By Prosper Merimee
A friend of mine, a soldier, who died
in Greece of fever some years since, described to
me one day his first engagement. His story so
impressed me that I wrote it down from memory.
It was as follows:
I joined my regiment on September
4th. It was evening. I found the colonel
in the camp. He received me rather bruskly, but
having read the general’s introductory letter
he changed his manner and addressed me courteously.
By him I was presented to my captain,
who had just come in from reconnoitring. This
captain, whose acquaintance I had scarcely time to
make, was a tall, dark man, of harsh, repelling aspect.
He had been a private soldier, and had won his cross
and épaulettes upon the field of battle.
His voice, which was hoarse and feeble, contrasted
strangely with his gigantic stature. This voice
of his he owed, as I was told, to a bullet which had
passed completely through his body at the battle of
Jena.
On learning that I had just come from
college at Fontainebleau, he remarked, with a wry
face: “My lieutenant died last night.”
I understood what he implied, “It
is for you to take his place, and you are good for
nothing.”
A sharp retort was on my tongue, but I restrained
it.
The moon was rising behind the redoubt
of Cheverino, which stood two cannon-shots from our
encampment. The moon was large and red, as is
common at her rising; but that night she seemed to
me of extraordinary size. For an instant the
redoubt stood out coal-black against the glittering
disk. It resembled the cone of a volcano at the
moment of eruption.
An old soldier, at whose side I found
myself, observed the color of the moon.
“She is very red,” he
said. “It is a sign that it will cost us
dear to win this wonderful redoubt.”
I was always superstitious, and this
piece of augury, coming at that moment, troubled me.
I sought my couch, but could not sleep. I rose,
and walked about a while, watching the long line of
fires upon the heights beyond the village of Cheverino.
When the sharp night air had thoroughly
refreshed my blood I went back to the fire. I
rolled my mantle round me, and I shut my eyes, trusting
not to open them till daybreak. But sleep refused
to visit me. Insensibly my thoughts grew doleful.
I told myself that I had not a friend among the hundred
thousand men who filled that plain. If I were
wounded, I should be placed in hospital, in the hands
of ignorant and careless surgeons. I called to
mind what I had heard of operations. My heart
beat violently, and I mechanically arranged, as a kind
of rude cuirass, my handkerchief and pocketbook upon
my breast. Then, overpowered with weariness,
my eyes closed drowsily, only to open the next instant
with a start at some new thought of horror.
Fatigue, however, at last gained the
day. When the drums beat at daybreak I was fast
asleep. We were drawn up in ranks. The roll
was called, then we stacked our arms, and everything
announced that we should pass another uneventful day.
But about three o’clock an aide-de-camp
arrived with orders. We were commanded to take
arms.
Our sharpshooters marched into the
plain, We followed slowly, and in twenty minutes we
saw the outposts of the Russians falling back and
entering the redoubt. We had a battery of artillery
on our right, another on our left, but both some distance
in advance of us. They opened a sharp fire upon
the enemy, who returned it briskly, and the redoubt
of Cheverino was soon concealed by volumes of thick
smoke. Our regiment was almost covered from the
Russians’ fire by a piece of rising ground.
Their bullets (which besides were rarely aimed at us,
for they preferred to fire upon our cannoneers) whistled
over us, or at worst knocked up a shower of earth
and stones.
Just as the order to advance was given,
the captain looked at me intently. I stroked
my sprouting mustache with an air of unconcern; in
truth, I was not frightened, and only dreaded lest
I might be thought so. These passing bullets
aided my heroic coolness, while my self-respect assured
me that the danger was a real one, since I was veritably
under fire. I was delighted at my self-possession,
and already looked forward to the pleasure of describing
in Parisian drawing-rooms the capture of the redoubt
of Cheverino.
The colonel passed before our company.
“Well,” he said to me, “you are
going to see warm work in your first action.”
I gave a martial smile, and brushed
my cuff, on which a bullet, which had struck the earth
at thirty paces distant, had cast a little dust.
It appeared that the Russians had
discovered that their bullets did no harm, for they
replaced them by a fire of shells, which began to reach
us in the hollows where we lay. One of these,
in its explosion, knocked off my shako and killed
a man beside me.
