THE CAMP OF BOULOGNE
My uncle was still standing at the
castle gateway, the very picture of a usurper, with
our own old coat-of-arms of the bend argent and the
three blue martlets engraved upon the stones at either
side of him. He gave me no sign of greeting
as I mounted the large grey horse which was awaiting
me, but he looked thoughtfully at me from under his
down-drawn brows, and his jaw muscles still throbbed
with that stealthy rhythmical movement. I read
a cold and settled malice in his set yellow face and
his stern eyes. For my own part I sprang readily
enough into the saddle, for the man’s presence
had, from the first, been loathsome to me, and I was
right glad to be able to turn my back upon him.
And so, with a stern quick order from the lieutenant
and a jingle and clatter from the troopers, we were
off upon our journey. As I glanced back at the
black keep of Grosbois, and at the sinister figure
who stood looking after us from beside the gateway,
I saw from over his head a white handkerchief gleam
for an instant in a last greeting from one of the
gloomy meurtrière windows, and again a chill ran
through me as I thought of the fearless girl and of
the hands in which we were leaving her.
But sorrow clears from the mind of
youth like the tarnish of breath upon glass, and who
could carry a heavy heart upon so lightfooted a horse
and through so sweet an air? The white glimmering
road wound over the downs with the sea far upon the
left, and between lay that great salt-marsh which
had been the scene of our adventures. I could
even see, as I fancied, a dull black spot in the distance
to mark the position of that terrible cottage.
Far away the little clusters of houses showed the
positions of Etaples, Ambleterre, and the other fishing
villages, whilst I could see that the point which
had seemed last night to glow like a half-forged red-hot
sword-blade was now white as a snow-field with the
camp of a great army. Far, far away, a little
dim cloud upon the water stood for the land where
I had spent my days the pleasant, homely
land which will always rank next to my own in my affections.
And now I turned my attention from
the downs and the sea to the hussars who rode beside
me, forming, as I could perceive, a guard rather than
an escort. Save for the patrol last night, they
were the first of the famous soldiers of Napoleon
whom I had ever seen, and it was with admiration and
curiosity that I looked upon men who had won a world-wide
reputation for their discipline and their gallantry.
Their appearance was by no means gorgeous, and their
dress and equipment was much more modest than that
of the East Kent Yeomanry, which rode every Saturday
through Ashford; but the stained tunics, the worn leathers,
and the rough hardy horses gave them a very workmanlike
appearance. They were small, light, brown-faced
fellows, heavily whiskered and moustached, many of
them wearing ear-rings in their ears. It surprised
me that even the youngest and most boyish-looking
of them should be so bristling with hair, until, upon
a second look, I perceived that his whiskers were
formed of lumps of black wax stuck on to the sides
of his face. The tall young lieutenant noticed
the astonishment with which I gazed at his boyish
trooper.
‘Yes, yes,’ said he, ’they
are artificial, sure enough; but what can you expect
from a lad of seventeen? On the other hand, we
cannot spoil the appearance of the regiment upon parade
by having a girl’s cheeks in the ranks.’
‘It melts terribly in this warm
weather, lieutenant,’ said the hussar, joining
in the conversation with the freedom which was one
of the characteristics of Napoleon’s troops.
‘Well, well, Caspar, in a year
or two you will dispense with them.’
’Who knows? Perhaps he
will have dispensed with his head also by that time,’
said a corporal in front, and they all laughed together
in a manner which in England would have meant a court-martial.
This seemed to me to be one of the survivals of the
Revolution, that officer and private were left, upon
a very familiar footing, which was increased, no doubt,
by the freedom with which the Emperor would chat with
his old soldiers, and the liberties which he would
allow them to take with him. It was no uncommon
thing for a shower of chaff to come from the ranks
directed at their own commanding officers, and I am
sorry to say, also, that it was no very unusual thing
for a shower of bullets to come also. Unpopular
officers were continually assassinated by their own
men; at the battle of Montebello it is well known
that every officer, with the exception of one lieutenant
belonging to the 24th demi-brigade, was shot down
from behind. But this was a relic of the bad
times, and, as the Emperor gained more complete control,
a better feeling was established. The history
of our army at that time proved, at any rate, that
the highest efficiency could be maintained without
the flogging which was still used in the Prussian
and the English service, and it was shown, for the
first time, that great bodies of men could be induced
to act from a sense of duty and a love of country,
without hope of reward or fear of punishment.
When a French general could suffer his division to
straggle as they would over the face of the country,
with the certainty that they would concentrate upon
the day of battle, he proved that he had soldiers
who were worthy of his trust.
One thing had struck me as curious
about these hussars that they pronounced
French with the utmost difficulty. I remarked
it to the lieutenant as he rode by my side, and I
asked him from what foreign country his men were recruited,
since I could perceive that they were not Frenchmen.
