_40">40–1</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">oration at Eagle presentations, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">at the surrender of Ulm, <a href="#Page_70">70–4</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">sees the rout of the 4th at Austerlitz, <a href="#Page_109">109–10</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">at Eylau, <a href="#Page_158">158–9</a>, <a href="#Page_169">169–170</a>, <a href="#Page_172">172–4</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">meeting Eagles on the march, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">numerous wounds of, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">forlorn-hope attempt to save Paris, <a href="#Page_319">319–23</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">during the battle at Waterloo, <a href="#Page_386">386–7</a>, <a href="#Page_389">389–90</a>, <a href="#Page_397">397</a>, <a href="#Page_409">409–10</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">witnesses the rout of the Guard, <a href="#Page_409">409</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">retreating in the square of the Old Guard, <a href="#Page_411">411–14</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Naval Eagle, only one now existing, <a href="#Page_46">46–50</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Ney, Marshal, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <a href="#Page_65">65–9</a>, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_75">75</a>, <a href="#Page_78">78–9</a>, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_139">139–41</a>, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>, <a href="#Page_259">259</a>, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_276">276–7</a>, <a href="#Page_281">281–6</a>, <a href="#Page_288">288</a>, <a href="#Page_291">291</a>, <a href="#Page_293">293</a>, <a href="#Page_303">303</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_318">318</a>, <a href="#Page_336">336</a>, <a href="#Page_354">354</a>, <a href="#Page_357">357–60</a>, <a href="#Page_377">377</a>, <a href="#Page_385">385</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_389">389</a>, <a href="#Page_390">390–2</a>, <a href="#Page_406">406–8</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">superintends the surrender at Ulm, <a href="#Page_70">70–1</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">defilade of garrison of Magdeburg before, <a href="#Page_140">140–1</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">heroism of, in retreat from Moscow, <a href="#Page_281">281–4</a>, <a href="#Page_286">286</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">orders his Eagles to be destroyed, <a href="#Page_284">284</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">at Waterloo, <a href="#Page_390">390</a>, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_406">406–8</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="ifrst">Officers’ guard accompanies Eagles throughout Moscow retreat, <a href="#Page_286">286–7</a>, <a href="#Page_289">289–90</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Official Eagle regulations and instructions, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>, <a href="#Page_188">188–90</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_268">268–9</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Old Guard, full-dress uniform always carried for triumphal parades, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_273">273</a>, <a href="#Page_382">382</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Eagle of, at Eylau, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>, <a href="#Page_171">171–2</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">charge of, at Eylau, <a href="#Page_170">170–1</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">how recruited and privileges, <a href="#Page_179">179–80</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Eagle of, recrosses the Niemen, <a href="#Page_291">291</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">existing Eagle of the Grenadiers, <a href="#Page_314">314–15</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">escort Napoleon from Waterloo, <a href="#Page_411">411–415</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Oudinot, Marshal, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>, <a href="#Page_287">287</a>, <a href="#Page_293">293</a>, <a href="#Page_308">308</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_318">318</a>, <a href="#Page_364">364</a></li>
+
+<li class="ifrst">Pack, General, Sir Dennis, at Waterloo, <a href="#Page_393">393</a>, <a href="#Page_407">407</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Percy, Major the Hon. Henry (11th Light Dragoons), brings Wellington’s Waterloo despatch to England, <a href="#Page_424">424–5</a>, <a href="#Page_427">427–428</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Petit, General, at Waterloo, <a href="#Page_311">311</a>, <a href="#Page_312">312</a>, <a href="#Page_313">313</a>, <a href="#Page_314">314</a>, <a href="#Page_350">350</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_412">412</a>, <a href="#Page_413">413</a>, <a href="#Page_417">417</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Picton, General Sir Thomas, at Waterloo, <a href="#Page_246">246</a>, <a href="#Page_389">389</a>, <a href="#Page_393">393</a>, <a href="#Page_394">394</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_399">399</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Pierce, Lieutenant, 66th Regiment, takes Eagle at Salamanca, <a href="#Page_253">253</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Polytechnic, school flag burned after surrender of Paris, <a href="#Page_327">327</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Pope and the Coronation, Napoleon’s first views as to presence of in Paris, <a href="#Page_3">3</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Pratt, Ensign, 30th Regiment, takes Eagle at Salamanca, <a href="#Page_254">254</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Presentation of Eagles by Napoleon in the field, <a href="#Page_194">194–6</a>, <a href="#Page_268">268–9</a>, <a href="#Page_305">305</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Prussian army, before Jena, <a href="#Page_123">123–5</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">hopeless demoralisation of after, <a href="#Page_125">125–126</a>, <a href="#Page_137">137–8</a>, <a href="#Page_142">142–3</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">fugitives from Jena cause break-up of Auerstadt troops, <a href="#Page_127">127–8</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Prussian prisoners in France, Napoleon’s orders in regard to, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_7">7</a></li>
