CHAPTER I
WHAT IS MET WITH ON THE WAY FROM NIVELLES-
Last year (1861), on a beautiful May
morning, a traveller, the person who is telling this
story, was coming from Nivelles, and directing his
course towards La Hulpe. He was on foot.
He was pursuing a broad paved road, which undulated
between two rows of trees, over the hills which succeed
each other, raise the road and let it fall again, and
produce something in the nature of enormous waves.
He had passed Lillois and Bois-Seigneur-Isaac.
In the west he perceived the slate-roofed tower of
Braine-l’Alleud, which has the form of a reversed
vase. He had just left behind a wood upon an eminence;
and at the angle of the cross-road, by the side of
a sort of mouldy gibbet bearing the inscription Ancient
Barrier N, a public house, bearing on its front
this sign: At the Four Winds (Aux Quatre Vents).
Echabeau, Private Cafe.
A quarter of a league further on,
he arrived at the bottom of a little valley, where
there is water which passes beneath an arch made through
the embankment of the road. The clump of sparsely
planted but very green trees, which fills the valley
on one side of the road, is dispersed over the meadows
on the other, and disappears gracefully and as in order
in the direction of Braine-l’Alleud.
On the right, close to the road, was
an inn, with a four-wheeled cart at the door, a large
bundle of hop-poles, a plough, a heap of dried brushwood
near a flourishing hedge, lime smoking in a square
hole, and a ladder suspended along an old penthouse
with straw partitions. A young girl was weeding
in a field, where a huge yellow poster, probably of
some outside spectacle, such as a parish festival,
was fluttering in the wind. At one corner of
the inn, beside a pool in which a flotilla of ducks
was navigating, a badly paved path plunged into the
bushes. The wayfarer struck into this.
After traversing a hundred paces,
skirting a wall of the fifteenth century, surmounted
by a pointed gable, with bricks set in contrast, he
found himself before a large door of arched stone,
with a rectilinear impost, in the sombre style of
Louis XIV., flanked by two flat medallions. A
severe façade rose above this door; a wall, perpendicular
to the façade, almost touched the door, and flanked
it with an abrupt right angle. In the meadow
before the door lay three harrows, through which,
in disorder, grew all the flowers of May. The
door was closed. The two decrepit leaves which
barred it were ornamented with an old rusty knocker.
The sun was charming; the branches
had that soft shivering of May, which seems to proceed
rather from the nests than from the wind. A brave
little bird, probably a lover, was carolling in a distracted
manner in a large tree.
The wayfarer bent over and examined
a rather large circular excavation, resembling the
hollow of a sphere, in the stone on the left, at the
foot of the pier of the door.
At this moment the leaves of the door
parted, and a peasant woman emerged.
She saw the wayfarer, and perceived
what he was looking at.
“It was a French cannon-ball
which made that,” she said to him. And she
added:
“That which you see there, higher
up in the door, near a nail, is the hole of a big
iron bullet as large as an egg. The bullet did
not pierce the wood.”
“What is the name of this place?” inquired
the wayfarer.
“Hougomont,” said the peasant woman.
The traveller straightened himself
up. He walked on a few paces, and went off to
look over the tops of the hedges. On the horizon
through the trees, he perceived a sort of little elevation,
and on this elevation something which at that distance
resembled a lion.
He was on the battle-field of Waterloo.
Chapter II
Hougomont
Hougomont, this was a funereal
spot, the beginning of the obstacle, the first resistance,
which that great wood-cutter of Europe, called Napoleon,
encountered at Waterloo, the first knot under the blows
of his axe.
It was a chateau; it is no longer
anything but a farm. For the antiquary, Hougomont
is Hugomons. This manor was built by Hugo, Sire
of Somerel, the same who endowed the sixth chaplaincy
of the Abbey of Villiers.
The traveller pushed open the door,
elbowed an ancient calash under the porch, and entered
the courtyard.
The first thing which struck him in
this paddock was a door of the sixteenth century,
which here simulates an arcade, everything else having
fallen prostrate around it. A monumental aspect
often has its birth in ruin. In a wall near the
arcade opens another arched door, of the time of Henry
IV., permitting a glimpse of the trees of an orchard;
beside this door, a manure-hole, some pickaxes, some
shovels, some carts, an old well, with its flagstone
and its iron reel, a chicken jumping, and a turkey
spreading its tail, a chapel surmounted by a small
bell-tower, a blossoming pear-tree trained in espalier
against the wall of the chapel behold the
court, the conquest of which was one of Napoleon’s
dreams. This corner of earth, could he but have
seized it, would, perhaps, have given him the world
likewise. Chickens are scattering its dust abroad
with their beaks. A growl is audible; it is a
huge dog, who shows his teeth and replaces the English.
The English behaved admirably there.
Cooke’s four companies of guards there held
out for seven hours against the fury of an army.
Hougomont viewed on the map, as a
geometrical plan, comprising buildings and enclosures,
presents a sort of irregular rectangle, one angle of
which is nicked out. It is this angle which contains
the southern door, guarded by this wall, which commands
it only a gun’s length away. Hougomont
has two doors, the southern door, that of
the chateau; and the northern door, belonging to the
farm. Napoleon sent his brother Jerome against
Hougomont; the divisions of Foy, Guilleminot, and Bachelu
hurled themselves against it; nearly the entire corps
of Reille was employed against it, and miscarried;
Kellermann’s balls were exhausted on this heroic
section of wall. Bauduin’s brigade was not
strong enough to force Hougomont on the north, and
the brigade of Soye could not do more than effect
the beginning of a breach on the south, but without
taking it.
The farm buildings border the courtyard
on the south. A bit of the north door, broken
by the French, hangs suspended to the wall. It
consists of four planks nailed to two cross-beams,
on which the scars of the attack are visible.
The northern door, which was beaten
in by the French, and which has had a piece applied
to it to replace the panel suspended on the wall, stands
half-open at the bottom of the paddock; it is cut squarely
in the wall, built of stone below, of brick above
which closes in the courtyard on the north. It
is a simple door for carts, such as exist in all farms,
with the two large leaves made of rustic planks:
beyond lie the meadows. The dispute over this
entrance was furious. For a long time, all sorts
of imprints of bloody hands were visible on the door-posts.
It was there that Bauduin was killed.
The storm of the combat still lingers
in this courtyard; its horror is visible there; the
confusion of the fray was petrified there; it lives
and it dies there; it was only yesterday. The
walls are in the death agony, the stones fall; the
breaches cry aloud; the holes are wounds; the drooping,
quivering trees seem to be making an effort to flee.
This courtyard was more built up in
1815 than it is to-day. Buildings which have
since been pulled down then formed redans and
angles.
The English barricaded themselves
there; the French made their way in, but could not
stand their ground. Beside the chapel, one wing
of the chateau, the only ruin now remaining of the
manor of Hougomont, rises in a crumbling state, disembowelled,
one might say. The chateau served for a dungeon,
the chapel for a block-house. There men exterminated
each other. The French, fired on from every point, from
behind the walls, from the summits of the garrets,
from the depths of the cellars, through all the casements,
through all the air-holes, through every crack in the
stones, fetched fagots and set fire
to walls and men; the reply to the grape-shot was
a conflagration.
In the ruined wing, through windows
garnished with bars of iron, the dismantled chambers
of the main building of brick are visible; the English
guards were in ambush in these rooms; the spiral of
the staircase, cracked from the ground floor to the
very roof, appears like the inside of a broken shell.
The staircase has two stories; the English, besieged
on the staircase, and massed on its upper steps, had
cut off the lower steps. These consisted of large
slabs of blue stone, which form a heap among the nettles.
Half a score of steps still cling to the wall; on
the first is cut the figure of a trident. These
inaccessible steps are solid in their niches.
All the rest resembles a jaw which has been denuded
of its teeth. There are two old trees there:
one is dead; the other is wounded at its base, and
is clothed with verdure in April. Since 1815
it has taken to growing through the staircase.
A massacre took place in the chapel.
The interior, which has recovered its calm, is singular.
The mass has not been said there since the carnage.
Nevertheless, the altar has been left there an
altar of unpolished wood, placed against a background
of roughhewn stone. Four whitewashed walls, a
door opposite the altar, two small arched windows;
over the door a large wooden crucifix, below the crucifix
a square air-hole stopped up with a bundle of hay;
on the ground, in one corner, an old window-frame
with the glass all broken to pieces such
is the chapel. Near the altar there is nailed
up a wooden statue of Saint Anne, of the fifteenth
century; the head of the infant Jesus has been carried
off by a large ball. The French, who were masters
of the chapel for a moment, and were then dislodged,
set fire to it. The flames filled this building;
it was a perfect furnace; the door was burned, the
floor was burned, the wooden Christ was not burned.
The fire preyed upon his feet, of which only the blackened
stumps are now to be seen; then it stopped, a
miracle, according to the assertion of the people of
the neighborhood. The infant Jesus, decapitated,
was less fortunate than the Christ.
The walls are covered with inscriptions.
Near the feet of Christ this name is to be read:
Henquinez. Then these others: Conde de Rio
Maior Marques y Marquesa de Almagro (Habana).
There are French names with exclamation points, a
sign of wrath. The wall was freshly whitewashed
in 1849. The nations insulted each other there.
It was at the door of this chapel
that the corpse was picked up which held an axe in
its hand; this corpse was Sub-Lieutenant Legros.
On emerging from the chapel, a well
is visible on the left. There are two in this
courtyard. One inquires, Why is there no bucket
and pulley to this? It is because water is no
longer drawn there. Why is water not drawn there?
Because it is full of skeletons.
The last person who drew water from
the well was named Guillaume van Kylsom. He was
a peasant who lived at Hougomont, and was gardener
there. On the 18th of June, 1815, his family
fled and concealed themselves in the woods.
The forest surrounding the Abbey of
Villiers sheltered these unfortunate people who had
been scattered abroad, for many days and nights.
There are at this day certain traces recognizable,
such as old boles of burned trees, which mark the
site of these poor bivouacs trembling in the depths
of the thickets.
Guillaume van Kylsom remained at Hougomont,
“to guard the chateau,” and concealed
himself in the cellar. The English discovered
him there. They tore him from his hiding-place,
and the combatants forced this frightened man to serve
them, by administering blows with the flats of their
swords. They were thirsty; this Guillaume brought
them water. It was from this well that he drew
it. Many drank there their last draught.