“I congratulate you,”
said the captain, as I picked up my shako. “You
are safe now for the day.”
I knew the military superstition which
believes that the axiom “non bis in idem”
is as applicable to the battlefield as to the courts
of justice, I replaced my shako with a swagger.
“That’s a rude way to
make one raise one’s hat,” I said, as lightly
as I could. And this wretched piece of wit was,
in the circumstances, received as excellent.
“I compliment you,” said
the captain. “You will command a company
to-night; for I shall not survive the day. Every
time I have been wounded the officer below me has
been touched by some spent ball; and,” he added,
in a lower tone, “all the names began with P.”
I laughed skeptically; most people
would have done the same; but most would also have
been struck, as I was, by these prophetic words.
But, conscript though I was, I felt that I could trust
my thoughts to no one, and that it was my duty to
seem always calm and bold.
At the end of half an hour the Russian
fire had sensibly diminished. We left our cover
to advance on the redoubt.
Our regiment was composed of three
battalions. The second had to take the enemy
in flank; the two others formed a storming party.
I was in the third.
On issuing from behind the cover,
we were received by several volleys, which did but
little harm.
The whistling of the balls amazed
me. “But after all,” I thought, “a
battle is less terrible than I expected.”
We advanced at a smart run, our musketeers in front.
All at once the Russians uttered three
hurrahs three distinct hurrahs and
then stood silent, without firing.
“I don’t like that silence,”
said the captain. “It bodes no good.”
I began to think our people were too
eager. I could not help comparing, mentally,
their shouts and clamor with the striking silence of
the enemy.
We quickly reached the foot of the
redoubt. The palisades were broken and the earthworks
shattered by our balls. With a roar of “Vive
l’Empereur,” our soldiers rushed across
the ruins.
I raised my eyes. Never shall
I forget the sight which met my view. The smoke
had mostly lifted, and remained suspended, like a canopy,
at twenty feet above the redoubt. Through a bluish
mist could be perceived, behind the shattered parapet,
the Russian Grenadiers, with rifles lifted, as motionless
as statues. I can see them still, the
left eye of every soldier glaring at us, the right
hidden by his lifted gun. In an embrasure at
a few feet distant, a man with a fuse stood by a cannon.
I shuddered. I believed that my last hour had
come.
“Now for the dance to open,”
cried the captain. These were the last words
I heard him speak.
There came from the redoubts a roll
of drums. I saw the muzzles lowered. I shut
my eyes; I heard a most appalling crash of sound, to
which succeeded groans and cries. Then I looked
up, amazed to find myself still living. The redoubt
was once more wrapped in smoke. I was surrounded
by the dead and wounded. The captain was extended
at my feet; a ball had carried off his head, and I
was covered with his blood. Of all the company,
only six men, except myself, remained erect.
This carnage was succeeded by a kind
of stupor. The next instant the colonel, with
his hat on his sword’s point, had scaled the
parapet with a cry of “Vive l’Empereur.”
The survivors followed him. All that succeeded
is to me a kind of dream. We rushed into the redoubt,
I know not how, we fought hand to hand in the midst
of smoke so thick that no man could perceive his enemy.
I found my sabre dripping blood; I heard a shout of
“Victory”; and, in the clearing smoke,
I saw the earthworks piled with dead and dying.
The cannons were covered with a heap of corpses.
About two hundred men in the French uniform were standing,
without order, loading their muskets or wiping their
bayonets. Eleven Russian prisoners were with
them. The colonel was lying, bathed in blood,
upon a broken cannon. A group of soldiers crowded
round him. I approached them.
“Who is the oldest captain?” he was asking
of a sergeant.
The sergeant shrugged his shoulders most expressively.
“Who is the oldest lieutenant?”
“This gentleman, who came last night,”
replied the sergeant calmly.
The colonel smiled bitterly.
“Come, sir,” he said to
me, “you are now in chief command. Fortify
the gorge of the redoubt at once with wagons, for
the enemy is out in force. But General C--
is coming to support you.”
“Colonel,” I asked him, “are you
badly wounded?”
“Pish, my dear fellow. The redoubt is taken.”