+
+<li class="ifrst">Rapp, Colonel, of the Mamelukes, at Austerlitz, <a href="#Page_110">110–11</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Ratisbon, heroic fight in defence, <a href="#Page_199">199</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Eagle of 65th buried in cellar, <a href="#Page_197">197–201</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Reception of the Old Guard in Paris after Friedland, <a href="#Page_177">177–9</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Regimental numbers abolished by the Bourbons at Restoration, feeling among the soldiers, <a href="#Page_351">351–2</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Reille, General, at Waterloo, <a href="#Page_381">381</a>, <a href="#Page_382">382</a>, <a href="#Page_383">383</a>, <a href="#Page_384">384</a>, <a href="#Page_385">385</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_388">388</a>, <a href="#Page_410">410</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_443">443</span>Retiro, Madrid, two Eagles taken at surrender of, now at Chelsea, <a href="#Page_259">259–60</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Russian Cuirassiers of the Guard at Austerlitz, <a href="#Page_108">108–9</a></li>
+
+<li class="ifrst">St. Cyr, Marshal, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_283">283</a>, <a href="#Page_291">291</a>, <a href="#Page_302">302</a>, <a href="#Page_307">307</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_348">348</a>, <a href="#Page_364">364</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">St. Hilaire, General, at Austerlitz and Eylau, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>, <a href="#Page_163">163</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">St. Petersburg Dragoons take two Eagles at Eylau, <a href="#Page_153">153–4</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Salamanca, Battle of, <a href="#Page_243">243–5</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Wellington’s diploma victory, <a href="#Page_243">243</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Marmont carried wounded off the field, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">charge of Heavy Cavalry at, three regiments ridden down, <a href="#Page_250">250–2</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">two Eagles taken at, <a href="#Page_253">253–5</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Saving of the Eagle of the Chasseurs of the Guard at Austerlitz, <a href="#Page_418">418–20</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Schönbrunn review after Austerlitz, 4th of the Line censured by Napoleon at, <a href="#Page_116">116–20</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Serrurier, Marshal, Governor of the Invalides, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_328">328</a>, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_330">330</a>, <a href="#Page_331">331</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_363">363</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Smolensk, Eagles in the attack on, <a href="#Page_267">267–8</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">new regiment wins its Eagle at, <a href="#Page_268">268–9</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Soult, Marshal, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_99">99</a>, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_16">16</a>, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_197">197</a>, <a href="#Page_337">337</a>, <a href="#Page_363">363</a>, <a href="#Page_377">377</a>, <a href="#Page_385">385</a>, <a href="#Page_386">386</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_390">390</a>, <a href="#Page_414">414</a>, <a href="#Page_416">416</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Spandau, surrender of fortress of, to squadron of hussars, <a href="#Page_126">126</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">State procession of Napoleon to Champ de Mars for presentation of Eagles, <a href="#Page_24">24–30</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Stettin, surrender of, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_138">138</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Styles, Corporal, 1st Royal Dragoons, at Waterloo, takes charge of captured Eagle, <a href="#Page_402">402</a></li>
+
+<li class="ifrst">“Temple of Victory” for the trophies of the Grand Army, Napoleon’s proposals for the Madeleine as, <a href="#Page_175">175</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Trophies taken in the Jena Campaign, Napoleon’s disposal of, <a href="#Page_138">138–9</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_147">147–8</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Trophy Eagles at Vienna, <a href="#Page_204">204–5</a>, <a href="#Page_292">292</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Tyrol Campaign, 1805, storming of the heights before Innsbrück by Marshal Ney, Eagles signal main attack, <a href="#Page_78">78–9</a></li>
+
+<li class="ifrst">Ulm Campaign, Eagles in:</li>
+<li class="isub1">Eagle of 59th at Günsburg, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Eagle of the 6th Light Infantry heads the attack at Elchingen, <a href="#Page_67">67–8</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">paraded at the surrender of Ulm for the Austrian prisoners to pass before, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">humiliating march past of defeated Austrian army, <a href="#Page_69">69–77</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">trophies sent by Napoleon to Paris, <a href="#Page_77">77–8</a></li>
+