This well where drank so many of the dead was destined
to die itself.
After the engagement, they were in
haste to bury the dead bodies. Death has a fashion
of harassing victory, and she causes the pest to follow
glory. The typhus is a concomitant of triumph.
This well was deep, and it was turned into a sepulchre.
Three hundred dead bodies were cast into it.
With too much haste perhaps. Were they all dead?
Legend says they were not. It seems that on the
night succeeding the interment, feeble voices were
heard calling from the well.
This well is isolated in the middle
of the courtyard. Three walls, part stone, part
brick, and simulating a small, square tower, and folded
like the leaves of a screen, surround it on all sides.
The fourth side is open. It is there that the
water was drawn. The wall at the bottom has a
sort of shapeless loophole, possibly the hole made
by a shell. This little tower had a platform,
of which only the beams remain. The iron supports
of the well on the right form a cross. On leaning
over, the eye is lost in a deep cylinder of brick
which is filled with a heaped-up mass of shadows.
The base of the walls all about the well is concealed
in a growth of nettles.
This well has not in front of it that
large blue slab which forms the table for all wells
in Belgium. The slab has here been replaced by
a cross-beam, against which lean five or six shapeless
fragments of knotty and petrified wood which resemble
huge bones. There is no longer either pail, chain,
or pulley; but there is still the stone basin which
served the overflow. The rain-water collects
there, and from time to time a bird of the neighboring
forests comes thither to drink, and then flies away.
One house in this ruin, the farmhouse, is still inhabited.
The door of this house opens on the courtyard.
Upon this door, beside a pretty Gothic lock-plate,
there is an iron handle with trefoils placed slanting.
At the moment when the Hanoverian lieutenant, Wilda,
grasped this handle in order to take refuge in the
farm, a French sapper hewed off his hand with an axe.
The family who occupy the house had
for their grandfather Guillaume van Kylsom, the old
gardener, dead long since. A woman with gray hair
said to us: “I was there. I was three
years old. My sister, who was older, was terrified
and wept. They carried us off to the woods.
I went there in my mother’s arms. We glued
our ears to the earth to hear. I imitated the
cannon, and went boum! boum!”
A door opening from the courtyard
on the left led into the orchard, so we were told.
The orchard is terrible.
It is in three parts; one might almost
say, in three acts. The first part is a garden,
the second is an orchard, the third is a wood.
These three parts have a common enclosure: on
the side of the entrance, the buildings of the chateau
and the farm; on the left, a hedge; on the right,
a wall; and at the end, a wall. The wall on the
right is of brick, the wall at the bottom is of stone.
One enters the garden first. It slopes downwards,
is planted with gooseberry bushes, choked with a wild
growth of vegetation, and terminated by a monumental
terrace of cut stone, with balustrade with a double
curve.
It was a seignorial garden in the
first French style which preceded Le Notre; to-day
it is ruins and briars. The pilasters are surmounted
by globes which resemble cannon-balls of stone.
Forty-three balusters can still be counted on their
sockets; the rest lie prostrate in the grass.
Almost all bear scratches of bullets. One broken
baluster is placed on the pediment like a fractured
leg.
It was in this garden, further down
than the orchard, that six light-infantry men of the
1st, having made their way thither, and being unable
to escape, hunted down and caught like bears in their
dens, accepted the combat with two Hanoverian companies,
one of which was armed with carbines. The Hanoverians
lined this balustrade and fired from above. The
infantry men, replying from below, six against two
hundred, intrepid and with no shelter save the currant-bushes,
took a quarter of an hour to die.
One mounts a few steps and passes
from the garden into the orchard, properly speaking.
There, within the limits of those few square fathoms,
fifteen hundred men fell in less than an hour.
The wall seems ready to renew the combat. Thirty-eight
loopholes, pierced by the English at irregular heights,
are there still. In front of the sixth are placed
two English tombs of granite. There are loopholes
only in the south wall, as the principal attack came
from that quarter. The wall is hidden on the
outside by a tall hedge; the French came up, thinking
that they had to deal only with a hedge, crossed it,
and found the wall both an obstacle and an ambuscade,
with the English guards behind it, the thirty-eight
loopholes firing at once a shower of grape-shot and
balls, and Soye’s brigade was broken against
it. Thus Waterloo began.
Nevertheless, the orchard was taken.
As they had no ladders, the French scaled it with
their nails. They fought hand to hand amid the
trees. All this grass has been soaked in blood.
A battalion of Nassau, seven hundred strong, was overwhelmed
there. The outside of the wall, against which
Kellermann’s two batteries were trained, is gnawed
by grape-shot.
This orchard is sentient, like others,
in the month of May. It has its buttercups and
its daisies; the grass is tall there; the cart-horses
browse there; cords of hair, on which linen is drying,
traverse the spaces between the trees and force the
passer-by to bend his head; one walks over this uncultivated
land, and one’s foot dives into mole-holes.
In the middle of the grass one observes an uprooted
tree-bole which lies there all verdant. Major
Blackmann leaned against it to die. Beneath a
great tree in the neighborhood fell the German general,
Duplat, descended from a French family which fled
on the revocation of the Edict of Nantes. An
aged and falling apple-tree leans far over to one side,
its wound dressed with a bandage of straw and of clayey
loam. Nearly all the apple-trees are falling
with age. There is not one which has not had
its bullet or its biscayan. The skeletons of dead
trees abound in this orchard. Crows fly through
their branches, and at the end of it is a wood full
of violets.
Bauduin, killed, Foy wounded, conflagration,
massacre, carnage, a rivulet formed of English blood,
French blood, German blood mingled in fury, a well
crammed with corpses, the regiment of Nassau and the
regiment of Brunswick destroyed, Duplat killed, Blackmann
killed, the English Guards mutilated, twenty French
battalions, besides the forty from Reille’s
corps, decimated, three thousand men in that hovel
of Hougomont alone cut down, slashed to pieces, shot,
burned, with their throats cut, and all
this so that a peasant can say to-day to the traveller:
Monsieur, give me three francs, and if you like, I
will explain to you the affair of Waterloo!
Chapter III
the eighteenth of June, 1815-
Let us turn back, that
is one of the story-teller’s rights, and
put ourselves once more in the year 1815, and even
a little earlier than the epoch when the action narrated
in the first part of this book took place.
If it had not rained in the night
between the 17th and the 18th of June, 1815, the fate
of Europe would have been different. A few drops
of water, more or less, decided the downfall of Napoleon.
All that Providence required in order to make Waterloo
the end of Austerlitz was a little more rain, and
a cloud traversing the sky out of season sufficed
to make a world crumble.
The battle of Waterloo could not be
begun until half-past eleven o’clock, and that
gave Blucher time to come up. Why? Because
the ground was wet. The artillery had to wait
until it became a little firmer before they could
manoeuvre.
Napoleon was an artillery officer,
and felt the effects of this. The foundation
of this wonderful captain was the man who, in the report
to the Directory on Aboukir, said: Such a one
of our balls killed six men. All his plans of
battle were arranged for projectiles. The key
to his victory was to make the artillery converge
on one point. He treated the strategy of the
hostile general like a citadel, and made a breach in
it. He overwhelmed the weak point with grape-shot;
he joined and dissolved battles with cannon.
There was something of the sharpshooter in his genius.
To beat in squares, to pulverize regiments, to break
lines, to crush and disperse masses, for
him everything lay in this, to strike, strike, strike
incessantly, and he intrusted this task
to the cannon-ball. A redoubtable method, and
one which, united with genius, rendered this gloomy
athlete of the pugilism of war invincible for the
space of fifteen years.
On the 18th of June, 1815, he relied
all the more on his artillery, because he had numbers
on his side. Wellington had only one hundred and
fifty-nine mouths of fire; Napoleon had two hundred
and forty.
Suppose the soil dry, and the artillery
capable of moving, the action would have begun at
six o’clock in the morning. The battle would
have been won and ended at two o’clock, three
hours before the change of fortune in favor of the
Prussians. What amount of blame attaches to Napoleon
for the loss of this battle? Is the shipwreck
due to the pilot?
Was it the evident physical decline
of Napoleon that complicated this epoch by an inward
diminution of force? Had the twenty years of war
worn out the blade as it had worn the scabbard, the
soul as well as the body? Did the veteran make
himself disastrously felt in the leader? In a
word, was this genius, as many historians of note
have thought, suffering from an eclipse? Did
he go into a frenzy in order to disguise his weakened
powers from himself? Did he begin to waver under
the delusion of a breath of adventure? Had he
become a grave matter in a general unconscious
of peril? Is there an age, in this class of material
great men, who may be called the giants of action,
when genius grows short-sighted? Old age has
no hold on the geniuses of the ideal; for the Dantes
and Michael Angelos to grow old is to grow in greatness;
is it to grow less for the Hannibals and the Bonapartes?
Had Napoleon lost the direct sense of victory?
Had he reached the point where he could no longer
recognize the reef, could no longer divine the snare,
no longer discern the crumbling brink of abysses?
Had he lost his power of scenting out catastrophes?
He who had in former days known all the roads to triumph,
and who, from the summit of his chariot of lightning,
pointed them out with a sovereign finger, had he now
reached that state of sinister amazement when he could
lead his tumultuous legions harnessed to it, to the
precipice? Was he seized at the age of forty-six
with a supreme madness? Was that titanic charioteer
of destiny no longer anything more than an immense
dare-devil?
We do not think so.
His plan of battle was, by the confession
of all, a masterpiece. To go straight to the
centre of the Allies’ line, to make a breach
in the enemy, to cut them in two, to drive the British
half back on Hal, and the Prussian half on Tongres,
to make two shattered fragments of Wellington and
Blucher, to carry Mont-Saint-Jean, to seize Brussels,
to hurl the German into the Rhine, and the Englishman
into the sea. All this was contained in that
battle, according to Napoleon. Afterwards people
would see.
Of course, we do not here pretend
to furnish a history of the battle of Waterloo; one
of the scenes of the foundation of the story which
we are relating is connected with this battle, but
this history is not our subject; this history, moreover,
has been finished, and finished in a masterly manner,
from one point of view by Napoleon, and from another
point of view by a whole pleiad of historians.