‘My faith, you must not let
them hear you say so,’ said he, ’for they
would answer you as like as not by a thrust from their
sabres. We are the premier regiment of the French
cavalry, the First Hussars of Bercheny, and, though
it is true that our men are all recruited in Alsace,
and few of them can speak anything but German, they
are as good Frenchmen as Kleber or Kellermann, who
came from the same parts. Our men are all picked,
and our officers,’ he added, pulling at his
light moustache, ‘are the finest in the service.’
The swaggering vanity of the fellow
amused me, for he cocked his busby, swung the blue
dolman which hung from his shoulder, sat his horse,
and clattered his scabbard in a manner which told
of his boyish delight and pride in himself and his
regiment. As I looked at his lithe figure and
his fearless bearing, I could quite imagine that he
did himself no more than justice, while his frank
smile and his merry blue eyes assured me that he would
prove a good comrade. He had himself been taking
observations of me, for he suddenly placed his hand
upon my knee as we rode side by side.
‘I trust that the Emperor is
not displeased with you,’ said he, with a very
grave face.
‘I cannot think that he can
be so,’ I answered, ’for I have come from
England to put my services at his disposal.’
’When the report was presented
last night, and he heard of your presence in that
den of thieves, he was very anxious that you should
be brought to him. Perhaps it is that he wishes
you to be guide to us in England. No doubt you
know your way all over the island.’
The hussar’s idea of an island
seemed to be limited to the little patches which lie
off the Norman or Breton coast. I tried to explain
to him that this was a great country, not much smaller
than France.
‘Well, well,’ said he,
’we shall know all about it presently, for we
are going to conquer it. They say in the camp
that we shall probably enter London either next Wednesday
evening or else on the Thursday morning. We are
to have a week for plundering the town, and then one
army corps is to take possession of Scotland and another
of Ireland.’
His serene confidence made me smile.
’But how do you know you can do all this?’
I asked.
‘Oh!’ said he, ‘the Emperor has
arranged it.’
’But they have an army, and
they are well prepared. They are brave men and
they will fight.’
’There would be no use their
doing that, for the Emperor is going over himself,’
said he; and in the simple answer I understood for
the first time the absolute trust and confidence which
these soldiers had in their leader. Their feeling
for him was fanaticism, and its strength was religion,
and never did Mahomet nerve the arms of his believers
and strengthen them against pain and death more absolutely
than this little grey-coated idol did to those who
worshipped him. If he had chosen and
he was more than once upon the point of it to
assert that he was indeed above humanity he would
have found millions to grant his claim. You who
have heard of him as a stout gentleman in a straw hat,
as he was in his later days, may find it hard to understand
it, but if you had seen his mangled soldiers still
with their dying breath crying out to him, and turning
their livid faces towards him as he passed, you would
have realised the hold which he had over the minds
of men.
‘You have been over there?’
asked the lieutenant presently, jerking his thumb
towards the distant cloud upon the water.
‘Yes, I have spent my life there.’
’But why did you stay there
when there was such good fighting to be had in the
French service?’
’My father was driven out of
the country as an aristocrat. It was only after
his death that I could offer my sword to the Emperor.’
’You have missed a great deal,
but I have no doubt that we shall still have plenty
of fine wars. And you think that the English
will offer us battle?’
‘I have no doubt of it.’
’We feared that when they understood
that it was the Emperor in person who had come they
would throw down their arms. I have heard that
there are some fine women over there.’
‘The women are beautiful.’
He said nothing, but for some time
he squared his shoulders and puffed out his chest,
curling up the ends of his little yellow moustache.
‘But they will escape in boats,’
he muttered at last; and I could see that he had still
that picture of a little island in his imagination.
’If they could but see us they might remain.
It has been said of the Hussars of Bercheny that
they can set a whole population running, the women
towards us, the men away. We are, as you have
no doubt observed, a very fine body of men, and the
officers are the pick of the service, though the seniors
are hardly up to the same standard as the rest of
us.’
With all his self-confidence, this
officer did not seem to me to be more than my own
age, so I asked him whether he had seen any service.
His moustache bristled with indignation at my question,
and he looked me up and down with a severe eye.
’I have had the good fortune
to be present at nine battles, sir, and at more than
forty skirmishes,’ said he. ’I have
also fought a considerable number of duels, and I
can assure you that I am always ready to meet anyone even
a civilian who may wish to put me to the
proof.’
I assured him that he was very fortunate
to be so young and yet to have seen so much, upon
which his ill-temper vanished as quickly as it came,
and he explained that he had served in the Hohenlinden
campaign under Moreau, as well as in Napoleon’s
passage of the Alps, and the campaign of Marengo.
’When you have been with the
army for a little time the name of Etienne Gerard
will not be so unfamiliar to you,’ said he.
’I believe that I may claim to be the hero
of one or two little stories which the soldiers love
to tell about their camp fires. You will hear
of my duel with the six fencing masters, and you will
be told how, single-handed, I charged the Austrian
Hussars of Graz and brought their silver kettledrum
back upon the crupper of my mare. I can assure
you that it was not by accident that I was present
last night, but it was because Colonel Lasalle was
very anxious to be sure of any prisoners whom he might
make. As it turned out, however, I only had the
one poor chicken-hearted creature, whom I handed over
to the provost-marshal.’
