My services while with the Legion
were of no very distinguished character, and require
no lengthened chronicle. Their great feat of arms,
the repulse of an advanced guard of Victor’s
corps, had taken place the very morning I had joined
them, and the ensuing month was passed in soft repose
upon their laurels.
For the first few days, indeed, a
multiplicity of cares beset the worthy major.
There was a despatch to be written to Beresford, another
to the Supreme Junta, a letter to Wilson, at that
time with the corps of observation to the eastward.
There were some wounded to be looked after, a speech
to be made to the conquering heroes themselves, and
lastly, a few prisoners were taken, whose fate seemed
certainly to partake of the most uncertain of war’s
proverbial chances.
The despatches gave little trouble;
with some very slight alterations, the great original,
already sent forward to Sir Arthur, served as a basis
for the rest. The wounded were forwarded to Alcantara,
with a medical staff; to whom Monsoon, at parting,
pleasantly hinted that he expected to see all the
sick at their duty by an early day, or he would be
compelled to report the doctors. The speech,
which was intended as a kind of general order, he
deferred for some favorable afternoon when he could
get up his Portuguese; and lastly, came the prisoners,
by far the most difficult of all his cares. As
for the few common soldiers taken, they gave him little
uneasiness, as Sir John has it, they were
“mortal men, and food for powder;” but
there was a staff-officer among them, aiguilletted
and epauletted. The very decorations he wore
were no common temptation. Now, the major deliberated
a long time with himself, whether the usages of modern
war might not admit of the ancient, time-honored practice
of ransom. The battle, save in glory, had been
singularly unproductive: plunder there was none;
the few ammunition-wagons and gun-carriages were worth
little or nothing; so that, save the prisoners, nothing
remained. It was late in the evening the
mellow hour of the major’s meditations when
he ventured to open his heart to me upon the matter.
“I was just thinking, Charley,
how very superior they were in olden times to us moderns,
in many matters, and nothing more than in their treatment
of prisoners. They never took them away from
their friends and country; they always ransomed them, if
they had wherewithal to pay their way. So good-natured! upon
my life it was a most excellent custom! They took
any little valuables they found about them, and then
put them up at auction. Moses and Eleazar, a
priest, we are told, took every piece of gold, and
their wrought jewels, meaning their watches,
and ear-rings. You needn’t laugh, they
all wore ear-rings, those fellows did. Now, why
shouldn’t I profit by their good example?
I have taken Agag, the King of the Amalekites, no,
but upon my life, I have got a French major, and I’d
let him go for fifty doubloons.”
It was not without much laughing,
and some eloquence, that I could persuade Monsoon
that Sir Arthur’s military notions might not
accept of even the authority of Moses; and as our
headquarters were at no great distance, the danger
of such a step as he meditated was too considerable
at such a moment.
As for ourselves, no fatiguing drills,
no harassing field-days, and no provoking inspections
interfered with the easy current of our lives.
Foraging parties there were, it was true, and some
occasional outpost duty was performed. But the
officers for both were selected with a tact that proved
the major’s appreciation of character; for while
the gay, joyous fellow that sung a jovial song and
loved his liquor was certain of being entertained
at headquarters, the less-gifted and less-congenial
spirit had the happiness of scouring the country for
forage, and presenting himself as a target to a French
rifle.
My own endeavors to fulfil my instructions
met with but little encouragement or support; and
although I labored hard at my task, I must confess
that the soil was a most ungrateful one. The cavalry
were, it is true, composed mostly of young fellows
well-appointed, and in most cases well-mounted; but
a more disorderly, careless, undisciplined set of
good-humored fellows never formed a corps in the world.
Monsoon’s opinions were felt
in every branch of the service, from the adjutant
to the drumboy, the same reckless, indolent,
plunder-loving spirit prevailed everywhere. And
although under fire they showed no lack of gallantry
or courage, the moment of danger passed, discipline
departed with it, and their only conception of benefiting
by a victory consisted in the amount of pillage that
resulted from it.
From time to time the rumors of great
events reached us. We heard that Soult, having
succeeded in re-organizing his beaten army, was, in
conjunction with Ney’s corps, returning from
the north; that the marshals were consolidating their
forces in the neighborhood of Talavera; and that King
Joseph himself, at the head of a large army, had marched
for Madrid.
Menacing as such an aspect of affairs
was, it had little disturbed the major’s equanimity;
and when our advanced posts reported daily the intelligence
that the French were in retreat, he cared little with
what object of concentrating they retired, provided
the interval between us grew gradually wider.
His speculations upon the future were singularly prophetic.
“You’ll see, Charley, what will happen;
old Cuesta will pursue them, and get thrashed.
The English will come up, and perhaps get thrashed
too; but we, God bless us! are only a small force,
partially organized and ill to depend on, we’ll
go up the mountains till all is over!” Thus did
the major’s discretion not only extend to the
avoidance of danger, but he actually disqualified
himself from even making its acquaintance.
Meanwhile our operations consisted
in making easy marches to Almarez, halting wherever
the commissariat reported a well-stocked cellar or
well-furnished hen-roost, taking the primrose path
in life, and being, in words of the major, “contented
and grateful, even amidst great perils!”