As for us, we leave the historians
at loggerheads; we are but a distant witness, a passer-by
on the plain, a seeker bending over that soil all
made of human flesh, taking appearances for realities,
perchance; we have no right to oppose, in the name
of science, a collection of facts which contain illusions,
no doubt; we possess neither military practice nor
strategic ability which authorize a system; in our
opinion, a chain of accidents dominated the two leaders
at Waterloo; and when it becomes a question of destiny,
that mysterious culprit, we judge like that ingenious
judge, the populace.
Chapter IV
A-
Those persons who wish to gain a clear
idea of the battle of Waterloo have only to place,
mentally, on the ground, a capital A. The left limb
of the A is the road to Nivelles, the right limb is
the road to Genappe, the tie of the A is the hollow
road to Ohain from Braine-l’Alleud. The
top of the A is Mont-Saint-Jean, where Wellington is;
the lower left tip is Hougomont, where Reille is stationed
with Jerome Bonaparte; the right tip is the Belle-Alliance,
where Napoleon was. At the centre of this chord
is the precise point where the final word of the battle
was pronounced. It was there that the lion has
been placed, the involuntary symbol of the supreme
heroism of the Imperial Guard.
The triangle included in the top of
the A, between the two limbs and the tie, is the plateau
of Mont-Saint-Jean. The dispute over this plateau
constituted the whole battle. The wings of the
two armies extended to the right and left of the two
roads to Genappe and Nivelles; d’Erlon facing
Picton, Reille facing Hill.
Behind the tip of the A, behind the
plateau of Mont-Saint-Jean, is the forest of Soignes.
As for the plain itself, let the reader
picture to himself a vast undulating sweep of ground;
each rise commands the next rise, and all the undulations
mount towards Mont-Saint-Jean, and there end in the
forest.
Two hostile troops on a field of battle
are two wrestlers. It is a question of seizing
the opponent round the waist. The one seeks to
trip up the other. They clutch at everything:
a bush is a point of support; an angle of the wall
offers them a rest to the shoulder; for the lack of
a hovel under whose cover they can draw up, a regiment
yields its ground; an unevenness in the ground, a
chance turn in the landscape, a cross-path encountered
at the right moment, a grove, a ravine, can stay the
heel of that colossus which is called an army, and
prevent its retreat. He who quits the field is
beaten; hence the necessity devolving on the responsible
leader, of examining the most insignificant clump of
trees, and of studying deeply the slightest relief
in the ground.
The two generals had attentively studied
the plain of Mont-Saint-Jean, now called the plain
of Waterloo. In the preceding year, Wellington,
with the sagacity of foresight, had examined it as
the possible seat of a great battle. Upon this
spot, and for this duel, on the 18th of June, Wellington
had the good post, Napoleon the bad post. The
English army was stationed above, the French army
below.
It is almost superfluous here to sketch
the appearance of Napoleon on horseback, glass in
hand, upon the heights of Rossomme, at daybreak, on
June 18, 1815. All the world has seen him before
we can show him. That calm profile under the
little three-cornered hat of the school of Brienne,
that green uniform, the white revers concealing the
star of the Legion of Honor, his great coat hiding
his epaulets, the corner of red ribbon peeping from
beneath his vest, his leather trousers, the white
horse with the saddle-cloth of purple velvet bearing
on the corners crowned N’s and eagles, Hessian
boots over silk stockings, silver spurs, the sword
of Marengo, that whole figure of the last
of the Caesars is present to all imaginations, saluted
with acclamations by some, severely regarded
by others.
That figure stood for a long time
wholly in the light; this arose from a certain legendary
dimness evolved by the majority of heroes, and which
always veils the truth for a longer or shorter time;
but to-day history and daylight have arrived.
That light called history is pitiless;
it possesses this peculiar and divine quality, that,
pure light as it is, and precisely because it is wholly
light, it often casts a shadow in places where people
had hitherto beheld rays; from the same man it constructs
two different phantoms, and the one attacks the other
and executes justice on it, and the shadows of the
despot contend with the brilliancy of the leader.
Hence arises a truer measure in the definitive judgments
of nations. Babylon violated lessens Alexander,
Rome enchained lessens Caesar, Jerusalem murdered
lessens Titus, tyranny follows the tyrant. It
is a misfortune for a man to leave behind him the
night which bears his form.
Chapter V
the quid obscurum of battles
Every one is acquainted with the first
phase of this battle; a beginning which was troubled,
uncertain, hesitating, menacing to both armies, but
still more so for the English than for the French.
It had rained all night, the earth
had been cut up by the downpour, the water had accumulated
here and there in the hollows of the plain as if in
casks; at some points the gear of the artillery carriages
was buried up to the axles, the circingles of the
horses were dripping with liquid mud. If the
wheat and rye trampled down by this cohort of transports
on the march had not filled in the ruts and strewn
a litter beneath the wheels, all movement, particularly
in the valleys, in the direction of Papelotte would
have been impossible.
The affair began late. Napoleon,
as we have already explained, was in the habit of
keeping all his artillery well in hand, like a pistol,
aiming it now at one point, now at another, of the
battle; and it had been his wish to wait until the
horse batteries could move and gallop freely.
In order to do that it was necessary that the sun should
come out and dry the soil. But the sun did not
make its appearance. It was no longer the rendezvous
of Austerlitz. When the first cannon was fired,
the English general, Colville, looked at his watch,
and noted that it was thirty-five minutes past eleven.
The action was begun furiously, with
more fury, perhaps, than the Emperor would have wished,
by the left wing of the French resting on Hougomont.
At the same time Napoleon attacked the centre by hurling
Quiot’s brigade on La Haie-Sainte,
and Ney pushed forward the right wing of the French
against the left wing of the English, which rested
on Papelotte.
The attack on Hougomont was something
of a feint; the plan was to draw Wellington thither,
and to make him swerve to the left. This plan
would have succeeded if the four companies of the
English guards and the brave Belgians of Perponcher’s
division had not held the position solidly, and Wellington,
instead of massing his troops there, could confine
himself to despatching thither, as reinforcements,
only four more companies of guards and one battalion
from Brunswick.
The attack of the right wing of the
French on Papelotte was calculated, in fact, to overthrow
the English left, to cut off the road to Brussels,
to bar the passage against possible Prussians, to force
Mont-Saint-Jean, to turn Wellington back on Hougomont,
thence on Braine-l’Alleud, thence on Hal; nothing
easier. With the exception of a few incidents
this attack succeeded Papelotte was taken; La
Haie-Sainte was carried.
A detail to be noted. There was
in the English infantry, particularly in Kempt’s
brigade, a great many raw recruits. These young
soldiers were valiant in the presence of our redoubtable
infantry; their inexperience extricated them intrepidly
from the dilemma; they performed particularly excellent
service as skirmishers: the soldier skirmisher,
left somewhat to himself, becomes, so to speak, his
own general. These recruits displayed some of
the French ingenuity and fury. This novice of
an infantry had dash. This displeased Wellington.
After the taking of La Haie-Sainte
the battle wavered.
There is in this day an obscure interval,
from mid-day to four o’clock; the middle portion
of this battle is almost indistinct, and participates
in the sombreness of the hand-to-hand conflict.
Twilight reigns over it. We perceive vast fluctuations
in that fog, a dizzy mirage, paraphernalia of war
almost unknown to-day, pendant colbacks, floating
sabre-taches, cross-belts, cartridge-boxes for grenades,
hussar dolmans, red boots with a thousand
wrinkles, heavy shakos garlanded with torsades,
the almost black infantry of Brunswick mingled with
the scarlet infantry of England, the English soldiers
with great, white circular pads on the slopes of their
shoulders for epaulets, the Hanoverian light-horse
with their oblong casques of leather, with brass
hands and red horse-tails, the Scotch with their bare
knees and plaids, the great white gaiters of our grenadiers;
pictures, not strategic lines what Salvator
Rosa requires, not what is suited to the needs
of Gribeauval.
A certain amount of tempest is always
mingled with a battle. Quid obscurum, quid divinum.
Each historian traces, to some extent, the particular
feature which pleases him amid this pell-mell.
Whatever may be the combinations of the generals,
the shock of armed masses has an incalculable ebb.
During the action the plans of the two leaders enter
into each other and become mutually thrown out of shape.
Such a point of the field of battle devours more combatants
than such another, just as more or less spongy soils
soak up more or less quickly the water which is poured
on them. It becomes necessary to pour out more
soldiers than one would like; a series of expenditures
which are the unforeseen. The line of battle
waves and undulates like a thread, the trails of blood
gush illogically, the fronts of the armies waver, the
regiments form capes and gulfs as they enter and withdraw;
all these reefs are continually moving in front of
each other. Where the infantry stood the artillery
arrives, the cavalry rushes in where the artillery
was, the battalions are like smoke. There was
something there; seek it. It has disappeared;
the open spots change place, the sombre folds advance
and retreat, a sort of wind from the sepulchre pushes
forward, hurls back, distends, and disperses
these tragic multitudes. What is a fray? an oscillation?
The immobility of a mathematical plan expresses a minute,
not a day. In order to depict a battle, there
is required one of those powerful painters who have
chaos in their brushes. Rembrandt is better than
Vandermeulen; Vandermeulen, exact at noon, lies at
three o’clock. Geometry is deceptive; the
hurricane alone is trustworthy. That is what
confers on Folard the right to contradict Polybius.
Let us add, that there is a certain instant when the
battle degenerates into a combat, becomes specialized,
and disperses into innumerable detailed feats, which,
to borrow the expression of Napoleon himself, “belong
rather to the biography of the regiments than to the
history of the army.” The historian has,
in this case, the evident right to sum up the whole.
He cannot do more than seize the principal outlines
of the struggle, and it is not given to any one narrator,
however conscientious he may be, to fix, absolutely,
the form of that horrible cloud which is called a
battle.
This, which is true of all great armed
encounters, is particularly applicable to Waterloo.
Nevertheless, at a certain moment
in the afternoon the battle came to a point.
Chapter VI
four o’clock in the afternoon
Towards four o’clock the condition
of the English army was serious. The Prince of
Orange was in command of the centre, Hill of the right
wing, Picton of the left wing. The Prince of
Orange, desperate and intrepid, shouted to the Hollando-Belgians:
“Nassau! Brunswick! Never retreat!”
