THE MANOEUVRING FOR POSITION
With the end of the siege of Tournai
both armies were free, the one for unfettered assault,
the other to defend itself behind the lines as best
it might.
To make a frontal attack upon Villars’
lines at any point was justly thought impossible after
the past experience which Eugene and Marlborough had
of their strength. A different plan was determined
on. Mons, with its little garrison, should be
invested, and the mass of the army should, on that
extreme right of the French position, attempt to break
through the old lines of the Trouille and invade
France.
Coincidently with the first negotiations
for the capitulation of the citadel of Tournai, this
new plan was entered upon. Lord Orkney, with the
grenadiers of the army and between 2000 and 3000 mounted
men, was sent off on the march to the south-east just
as the first negotiations of Marlborough with Surville
were opened. With this mobile force Orkney attempted
to pass the Haine at St Ghislain. He all but surprised
that point at one o’clock of the dark September
night, but the French posts were just in time.
He was beaten off, and had to cross the river higher
up upon the eastern side of Mons, at Havre.
The little check was not without its
importance. It meant that the rapid forward march
of his vanguard had failed to force that extreme extension
of the French line, which was called “The Line
of the Trouille” from the name of the small
river that falls into the Haine near Mons. In
point of time which is everything in defensive
warfare the success of the defence at St
Ghislain meant that all action by the allies was retarded
for pretty well a week. Meanwhile, the weather
had turned to persistent and harassing rain, the allied
army, “toiling through a sea of mud," had
not invested Mons even upon the eastern side until
the evening of the 7th of September. On the same
day Villars took advantage of a natural feature, stronger
for purposes of defence than the line of the Trouille.
This feature was the belt of forest-land which lies
south and a little west of Mons, between that town
and Bavai. He strengthened such forces as
he had on the line of the Trouille (the little
posts which had checked the first advance upon Mons,
as I have said), concentrated the whole army just behind
and west of the forest barrier, and watching the two
gaps of that barrier, whose importance will be explained
in a moment, he lay, upon the morning of Sunday, September
the 8th, in a line which stretched from the river Haine
at Montreuil to the bridge of Athis behind the woods;
keeping watch upon his right in case he should have
to move the line down south suddenly to meet an attack.
As Villars so lay, he was in the position of a man
who may be attacked through one of two doors in a
wall. Such a man would stand between the two
doors, watching both, and ready to spring upon that
one which might be attacked, and attempt to defend
it. The wall was the wall of wood, the two doors
were the opening by Boussu and the other narrow opening
which is distinguished by the name of Aulnois, the
principal village at its mouth. It was this last
which was to prove in the event the battlefield.
All this I must make plainer and elaborate
in what follows, and close this section by a mere
statement of the manoeuvring for position.
Villars lying, as I have said, with
his right at Athis, his left on the river Haine at
Montreuil, Marlborough countered him by bringing the
main of his forces over the Trouille so that
they lay from Quevy to Quaregnon.
Eugene brought up his half, and drew
it up as an extension of the Duke of Marlborough’s
line, and by the evening of the Sunday and on the morning
of the Monday, all the troops who were at Tournai
having been meanwhile called up, the allied army lay
opposite the second or southern of the two openings
in the forest wall. Villars during the Sunday
shifted somewhat to the left or the south in the course
of the day to face the new position of his enemy.
It was evident upon that Monday morning the 9th of
September that the action, when it was forced, would
be in the second and southernmost of the two gaps.
On that same Monday morning Villars brought the whole
of his army still further south and was now right in
front of the allies and barring the gap of Aulnois.
By ten o’clock the centre of the French forces
was drawn up in front of the hamlet of Malplaquet,
by noon it had marched forward not quite a mile, stretched
from wood to wood, and awaited the onslaught.
A few ineffective cannon-shots were exchanged, but
the expected attack was not delivered. Vastly
to the advantage of the French and to the inexplicable
prejudice of the allies Marlborough and Eugene wasted
all that Monday and all the Tuesday following:
the result we shall see when we come to the battle,
for Villars used every moment of his respite to entrench
and fortify without ceasing.
With the drawing up of the French
army across the gap, however, ends the manoeuvring
for position, and under the title of “The Preliminaries
of the Battle” I will next describe the arrival
of Boufflers a moral advantage not to be
despised the terrain, the French defences,
and the full effect of the unexpected delay upon the
part of the allies.