‘And the other Toussac?’
’Ah, he seems to have been a
man of another breed. I could have asked nothing
better than to have had him at my sword-point.
But he has escaped. They caught sight of him
and fired a pistol or two, but he knew the bog too
well, and they could not follow him.’
‘And what will be done to your prisoner?’
I asked.
Lieutenant Gerard shrugged his shoulders.
‘I am very sorry for Mademoiselle
your cousin,’ said he, ’but a fine girl
should not love such a man when there are so many gallant
soldiers upon the country side. I hear that
the Emperor is weary of these endless plottings, and
that an example will be made of him.’
Whilst the young hussar and I had
been talking we had been cantering down the broad
white road, until we were now quite close to the camp,
which we could see lying in its arrangement of regiments
and brigades beneath us. Our approach lay over
the high ground, so that we could see down into this
canvas city, with its interminable lines of picketed
horses, its parks of artillery, and its swarms of soldiers.
In the centre was a clear space, with one very large
tent and a cluster of low wooden houses in the middle
of it, with the tricolour banner waving above them.
’That is the Emperor’s
quarters, and the smaller tent there is the headquarters
of General Ney, who commands this corps. You
understand that this is only one of several armies
dotted along from Dunkirk in the north to this, which
is the most southerly. The Emperor goes from
one to the other, inspecting each in its turn, but
this is the main body, and contains most of the picked
troops, so that it is we who see most of him, especially
now that the Empress and the Court have come to Pont
de Briques. He is in there at the present moment,’
he added in a hushed voice, pointing to the great
white tent in the centre.
The road into the camp ran through
a considerable plain, which was covered by bodies
of cavalry and infantry engaged upon their drill.
We had heard so much in England about Napoleon’s
troops, and their feats had appeared so extraordinary,
that my imagination had prepared me for men of very
striking appearance. As a matter of fact, the
ordinary infantry of the line, in their blue coats
and white breeches and gaiters, were quite little
fellows, and even their high brass-covered hats and
red plumes could not make them very imposing.
In spite of their size, however, they
were tough and wiry, and after their eighteen months
in camp they were trained to the highest pitch of
perfection. The ranks were full of veterans,
and all the under-officers had seen much service,
while the generals in command have never been equalled
in ability, so that it was no mean foe which lay with
its menacing eyes fixed upon the distant cliffs of
England. If Pitt had not been able to place
the first navy in the world between the two shores
the history of Europe might be very different to-day.
Lieutenant Gerard, seeing the interest
with which I gazed at the manoeuvring troops, was
good enough to satisfy my curiosity about such of
them as approached the road along which we were journeying.
’Those fellows on the black
horses with the great blue rugs upon their croups
are the Cuirassiers,’ said he. ’They
are so heavy that they cannot raise more than a trot,
so when they charge we manage that there shall be
a brigade of chasseurs or hussars behind them to follow
up the advantage.’
‘Who is the civilian who is inspecting them?’
I asked.
’That is not a civilian, but
it is General St. Cyr, who is one of those whom they
called the Spartans of the Rhine. They were of
opinion that simplicity of life and of dress were
part of a good soldier, and so they would wear no
uniform beyond a simple blue riding coat, such as you
see. St. Cyr is an excellent officer, but he
is not popular, for he seldom speaks to anyone, and
he sometimes shuts himself up for days on end in his
tent, where he plays upon his violin. I think
myself that a soldier is none the worse because he
enjoys a glass of good wine, or has a smart jacket
and a few Brandenburgs across his chest. For
my part I do both, and yet those who know me would
tell you that it has not harmed my soldiering.
You see this infantry upon the left?’
‘The men with the yellow facings?’
’Precisely. Those are
Oudinot’s famous grenadiers. And the other
grenadiers, with the red shoulder-knots and the fur
hats strapped above their knapsacks, are the Imperial
Guard, the successors of the old Consular Guard who
won Marengo for us. Eighteen hundred of them
got the cross of honour after the battle. There
is the 57th of the line, which has been named “The
Terrible,” and there is the 7th Light Infantry,
who come from the Pyrénées, and who are well known
to be the best marchers and the greatest rascals in
the army. The light cavalry in green are the
Horse Chasseurs of the Guard, sometimes called the
Guides, who are said to be the Emperor’s favourite
troops, although he makes a great mistake if he prefers
them to the Hussars of Bercheny. The other cavalry
with the green pelisses are also chasseurs,
but I cannot tell from here what regiment they are.
Their colonel handles them admirably. They are
moving to a flank in open column of half-squadrons
and then wheeling into line to charge. We could
not do it better ourselves. And now, Monsieur
de Laval, here we are at the gates of the Camp of
Boulogne, and it is my duty to take you straight to
the Emperor’s quarters.’