Hill, having been weakened, had come up to the support
of Wellington; Picton was dead. At the very moment
when the English had captured from the French the
flag of the 105th of the line, the French had killed
the English general, Picton, with a bullet through
the head. The battle had, for Wellington, two
bases of action, Hougomont and La Haie-Sainte;
Hougomont still held out, but was on fire; La
Haie-Sainte was taken. Of the German
battalion which defended it, only forty-two men survived;
all the officers, except five, were either dead or
captured. Three thousand combatants had been
massacred in that barn. A sergeant of the English
Guards, the foremost boxer in England, reputed invulnerable
by his companions, had been killed there by a little
French drummer-boy. Baring had been dislodged,
Alten put to the sword. Many flags had been lost,
one from Alten’s division, and one from the battalion
of Lunenburg, carried by a prince of the house of
Deux-Ponts. The Scotch Grays no longer existed;
Ponsonby’s great dragoons had been hacked to
pieces. That valiant cavalry had bent beneath
the lancers of Bro and beneath the cuirassiers
of Travers; out of twelve hundred horses, six hundred
remained; out of three lieutenant-colonels, two lay
on the earth, Hamilton wounded, Mater slain.
Ponsonby had fallen, riddled by seven lance-thrusts.
Gordon was dead. Marsh was dead. Two divisions,
the fifth and the sixth, had been annihilated.
Hougomont injured, La Haie-Sainte
taken, there now existed but one rallying-point, the
centre. That point still held firm. Wellington
reinforced it. He summoned thither Hill, who was
at Merle-Braine; he summoned Chasse, who was at Braine-l’Alleud.
The centre of the English army, rather
concave, very dense, and very compact, was strongly
posted. It occupied the plateau of Mont-Saint-Jean,
having behind it the village, and in front of it the
slope, which was tolerably steep then. It rested
on that stout stone dwelling which at that time belonged
to the domain of Nivelles, and which marks the intersection
of the roads a pile of the sixteenth century,
and so robust that the cannon-balls rebounded from
it without injuring it. All about the plateau
the English had cut the hedges here and there, made
embrasures in the hawthorn-trees, thrust the throat
of a cannon between two branches, embattled the shrubs.
There artillery was ambushed in the brushwood.
This punic labor, incontestably authorized by war,
which permits traps, was so well done, that Haxo, who
had been despatched by the Emperor at nine o’clock
in the morning to reconnoitre the enemy’s batteries,
had discovered nothing of it, and had returned and
reported to Napoleon that there were no obstacles except
the two barricades which barred the road to Nivelles
and to Genappe. It was at the season when the
grain is tall; on the edge of the plateau a battalion
of Kempt’s brigade, the 95th, armed with carabines,
was concealed in the tall wheat.
Thus assured and buttressed, the centre
of the Anglo-Dutch army was well posted. The
peril of this position lay in the forest of Soignes,
then adjoining the field of battle, and intersected
by the ponds of Groenendael and Boitsfort.
An army could not retreat thither without dissolving;
the regiments would have broken up immediately there.
The artillery would have been lost among the morasses.
The retreat, according to many a man versed in the
art, though it is disputed by others, would
have been a disorganized flight.
To this centre, Wellington added one
of Chasse’s brigades taken from the right wing,
and one of Wincke’s brigades taken from the left
wing, plus Clinton’s division. To his English,
to the regiments of Halkett, to the brigades of Mitchell,
to the guards of Maitland, he gave as reinforcements
and aids, the infantry of Brunswick, Nassau’s
contingent, Kielmansegg’s Hanoverians, and Ompteda’s
Germans. This placed twenty-six battalions under
his hand. The right wing, as Charras says, was
thrown back on the centre. An enormous battery
was masked by sacks of earth at the spot where there
now stands what is called the “Museum of Waterloo.”
Besides this, Wellington had, behind a rise in the
ground, Somerset’s Dragoon Guards, fourteen
hundred horse strong. It was the remaining half
of the justly celebrated English cavalry. Ponsonby
destroyed, Somerset remained.
The battery, which, if completed,
would have been almost a redoubt, was ranged behind
a very low garden wall, backed up with a coating of
bags of sand and a large slope of earth. This
work was not finished; there had been no time to make
a palisade for it.
Wellington, uneasy but impassive,
was on horseback, and there remained the whole day
in the same attitude, a little in advance of the old
mill of Mont-Saint-Jean, which is still in existence,
beneath an elm, which an Englishman, an enthusiastic
vandal, purchased later on for two hundred francs,
cut down, and carried off. Wellington was coldly
heroic. The bullets rained about him. His
aide-de-camp, Gordon, fell at his side. Lord
Hill, pointing to a shell which had burst, said to
him: “My lord, what are your orders in
case you are killed?” “To do like me,”
replied Wellington. To Clinton he said laconically,
“To hold this spot to the last man.”
The day was evidently turning out ill. Wellington
shouted to his old companions of Talavera, of Vittoria,
of Salamanca: “Boys, can retreat be thought
of? Think of old England!”
Towards four o’clock, the English
line drew back. Suddenly nothing was visible
on the crest of the plateau except the artillery and
the sharpshooters; the rest had disappeared:
the regiments, dislodged by the shells and the French
bullets, retreated into the bottom, now intersected
by the back road of the farm of Mont-Saint-Jean; a
retrograde movement took place, the English front hid
itself, Wellington drew back. “The beginning
of retreat!” cried Napoleon.
Chapter VII
napoleon in A good humor
The Emperor, though ill and discommoded
on horseback by a local trouble, had never been in
a better humor than on that day. His impenetrability
had been smiling ever since the morning. On the
18th of June, that profound soul masked by marble
beamed blindly. The man who had been gloomy at
Austerlitz was gay at Waterloo. The greatest favorites
of destiny make mistakes. Our joys are composed
of shadow. The supreme smile is God’s alone.
Ridet Caesar, Pompeius flebit,
said the legionaries of the Fulminatrix Legion.
Pompey was not destined to weep on that occasion, but
it is certain that Caesar laughed. While exploring
on horseback at one o’clock on the preceding
night, in storm and rain, in company with Bertrand,
the communes in the neighborhood of Rossomme, satisfied
at the sight of the long line of the English camp-fires
illuminating the whole horizon from Frischemont to
Braine-l’Alleud, it had seemed to him that fate,
to whom he had assigned a day on the field of Waterloo,
was exact to the appointment; he stopped his horse,
and remained for some time motionless, gazing at the
lightning and listening to the thunder; and this fatalist
was heard to cast into the darkness this mysterious
saying, “We are in accord.” Napoleon
was mistaken. They were no longer in accord.
He took not a moment for sleep; every
instant of that night was marked by a joy for him.
He traversed the line of the principal outposts, halting
here and there to talk to the sentinels. At half-past
two, near the wood of Hougomont, he heard the tread
of a column on the march; he thought at the moment
that it was a retreat on the part of Wellington.
He said: “It is the rear-guard of the English
getting under way for the purpose of decamping.
I will take prisoners the six thousand English who
have just arrived at Ostend.” He conversed
expansively; he regained the animation which he had
shown at his landing on the first of March, when he
pointed out to the Grand-Marshal the enthusiastic peasant
of the Gulf Juan, and cried, “Well, Bertrand,
here is a reinforcement already!” On the night
of the 17th to the 18th of June he rallied Wellington.
“That little Englishman needs a lesson,”
said Napoleon. The rain redoubled in violence;
the thunder rolled while the Emperor was speaking.
At half-past three o’clock in
the morning, he lost one illusion; officers who had
been despatched to reconnoitre announced to him that
the enemy was not making any movement. Nothing
was stirring; not a bivouac-fire had been extinguished;
the English army was asleep. The silence on earth
was profound; the only noise was in the heavens.
At four o’clock, a peasant was brought in to
him by the scouts; this peasant had served as guide
to a brigade of English cavalry, probably Vivian’s
brigade, which was on its way to take up a position
in the village of Ohain, at the extreme left.
At five o’clock, two Belgian deserters reported
to him that they had just quitted their regiment,
and that the English army was ready for battle.
“So much the better!” exclaimed Napoleon.
“I prefer to overthrow them rather than to drive
them back.”
In the morning he dismounted in the
mud on the slope which forms an angle with the Plancenoit
road, had a kitchen table and a peasant’s chair
brought to him from the farm of Rossomme, seated himself,
with a truss of straw for a carpet, and spread out
on the table the chart of the battle-field, saying
to Soult as he did so, “A pretty checker-board.”
In consequence of the rains during
the night, the transports of provisions, embedded
in the soft roads, had not been able to arrive by
morning; the soldiers had had no sleep; they were wet
and fasting. This did not prevent Napoleon from
exclaiming cheerfully to Ney, “We have ninety
chances out of a hundred.” At eight o’clock
the Emperor’s breakfast was brought to him.
He invited many generals to it. During breakfast,
it was said that Wellington had been to a ball two
nights before, in Brussels, at the Duchess of Richmond’s;
and Soult, a rough man of war, with a face of an archbishop,
said, “The ball takes place to-day.”
The Emperor jested with Ney, who said, “Wellington
will not be so simple as to wait for Your Majesty.”
That was his way, however. “He was fond
of jesting,” says Fleury de Chaboulon. “A
merry humor was at the foundation of his character,”
says Gourgaud. “He abounded in pleasantries,
which were more peculiar than witty,” says Benjamin
Constant. These gayeties of a giant are worthy
of insistence. It was he who called his grenadiers
“his grumblers”; he pinched their ears;
he pulled their mustaches. “The Emperor
did nothing but play pranks on us,” is the remark
of one of them. During the mysterious trip from
the island of Elba to France, on the 27th of February,
on the open sea, the French brig of war, Le Zephyr,
having encountered the brig L’Inconstant, on
which Napoleon was concealed, and having asked the
news of Napoleon from L’Inconstant, the Emperor,
who still wore in his hat the white and amaranthine
cockade sown with bees, which he had adopted at the
isle of Elba, laughingly seized the speaking-trumpet,
and answered for himself, “The Emperor is well.”
A man who laughs like that is on familiar terms with
events. Napoleon indulged in many fits of this
laughter during the breakfast at Waterloo. After
breakfast he meditated for a quarter of an hour; then
two generals seated themselves on the truss of straw,
pen in hand and their paper on their knees, and the
Emperor dictated to them the order of battle.