+<li class="ifrst">Vandamme, General, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>, <a href="#Page_297">297</a>, <a href="#Page_298">298</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_299">299</a>, <a href="#Page_300">300</a>, <a href="#Page_422">422</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Victor, Marshal, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>, <a href="#Page_287">287</a>, <a href="#Page_288">288</a>, <a href="#Page_318">318</a>, <a href="#Page_364">364</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Vigo-Roussillon, Lieut.-Col., of the 8th of the Line, at Barrosa, <a href="#Page_229">229</a>, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>, <a href="#Page_231">231</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_233">233</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Villeneuve, Admiral, after Trafalgar, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>, <a href="#Page_382">382</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Vincennes, Artillery Depôt of, Eagles sent to, for destruction at the Restoration, <a href="#Page_346">346–7</a>, <a href="#Page_434">434</a></li>
+
+<li class="ifrst">Wagram Campaign:</li>
+<li class="isub1">Eagle of the 65th hidden in a cellar at Ratisbon, wrapped in Austrian flags, unearthed, and presented to Napoleon, <a href="#Page_200">200–1</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">“One against ten,” the Eagle of the 84th, <a href="#Page_202">202–4</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Eagle of the 9th buried on the battlefield at Aspern, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Eagles of the 35th, 95th, and 106th taken, <a href="#Page_204">204–5</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Macdonald’s column at Wagram; five regiments rally round their Eagles, <a href="#Page_212">212–13</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Waterloo Campaign:</li>
+<li class="isub1">Eagles in, Napoleon’s parade of, before the battle, <a href="#Page_380">380–2</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_444">444</span>taking of Eagle of the 45th, <a href="#Page_396">396–7</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">two other Eagles stated to have been taken and recovered, <a href="#Page_398">398–9</a>, <a href="#Page_403">403–5</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">“fanion” of the 45th taken and lost while on the march, <a href="#Page_399">399</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">taking of the Eagle of the 105th, <a href="#Page_400">400–3</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">“fanion” of the 105th found at Abbotsford, <a href="#Page_403">403</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Eagle of the 1st of the Line before Hougoumont saved by colonel, <a href="#Page_405">405</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Eagles of the Guard in the last attack, <a href="#Page_406">406</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Eagles of the 8th and 95th, <a href="#Page_408">408</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Eagle of the Old Guard escorts Napoleon off the field, <a href="#Page_412">412–14</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">news of, in London, <a href="#Page_426">426–9</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">in Paris, <a href="#Page_429">429</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Wellington, mentioned, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_242">242</a>, <a href="#Page_243">243</a>, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>, <a href="#Page_246">246</a>, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_259">259</a>, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>, <a href="#Page_336">336</a>, <a href="#Page_380">380</a>, <a href="#Page_383">383</a>, <a href="#Page_384">384</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_385">385</a>, <a href="#Page_388">388</a>, <a href="#Page_389">389</a>, <a href="#Page_390">390</a>, <a href="#Page_399">399</a>, <a href="#Page_400">400</a>,
+ <a href="#Page_404">404</a>, <a href="#Page_424">424</a>, <a href="#Page_429">429</a></li>
+</ul>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="p2 center smaller"><i>Printed by Hazell, Watson &amp; Viney, Ld., London and Aylesbury.</i></p>
+
+<div class="chapter transnote">
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="Transcribers_Notes">Transcriber’s Notes</h2>
+
+<p>Punctuation, hyphenation, and spelling were made
+consistent when a predominant preference was found
+in the original book; otherwise they were not changed.</p>
+
+<p>Simple typographical errors were corrected; unbalanced
+quotation marks were remedied when the change was
+obvious, and otherwise left unbalanced.</p>
+
+<p>Illustrations in this eBook have been positioned
+between paragraphs and outside quotations. In versions
+of this eBook that support hyperlinks, the page
+references in the List of Illustrations lead to the
+corresponding illustrations.</p>
+
+<p>Footnotes, originally at the bottoms of the pages that referenced them,
+have been collected, sequentially renumbered, and placed at the end of
+the main text, just before the Index.</p>
+
+<p>Odd-page running headings appear here as Sidenotes,
+usually placed near relevant text. Some
+of the sidenotes refer to text in footnotes, and
+the footnotes in this eBook are at the end of the
+main text, not on their original pages.</p>
+
+<p>The index was not systematically checked for
+proper alphabetization or correct page references.</p>
+
+<p>The index often shortened page numbers in a
+sequence, e.g., “144, 51, 52”. In this ebook,
+those page numbers have been expanded to their
+full size, e.g., “144, 151, 152”. However, it is
+possible that some were missed.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#Page_8">Page 8</a>: “éploye” was printed that way, without an
+acute accent on the final “e”.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#Page_68">Page 68</a>: “Duc D’Elchingen” was printed as
+“Due D’Elchingen”; changed here.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#Page_387">Page 387</a>: “A present il est fini” was printed
+that way, without an acute accent over the “e”
+in “present”.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#Page_413">Page 413</a>: “presentaient” was printed that way,
+without an acute accent over the first “e”.
+</p>
+</div>
+
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75293 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>
+
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