At nine o’clock, at the instant
when the French army, ranged in echelons and set in
motion in five columns, had deployed the
divisions in two lines, the artillery between the
brigades, the music at their head; as they beat the
march, with rolls on the drums and the blasts of trumpets,
mighty, vast, joyous, a sea of casques, of sabres,
and of bayonets on the horizon, the Emperor was touched,
and twice exclaimed, “Magnificent! Magnificent!”
Between nine o’clock and half-past
ten the whole army, incredible as it may appear, had
taken up its position and ranged itself in six lines,
forming, to repeat the Emperor’s expression,
“the figure of six V’s.” A
few moments after the formation of the battle-array,
in the midst of that profound silence, like that which
heralds the beginning of a storm, which precedes engagements,
the Emperor tapped Haxo on the shoulder, as he beheld
the three batteries of twelve-pounders, detached by
his orders from the corps of Erlon, Reille, and Lobau,
and destined to begin the action by taking Mont-Saint-Jean,
which was situated at the intersection of the Nivelles
and the Genappe roads, and said to him, “There
are four and twenty handsome maids, General.”
Sure of the issue, he encouraged with
a smile, as they passed before him, the company of
sappers of the first corps, which he had appointed
to barricade Mont-Saint-Jean as soon as the village
should be carried. All this serenity had been
traversed by but a single word of haughty pity; perceiving
on his left, at a spot where there now stands a large
tomb, those admirable Scotch Grays, with their superb
horses, massing themselves, he said, “It is
a pity.”
Then he mounted his horse, advanced
beyond Rossomme, and selected for his post of observation
a contracted elevation of turf to the right of the
road from Genappe to Brussels, which was his second
station during the battle. The third station,
the one adopted at seven o’clock in the evening,
between La Belle-Alliance and La Haie-Sainte,
is formidable; it is a rather elevated knoll, which
still exists, and behind which the guard was massed
on a slope of the plain. Around this knoll the
balls rebounded from the pavements of the road, up
to Napoleon himself. As at Brienne, he had over
his head the shriek of the bullets and of the heavy
artillery. Mouldy cannon-balls, old sword-blades,
and shapeless projectiles, eaten up with rust, were
picked up at the spot where his horse’ feet
stood. Scabra rubigine. A few years
ago, a shell of sixty pounds, still charged, and with
its fuse broken off level with the bomb, was unearthed.
It was at this last post that the Emperor said to his
guide, Lacoste, a hostile and terrified peasant, who
was attached to the saddle of a hussar, and who turned
round at every discharge of canister and tried to
hide behind Napoleon: “Fool, it is shameful!
You’ll get yourself killed with a ball in the
back.” He who writes these lines has himself
found, in the friable soil of this knoll, on turning
over the sand, the remains of the neck of a bomb,
disintegrated, by the oxidization of six and forty
years, and old fragments of iron which parted like
elder-twigs between the fingers.
Every one is aware that the variously
inclined undulations of the plains, where the engagement
between Napoleon and Wellington took place, are no
longer what they were on June 18, 1815. By taking
from this mournful field the wherewithal to make a
monument to it, its real relief has been taken away,
and history, disconcerted, no longer finds her bearings
there. It has been disfigured for the sake of
glorifying it. Wellington, when he beheld Waterloo
once more, two years later, exclaimed, “They
have altered my field of battle!” Where the great
pyramid of earth, surmounted by the lion, rises to-day,
there was a hillock which descended in an easy slope
towards the Nivelles road, but which was almost an
escarpment on the side of the highway to Genappe.
The elevation of this escarpment can still be measured
by the height of the two knolls of the two great sepulchres
which enclose the road from Genappe to Brussels:
one, the English tomb, is on the left; the other,
the German tomb, is on the right. There is no
French tomb. The whole of that plain is a sepulchre
for France. Thanks to the thousands upon thousands
of cartloads of earth employed in the hillock one hundred
and fifty feet in height and half a mile in circumference,
the plateau of Mont-Saint-Jean is now accessible by
an easy slope. On the day of battle, particularly
on the side of La Haie-Sainte, it was
abrupt and difficult of approach. The slope there
is so steep that the English cannon could not see
the farm, situated in the bottom of the valley, which
was the centre of the combat. On the 18th of June,
1815, the rains had still farther increased this acclivity,
the mud complicated the problem of the ascent, and
the men not only slipped back, but stuck fast in the
mire. Along the crest of the plateau ran a sort
of trench whose presence it was impossible for the
distant observer to divine.
What was this trench? Let us
explain. Braine-l’Alleud is a Belgian village;
Ohain is another. These villages, both of them
concealed in curves of the landscape, are connected
by a road about a league and a half in length, which
traverses the plain along its undulating level, and
often enters and buries itself in the hills like a
furrow, which makes a ravine of this road in some
places. In 1815, as at the present day, this
road cut the crest of the plateau of Mont-Saint-Jean
between the two highways from Genappe and Nivelles;
only, it is now on a level with the plain; it was
then a hollow way. Its two slopes have been appropriated
for the monumental hillock. This road was, and
still is, a trench throughout the greater portion
of its course; a hollow trench, sometimes a dozen
feet in depth, and whose banks, being too steep, crumbled
away here and there, particularly in winter, under
driving rains. Accidents happened here.
The road was so narrow at the Braine-l’Alleud
entrance that a passer-by was crushed by a cart, as
is proved by a stone cross which stands near the cemetery,
and which gives the name of the dead, Monsieur Bernard
Debrye, Merchant of Brussels, and the date of the
accident, February, 1637. It was so deep on the
table-land of Mont-Saint-Jean that a peasant, Mathieu
Nicaise, was crushed there, in 1783, by a slide from
the slope, as is stated on another stone cross, the
top of which has disappeared in the process of clearing
the ground, but whose overturned pedestal is still
visible on the grassy slope to the left of the highway
between La Haie-Sainte and the farm
of Mont-Saint-Jean.
On the day of battle, this hollow
road whose existence was in no way indicated, bordering
the crest of Mont-Saint-Jean, a trench at the summit
of the escarpment, a rut concealed in the soil, was
invisible; that is to say, terrible.
Chapter VIII
the emperor puts A question to
the guide Lacoste
So, on the morning of Waterloo, Napoleon was content.
He was right; the plan of battle conceived
by him was, as we have seen, really admirable.
The battle once begun, its very various
changes, the resistance of Hougomont; the
tenacity of La Haie-Sainte; the killing
of Bauduin; the disabling of Foy; the unexpected wall
against which Soye’s brigade was shattered;
Guilleminot’s fatal heedlessness when he had
neither petard nor powder sacks; the miring of the
batteries; the fifteen unescorted pieces overwhelmed
in a hollow way by Uxbridge; the small effect of the
bombs falling in the English lines, and there embedding
themselves in the rain-soaked soil, and only succeeding
in producing volcanoes of mud, so that the canister
was turned into a splash; the uselessness of Pire’s
demonstration on Braine-l’Alleud; all that cavalry,
fifteen squadrons, almost exterminated; the right
wing of the English badly alarmed, the left wing badly
cut into; Ney’s strange mistake in massing, instead
of echelonning the four divisions of the first corps;
men delivered over to grape-shot, arranged in ranks
twenty-seven deep and with a frontage of two hundred;
the frightful holes made in these masses by the cannon-balls;
attacking columns disorganized; the side-battery suddenly
unmasked on their flank; Bourgeois, Donzelot, and Durutte
compromised; Quiot repulsed; Lieutenant Vieux, that
Hercules graduated at the Polytechnic School, wounded
at the moment when he was beating in with an axe the
door of La Haie-Sainte under the downright
fire of the English barricade which barred the angle
of the road from Genappe to Brussels; Marcognet’s
division caught between the infantry and the cavalry,
shot down at the very muzzle of the guns amid the
grain by Best and Pack, put to the sword by Ponsonby;
his battery of seven pieces spiked; the Prince of
Saxe-Weimar holding and guarding, in spite of the Comte
d’Erlon, both Frischemont and Smohain; the flag
of the 105th taken, the flag of the 45th captured;
that black Prussian hussar stopped by runners of the
flying column of three hundred light cavalry on the
scout between Wavre and Plancenoit; the alarming things
that had been said by prisoners; Grouchy’s delay;
fifteen hundred men killed in the orchard of Hougomont
in less than an hour; eighteen hundred men overthrown
in a still shorter time about La Haie-Sainte, all
these stormy incidents passing like the clouds of
battle before Napoleon, had hardly troubled his gaze
and had not overshadowed that face of imperial certainty.
Napoleon was accustomed to gaze steadily at war; he
never added up the heart-rending details, cipher by
cipher; ciphers mattered little to him, provided that
they furnished the total, victory; he was not alarmed
if the beginnings did go astray, since he thought
himself the master and the possessor at the end; he
knew how to wait, supposing himself to be out of the
question, and he treated destiny as his equal:
he seemed to say to fate, Thou wilt not dare.
Composed half of light and half of
shadow, Napoleon thought himself protected in good
and tolerated in evil. He had, or thought that
he had, a connivance, one might almost say a complicity,
of events in his favor, which was equivalent to the
invulnerability of antiquity.
Nevertheless, when one has Beresina,
Leipzig, and Fontainebleau behind one, it seems as
though one might distrust Waterloo. A mysterious
frown becomes perceptible in the depths of the heavens.
At the moment when Wellington retreated,
Napoleon shuddered. He suddenly beheld the table-land
of Mont-Saint-Jean cleared, and the van of the English
army disappear. It was rallying, but hiding itself.
The Emperor half rose in his stirrups. The lightning
of victory flashed from his eyes.
Wellington, driven into a corner at
the forest of Soignes and destroyed that
was the definitive conquest of England by France; it
was Crecy, Poitiers, Malplaquet, and Ramillies avenged.
The man of Marengo was wiping out Agincourt.
So the Emperor, meditating on this
terrible turn of fortune, swept his glass for the
last time over all the points of the field of battle.
His guard, standing behind him with grounded arms,
watched him from below with a sort of religion.
He pondered; he examined the slopes, noted the declivities,
scrutinized the clumps of trees, the square of rye,
the path; he seemed to be counting each bush.
He gazed with some intentness at the English barricades
of the two highways, two large abatis of
trees, that on the road to Genappe above La Haie-Sainte,
armed with two cannon, the only ones out of all the
English artillery which commanded the extremity of
the field of battle, and that on the road to Nivelles
where gleamed the Dutch bayonets of Chasse’s
brigade. Near this barricade he observed the
old chapel of Saint Nicholas, painted white, which
stands at the angle of the cross-road near Braine-l’Alleud;
he bent down and spoke in a low voice to the guide
Lacoste. The guide made a negative sign with
his head, which was probably perfidious.
The Emperor straightened himself up and fell to thinking.
Wellington had drawn back.
All that remained to do was to complete this retreat
by crushing him.
Napoleon turning round abruptly, despatched an express
at full speed to
Paris to announce that the battle was won.
Napoleon was one of those geniuses from whom thunder
darts.
He had just found his clap of thunder.
He gave orders to Milhaud’s cuirassiers
to carry the table-land of
Mont-Saint-Jean.
Chapter IX
the unexpected
There were three thousand five hundred
of them. They formed a front a quarter of a league
in extent. They were giant men, on colossal horses.
There were six and twenty squadrons of them; and they
had behind them to support them Lefebvre-Desnouettes’s
division, the one hundred and six picked
gendarmes, the light cavalry of the Guard, eleven
hundred and ninety-seven men, and the lancers of the
guard of eight hundred and eighty lances. They
wore casques without horse-tails, and cuirasses
of beaten iron, with horse-pistols in their holsters,
and long sabre-swords. That morning the whole
army had admired them, when, at nine o’clock,
with braying of trumpets and all the music playing
“Let us watch o’er the Safety of the Empire,”
they had come in a solid column, with one of their
batteries on their flank, another in their centre,
and deployed in two ranks between the roads to Genappe
and Frischemont, and taken up their position for battle
in that powerful second line, so cleverly arranged
by Napoleon, which, having on its extreme left Kellermann’s
cuirassiers and on its extreme right Milhaud’s
cuirassiers, had, so to speak, two wings of iron.
Aide-de-camp Bernard carried them
the Emperor’s orders. Ney drew his sword
and placed himself at their head. The enormous
squadrons were set in motion.
Then a formidable spectacle was seen.
All their cavalry, with upraised swords,
standards and trumpets flung to the breeze, formed
in columns by divisions, descended, by a simultaneous
movement and like one man, with the precision of a
brazen battering-ram which is effecting a breach,
the hill of La Belle Alliance, plunged into the terrible
depths in which so many men had already fallen, disappeared
there in the smoke, then emerging from that shadow,
reappeared on the other side of the valley, still
compact and in close ranks, mounting at a full trot,
through a storm of grape-shot which burst upon them,
the terrible muddy slope of the table-land of Mont-Saint-Jean.
They ascended, grave, threatening, imperturbable;
in the intervals between the musketry and the artillery,
their colossal trampling was audible. Being two
divisions, there were two columns of them; Wathier’s
division held the right, Delort’s division was
on the left. It seemed as though two immense
adders of steel were to be seen crawling towards the
crest of the table-land. It traversed the battle
like a prodigy.
Nothing like it had been seen since
the taking of the great redoubt of the Muskowa by
the heavy cavalry; Murat was lacking here, but Ney
was again present. It seemed as though that mass
had become a monster and had but one soul. Each
column undulated and swelled like the ring of a polyp.
They could be seen through a vast cloud of smoke which
was rent here and there. A confusion of helmets,
of cries, of sabres, a stormy heaving of the cruppers
of horses amid the cannons and the flourish of trumpets,
a terrible and disciplined tumult; over all, the cuirasses
like the scales on the hydra.
These narrations seemed to belong
to another age. Something parallel to this vision
appeared, no doubt, in the ancient Orphic epics, which
told of the centaurs, the old hippanthropes, those
Titans with human heads and equestrian chests who
scaled Olympus at a gallop, horrible, invulnerable,
sublime gods and beasts.
Odd numerical coincidence, twenty-six
battalions rode to meet twenty-six battalions.
Behind the crest of the plateau, in the shadow of
the masked battery, the English infantry, formed into
thirteen squares, two battalions to the square, in
two lines, with seven in the first line, six in the
second, the stocks of their guns to their shoulders,
taking aim at that which was on the point of appearing,
waited, calm, mute, motionless. They did not
see the cuirassiers, and the cuirassiers
did not see them. They listened to the rise of
this flood of men. They heard the swelling noise
of three thousand horse, the alternate and symmetrical
tramp of their hoofs at full trot, the jingling of
the cuirasses, the clang of the sabres and a sort
of grand and savage breathing. There ensued a
most terrible silence; then, all at once, a long file
of uplifted arms, brandishing sabres, appeared above
the crest, and casques, trumpets, and standards,
and three thousand heads with gray mustaches, shouting,
“Vive l’Empereur!” All this cavalry
debouched on the plateau, and it was like the appearance
of an earthquake.
All at once, a tragic incident; on
the English left, on our right, the head of the column
of cuirassiers reared up with a frightful clamor.
On arriving at the culminating point of the crest,
ungovernable, utterly given over to fury and their
course of extermination of the squares and cannon,
the cuirassiers had just caught sight of a trench, a
trench between them and the English. It was the
hollow road of Ohain.
It was a terrible moment. The
ravine was there, unexpected, yawning, directly under
the horses’ feet, two fathoms deep between its
double slopes; the second file pushed the first into
it, and the third pushed on the second; the horses
reared and fell backward, landed on their haunches,
slid down, all four feet in the air, crushing and overwhelming
the riders; and there being no means of retreat, the
whole column being no longer anything more than a
projectile, the force which had been acquired
to crush the English crushed the French; the inexorable
ravine could only yield when filled; horses and riders
rolled there pell-mell, grinding each other, forming
but one mass of flesh in this gulf: when this
trench was full of living men, the rest marched over
them and passed on. Almost a third of Dubois’s
brigade fell into that abyss.
This began the loss of the battle.
A local tradition, which evidently
exaggerates matters, says that two thousand horses
and fifteen hundred men were buried in the hollow road
of Ohain. This figure probably comprises all the
other corpses which were flung into this ravine the
day after the combat.
Let us note in passing that it was
Dubois’s sorely tried brigade which, an hour
previously, making a charge to one side, had captured
the flag of the Lunenburg battalion.
Napoleon, before giving the order
for this charge of Milhaud’s cuirassiers,
had scrutinized the ground, but had not been able to
see that hollow road, which did not even form a wrinkle
on the surface of the plateau. Warned, nevertheless,
and put on the alert by the little white chapel which
marks its angle of junction with the Nivelles highway,
he had probably put a question as to the possibility
of an obstacle, to the guide Lacoste. The guide
had answered No. We might almost affirm that
Napoleon’s catastrophe originated in that sign
of a peasant’s head.
Other fatalities were destined to arise.
Was it possible that Napoleon should have won that
battle? We answer No.
Why? Because of Wellington? Because of Blucher?
No. Because of God.
Bonaparte victor at Waterloo; that
does not come within the law of the nineteenth century.
Another series of facts was in preparation, in which
there was no longer any room for Napoleon. The
ill will of events had declared itself long before.
It was time that this vast man should fall.
The excessive weight of this man in
human destiny disturbed the balance. This individual
alone counted for more than a universal group.
These plethoras of all human vitality concentrated
in a single head; the world mounting to the brain
of one man, this would be mortal to civilization
were it to last. The moment had arrived for the
incorruptible and supreme equity to alter its plan.
Probably the principles and the elements, on which
the regular gravitations of the moral, as of the material,
world depend, had complained. Smoking blood, over-filled
cemeteries, mothers in tears, these are
formidable pleaders. When the earth is suffering
from too heavy a burden, there are mysterious groanings
of the shades, to which the abyss lends an ear.
Napoleon had been denounced in the
infinite and his fall had been decided on.
He embarrassed God.
Waterloo is not a battle; it is a change of front
on the part of the
Universe.
Chapter X
the plateau of Mont-saint-Jean
The battery was unmasked at the same moment with the
ravine.
Sixty cannons and the thirteen squares
darted lightning point-blank on the cuirassiers.
The intrepid General Delort made the military salute
to the English battery.
The whole of the flying artillery
of the English had re-entered the squares at a gallop.
The cuirassiers had not had even the time for
a halt. The disaster of the hollow road had decimated,
but not discouraged them. They belonged to that
class of men who, when diminished in number, increase
in courage.
Wathier’s column alone had suffered
in the disaster; Delort’s column, which Ney
had deflected to the left, as though he had a presentiment
of an ambush, had arrived whole.
The cuirassiers hurled themselves on the English
squares.
At full speed, with bridles loose,
swords in their teeth pistols in fist, such
was the attack.
There are moments in battles in which
the soul hardens the man until the soldier is changed
into a statue, and when all this flesh turns into
granite. The English battalions, desperately assaulted,
did not stir.
Then it was terrible.
All the faces of the English squares
were attacked at once. A frenzied whirl enveloped
them. That cold infantry remained impassive.
The first rank knelt and received the cuirassiers
on their bayonets, the second ranks shot them down;
behind the second rank the cannoneers charged their
guns, the front of the square parted, permitted the
passage of an eruption of grape-shot, and closed again.
The cuirassiers replied by crushing them.
Their great horses reared, strode across the ranks,
leaped over the bayonets and fell, gigantic, in the
midst of these four living wells. The cannon-balls
ploughed furrows in these cuirassiers; the cuirassiers
made breaches in the squares. Files of men disappeared,
ground to dust under the horses. The bayonets
plunged into the bellies of these centaurs; hence
a hideousness of wounds which has probably never been
seen anywhere else. The squares, wasted by this
mad cavalry, closed up their ranks without flinching.
Inexhaustible in the matter of grape-shot, they created
explosions in their assailants’ midst. The
form of this combat was monstrous. These squares
were no longer battalions, they were craters; those
cuirassiers were no longer cavalry, they were
a tempest. Each square was a volcano attacked
by a cloud; lava contended with lightning.
The square on the extreme right, the
most exposed of all, being in the air, was almost
annihilated at the very first shock. lt was formed
of the 75th regiment of Highlanders. The bagpipe-player
in the centre dropped his melancholy eyes, filled
with the reflections of the forests and the lakes,
in profound inattention, while men were being exterminated
around him, and seated on a drum, with his pibroch
under his arm, played the Highland airs. These
Scotchmen died thinking of Ben Lothian, as did the
Greeks recalling Argos. The sword of a cuirassier,
which hewed down the bagpipes and the arm which bore
it, put an end to the song by killing the singer.
The cuirassiers, relatively few
in number, and still further diminished by the catastrophe
of the ravine, had almost the whole English army against
them, but they multiplied themselves so that each man
of them was equal to ten. Nevertheless, some
Hanoverian battalions yielded. Wellington perceived
it, and thought of his cavalry. Had Napoleon at
that same moment thought of his infantry, he would
have won the battle. This forgetfulness was his
great and fatal mistake.
All at once, the cuirassiers,
who had been the assailants, found themselves assailed.
The English cavalry was at their back. Before
them two squares, behind them Somerset; Somerset meant
fourteen hundred dragoons of the guard. On the
right, Somerset had Dornberg with the German light-horse,
and on his left, Trip with the Belgian carabineers;
the cuirassiers attacked on the flank and in front,
before and in the rear, by infantry and cavalry, had
to face all sides. What mattered it to them?
They were a whirlwind. Their valor was something
indescribable.
In addition to this, they had behind
them the battery, which was still thundering.
It was necessary that it should be so, or they could
never have been wounded in the back. One of their
cuirasses, pierced on the shoulder by a ball from
a biscayan, is in the collection of the Waterloo
Museum.
For such Frenchmen nothing less than
such Englishmen was needed. It was no longer
a hand-to-hand conflict; it was a shadow, a fury, a
dizzy transport of souls and courage, a hurricane
of lightning swords. In an instant the fourteen
hundred dragoon guards numbered only eight hundred.
Fuller, their lieutenant-colonel, fell dead. Ney
rushed up with the lancers and Lefebvre-Desnouettes’s
light-horse. The plateau of Mont-Saint-Jean was
captured, recaptured, captured again. The cuirassiers
quitted the cavalry to return to the infantry; or,
to put it more exactly, the whole of that formidable
rout collared each other without releasing the other.
The squares still held firm.
There were a dozen assaults.
Ney had four horses killed under him. Half the
cuirassiers remained on the plateau. This
conflict lasted two hours.
The English army was profoundly shaken.
There is no doubt that, had they not been enfeebled
in their first shock by the disaster of the hollow
road the cuirassiers would have overwhelmed the
centre and decided the victory. This extraordinary
cavalry petrified Clinton, who had seen Talavera and
Badajoz. Wellington, three-quarters vanquished,
admired heroically. He said in an undertone,
“Sublime!”
The cuirassiers annihilated seven
squares out of thirteen, took or spiked sixty pieces
of ordnance, and captured from the English regiments
six flags, which three cuirassiers and three chasseurs
of the Guard bore to the Emperor, in front of the
farm of La Belle Alliance.
Wellington’s situation had grown
worse. This strange battle was like a duel between
two raging, wounded men, each of whom, still fighting
and still resisting, is expending all his blood.
Which of the two will be the first to fall?
The conflict on the plateau continued.
What had become of the cuirassiers?
No one could have told. One thing is certain,
that on the day after the battle, a cuirassier and
his horse were found dead among the woodwork of the
scales for vehicles at Mont-Saint-Jean, at the very
point where the four roads from Nivelles, Genappe,
La Hulpe, and Brussels meet and intersect each other.
This horseman had pierced the English lines.
One of the men who picked up the body still lives
at Mont-Saint-Jean. His name is Dehaze. He
was eighteen years old at that time.
Wellington felt that he was yielding. The crisis
was at hand.
The cuirassiers had not succeeded,
since the centre was not broken through. As every
one was in possession of the plateau, no one held it,
and in fact it remained, to a great extent, with the
English. Wellington held the village and the
culminating plain; Ney had only the crest and the
slope. They seemed rooted in that fatal soil on
both sides.
But the weakening of the English seemed
irremediable. The bleeding of that army was horrible.
Kempt, on the left wing, demanded reinforcements.
“There are none,” replied Wellington; “he
must let himself be killed!” Almost at that
same moment, a singular coincidence which paints the
exhaustion of the two armies, Ney demanded infantry
from Napoleon, and Napoleon exclaimed, “Infantry!
Where does he expect me to get it? Does he think
I can make it?”
Nevertheless, the English army was
in the worse case of the two. The furious onsets
of those great squadrons with cuirasses of iron and
breasts of steel had ground the infantry to nothing.
A few men clustered round a flag marked the post of
a regiment; such and such a battalion was commanded
only by a captain or a lieutenant; Alten’s division,
already so roughly handled at La Haie-Sainte,
was almost destroyed; the intrepid Belgians of Van
Kluze’s brigade strewed the rye-fields all along
the Nivelles road; hardly anything was left of those
Dutch grenadiers, who, intermingled with Spaniards
in our ranks in 1811, fought against Wellington; and
who, in 1815, rallied to the English standard, fought
against Napoleon. The loss in officers was considerable.
Lord Uxbridge, who had his leg buried on the following
day, had his knee shattered. If, on the French
side, in that tussle of the cuirassiers, Delort,
l’Heritier, Colbert, Dnop, Travers, and Blancard
were disabled, on the side of the English there was
Alten wounded, Barne wounded, Delancey killed, Van
Meeren killed, Ompteda killed, the whole of Wellington’s
staff decimated, and England had the worse of it in
that bloody scale. The second regiment of foot-guards
had lost five lieutenant-colonels, four captains, and
three ensigns; the first battalion of the 30th infantry
had lost 24 officers and 1,200 soldiers; the 79th
Highlanders had lost 24 officers wounded, 18 officers
killed, 450 soldiers killed. The Hanoverian hussars
of Cumberland, a whole regiment, with Colonel Hacke
at its head, who was destined to be tried later on
and cashiered, had turned bridle in the presence of
the fray, and had fled to the forest of Soignes, sowing
defeat all the way to Brussels. The transports,
ammunition-wagons, the baggage-wagons, the wagons
filled with wounded, on perceiving that the French
were gaining ground and approaching the forest, rushed
headlong thither. The Dutch, mowed down by the
French cavalry, cried, “Alarm!” From Vert-Coucou
to Groentendael, for a distance of nearly two leagues
in the direction of Brussels, according to the testimony
of eye-witnesses who are still alive, the roads were
encumbered with fugitives. This panic was such
that it attacked the Prince de Conde at Mechlin, and
Louis XVIII. at Ghent. With the exception of
the feeble reserve echelonned behind the ambulance
established at the farm of Mont-Saint-Jean, and of
Vivian’s and Vandeleur’s brigades, which
flanked the left wing, Wellington had no cavalry left.
A number of batteries lay unhorsed. These facts
are attested by Siborne; and Pringle, exaggerating
the disaster, goes so far as to say that the Anglo-Dutch
army was reduced to thirty-four thousand men.
The Iron Duke remained calm, but his lips blanched.
Vincent, the Austrian commissioner, Alava, the Spanish
commissioner, who were present at the battle in the
English staff, thought the Duke lost. At five
o’clock Wellington drew out his watch, and he
was heard to murmur these sinister words, “Blucher,
or night!”
It was at about that moment that a
distant line of bayonets gleamed on the heights in
the direction of Frischemont.
Here comes the change of face in this giant drama.
Chapter XI
A bad guide to napoleon; A good
guide to Bulow
The painful surprise of Napoleon is well known.
Grouchy hoped for,
Blucher arriving. Death instead of life.
Fate has these turns; the throne of the world was
expected; it was Saint
Helena that was seen.
If the little shepherd who served
as guide to Bulow, Blucher’s lieutenant, had
advised him to debouch from the forest above Frischemont,
instead of below Plancenoit, the form of the nineteenth
century might, perhaps, have been different. Napoleon
would have won the battle of Waterloo. By any
other route than that below Plancenoit, the Prussian
army would have come out upon a ravine impassable for
artillery, and Bulow would not have arrived.
Now the Prussian general, Muffling,
declares that one hour’s delay, and Blucher
would not have found Wellington on his feet. “The
battle was lost.”
It was time that Bulow should arrive,
as will be seen. He had, moreover, been very
much delayed. He had bivouacked at Dion-lé-Mont,
and had set out at daybreak; but the roads were impassable,
and his divisions stuck fast in the mire. The
ruts were up to the hubs of the cannons. Moreover,
he had been obliged to pass the Dyle on the narrow
bridge of Wavre; the street leading to the bridge
had been fired by the French, so the caissons
and ammunition-wagons could not pass between two rows
of burning houses, and had been obliged to wait until
the conflagration was extinguished. It was mid-day
before Bulow’s vanguard had been able to reach
Chapelle-Saint-Lambert.
Had the action been begun two hours
earlier, it would have been over at four o’clock,
and Blucher would have fallen on the battle won by
Napoleon. Such are these immense risks proportioned
to an infinite which we cannot comprehend.
The Emperor had been the first, as
early as mid-day, to descry with his field-glass,
on the extreme horizon, something which had attracted
his attention. He had said, “I see yonder
a cloud, which seems to me to be troops.”
Then he asked the Duc de Dalmatie, “Soult,
what do you see in the direction of Chapelle-Saint-Lambert?”
The marshal, levelling his glass, answered, “Four
or five thousand men, Sire; evidently Grouchy.”
But it remained motionless in the mist. All the
glasses of the staff had studied “the cloud”
pointed out by the Emperor. Some said: “It
is trees.” The truth is, that the cloud
did not move. The Emperor detached Domon’s
division of light cavalry to reconnoitre in that quarter.
Bulow had not moved, in fact.
His vanguard was very feeble, and could accomplish
nothing. He was obliged to wait for the body of
the army corps, and he had received orders to concentrate
his forces before entering into line; but at five
o’clock, perceiving Wellington’s peril,
Blucher ordered Bulow to attack, and uttered these
remarkable words: “We must give air to
the English army.”
A little later, the divisions of Losthin,
Hiller, Hacke, and Ryssel deployed before Lobau’s
corps, the cavalry of Prince William of Prussia debouched
from the forest of Paris, Plancenoit was in flames,
and the Prussian cannon-balls began to rain even upon
the ranks of the guard in reserve behind Napoleon.
Chapter XII
the guard
Every one knows the rest, the
irruption of a third army; the battle broken to pieces;
eighty-six mouths of fire thundering simultaneously;
Pirch the first coming up with Bulow; Zieten’s
cavalry led by Blucher in person, the French driven
back; Marcognet swept from the plateau of Ohain; Durutte
dislodged from Papelotte; Donzelot and Quiot retreating;
Lobau caught on the flank; a fresh battle precipitating
itself on our dismantled regiments at nightfall; the
whole English line resuming the offensive and thrust
forward; the gigantic breach made in the French army;
the English grape-shot and the Prussian grape-shot
aiding each other; the extermination; disaster in
front; disaster on the flank; the Guard entering the
line in the midst of this terrible crumbling of all
things.
Conscious that they were about to
die, they shouted, “Vive l’Empereur!”
History records nothing more touching than that agony
bursting forth in acclamations.
The sky had been overcast all day
long. All of a sudden, at that very moment, it
was eight o’clock in the evening the
clouds on the horizon parted, and allowed the grand
and sinister glow of the setting sun to pass through,
athwart the elms on the Nivelles road. They had
seen it rise at Austerlitz.
Each battalion of the Guard was commanded
by a general for this final catastrophe. Friant,
Michel, Roguet, Harlet, Mallet, Poret de Morvan, were
there. When the tall caps of the grenadiers of
the Guard, with their large plaques bearing the eagle
appeared, symmetrical, in line, tranquil, in the midst
of that combat, the enemy felt a respect for France;
they thought they beheld twenty victories entering
the field of battle, with wings outspread, and those
who were the conquerors, believing themselves to be
vanquished, retreated; but Wellington shouted, “Up,
Guards, and aim straight!” The red regiment of
English guards, lying flat behind the hedges, sprang
up, a cloud of grape-shot riddled the tricolored flag
and whistled round our eagles; all hurled themselves
forwards, and the final carnage began. In the
darkness, the Imperial Guard felt the army losing
ground around it, and in the vast shock of the rout
it heard the desperate flight which had taken the
place of the “Vive l’Empereur!” and,
with flight behind it, it continued to advance, more
crushed, losing more men at every step that it took.
There were none who hesitated, no timid men in its
ranks. The soldier in that troop was as much
of a hero as the general. Not a man was missing
in that suicide.
Ney, bewildered, great with all the
grandeur of accepted death, offered himself to all
blows in that tempest. He had his fifth horse
killed under him there. Perspiring, his eyes
aflame, foaming at the mouth, with uniform unbuttoned,
one of his epaulets half cut off by a sword-stroke
from a horseguard, his plaque with the great eagle
dented by a bullet; bleeding, bemired, magnificent,
a broken sword in his hand, he said, “Come and
see how a Marshal of France dies on the field of battle!”
But in vain; he did not die. He was haggard and
angry. At Drouet d’Erlon he hurled this
question, “Are you not going to get yourself
killed?” In the midst of all that artillery
engaged in crushing a handful of men, he shouted:
“So there is nothing for me! Oh! I
should like to have all these English bullets enter
my bowels!” Unhappy man, thou wert reserved
for French bullets!
Chapter XIII
the catastrophe
The rout behind the Guard was melancholy.
The army yielded suddenly on all sides
at once, Hougomont, La Haie-Sainte,
Papelotte, Plancenoit. The cry “Treachery!”
was followed by a cry of “Save yourselves who
can!” An army which is disbanding is like a
thaw. All yields, splits, cracks, floats, rolls,
falls, jostles, hastens, is precipitated. The
disintegration is unprecedented. Ney borrows
a horse, leaps upon it, and without hat, cravat, or
sword, places himself across the Brussels road, stopping
both English and French. He strives to detain
the army, he recalls it to its duty, he insults it,
he clings to the rout. He is overwhelmed.
The soldiers fly from him, shouting, “Long live
Marshal Ney!” Two of Durutte’s regiments
go and come in affright as though tossed back and forth
between the swords of the Uhlans and the fusillade
of the brigades of Kempt, Best, Pack, and Rylandt;
the worst of hand-to-hand conflicts is the defeat;
friends kill each other in order to escape; squadrons
and battalions break and disperse against each other,
like the tremendous foam of battle. Lobau at
one extremity, and Reille at the other, are drawn into
the tide. In vain does Napoleon erect walls from
what is left to him of his Guard; in vain does he
expend in a last effort his last serviceable squadrons.
Quiot retreats before Vivian, Kellermann before Vandeleur,
Lobau before Bulow, Morand before Pirch, Domon and
Subervic before Prince William of Prussia; Guyot,
who led the Emperor’s squadrons to the charge,
falls beneath the feet of the English dragoons.
Napoleon gallops past the line of fugitives, harangues,
urges, threatens, entreats them. All the mouths
which in the morning had shouted, “Long live
the Emperor!” remain gaping; they hardly recognize
him. The Prussian cavalry, newly arrived, dashes
forwards, flies, hews, slashes, kills, exterminates.
Horses lash out, the cannons flee; the soldiers of
the artillery-train unharness the caissons and
use the horses to make their escape; transports overturned,
with all four wheels in the air, clog the road and
occasion massacres. Men are crushed, trampled
down, others walk over the dead and the living.
Arms are lost. A dizzy multitude fills the roads,
the paths, the bridges, the plains, the hills, the
valleys, the woods, encumbered by this invasion of
forty thousand men. Shouts despair, knapsacks
and guns flung among the rye, passages forced at the
point of the sword, no more comrades, no more officers,
no more generals, an inexpressible terror. Zieten
putting France to the sword at its leisure. Lions
converted into goats. Such was the flight.
At Genappe, an effort was made to
wheel about, to present a battle front, to draw up
in line. Lobau rallied three hundred men.
The entrance to the village was barricaded, but at
the first volley of Prussian canister, all took to
flight again, and Lobau was taken. That volley
of grape-shot can be seen to-day imprinted on the
ancient gable of a brick building on the right of
the road at a few minutes’ distance before you
enter Genappe. The Prussians threw themselves
into Genappe, furious, no doubt, that they were not
more entirely the conquerors. The pursuit was
stupendous. Blucher ordered extermination.
Roguet had set the lugubrious example of threatening
with death any French grenadier who should bring him
a Prussian prisoner. Blucher outdid Roguet.
Duhesme, the general of the Young Guard, hemmed in
at the doorway of an inn at Genappe, surrendered his
sword to a huzzar of death, who took the sword and
slew the prisoner. The victory was completed
by the assassination of the vanquished. Let us
inflict punishment, since we are history: old
Blucher disgraced himself. This ferocity put the
finishing touch to the disaster. The desperate
route traversed Genappe, traversed Quatre-Bras, traversed
Gosselies, traversed Frasnes, traversed Charleroi,
traversed Thuin, and only halted at the frontier.
Alas! and who, then, was fleeing in that manner?
The Grand Army.
This vertigo, this terror, this downfall
into ruin of the loftiest bravery which ever astounded
history, is that causeless? No.
The shadow of an enormous right is projected athwart
Waterloo. It is the day of destiny. The
force which is mightier than man produced that day.
Hence the terrified wrinkle of those brows; hence
all those great souls surrendering their swords.
Those who had conquered Europe have fallen prone on
the earth, with nothing left to say nor to do, feeling
the present shadow of a terrible presence. Hoc
erat in fatis. That day the perspective of the
human race underwent a change. Waterloo is the
hinge of the nineteenth century. The disappearance
of the great man was necessary to the advent of the
great century. Some one, a person to whom one
replies not, took the responsibility on himself.
The panic of heroes can be explained. In the
battle of Waterloo there is something more than a
cloud, there is something of the meteor. God has
passed by.
At nightfall, in a meadow near Genappe,
Bernard and Bertrand seized by the skirt of his coat
and detained a man, haggard, pensive, sinister, gloomy,
who, dragged to that point by the current of the rout,
had just dismounted, had passed the bridle of his
horse over his arm, and with wild eye was returning
alone to Waterloo. It was Napoleon, the immense
somnambulist of this dream which had crumbled, essaying
once more to advance.
Chapter XIV
the last square
Several squares of the Guard, motionless
amid this stream of the defeat, as rocks in running
water, held their own until night. Night came,
death also; they awaited that double shadow, and, invincible,
allowed themselves to be enveloped therein. Each
regiment, isolated from the rest, and having no bond
with the army, now shattered in every part, died alone.
They had taken up position for this final action, some
on the heights of Rossomme, others on the plain of
Mont-Saint-Jean. There, abandoned, vanquished,
terrible, those gloomy squares endured their death-throes
in formidable fashion. Ulm, Wagram, Jena, Friedland,
died with them.
At twilight, towards nine o’clock
in the evening, one of them was left at the foot of
the plateau of Mont-Saint-Jean. In that fatal
valley, at the foot of that declivity which the cuirassiers
had ascended, now inundated by the masses of the English,
under the converging fires of the victorious hostile
cavalry, under a frightful density of projectiles,
this square fought on. It was commanded by an
obscure officer named Cambronne. At each discharge,
the square diminished and replied. It replied
to the grape-shot with a fusillade, continually contracting
its four walls. The fugitives pausing breathless
for a moment in the distance, listened in the darkness
to that gloomy and ever-decreasing thunder.
When this legion had been reduced
to a handful, when nothing was left of their flag
but a rag, when their guns, the bullets all gone, were
no longer anything but clubs, when the heap of corpses
was larger than the group of survivors, there reigned
among the conquerors, around those men dying so sublimely,
a sort of sacred terror, and the English artillery,
taking breath, became silent. This furnished a
sort of respite. These combatants had around
them something in the nature of a swarm of spectres,
silhouettes of men on horseback, the black profiles
of cannon, the white sky viewed through wheels and
gun-carriages, the colossal death’s-head, which
the heroes saw constantly through the smoke, in the
depths of the battle, advanced upon them and gazed
at them. Through the shades of twilight they
could hear the pieces being loaded; the matches all
lighted, like the eyes of tigers at night, formed a
circle round their heads; all the lintstocks of the
English batteries approached the cannons, and then,
with emotion, holding the supreme moment suspended
above these men, an English general, Colville according
to some, Maitland according to others, shouted to
them, “Surrender, brave Frenchmen!” Cambronne
replied, “-----.”
Chapter XV
Cambronne
If any French reader object to having
his susceptibilities offended, one would have to refrain
from repeating in his presence what is perhaps the
finest reply that a Frenchman ever made. This
would enjoin us from consigning something sublime
to History.
At our own risk and peril, let us
violate this injunction.
Now, then, among those giants there
was one Titan, Cambronne.
To make that reply and then perish,
what could be grander? For being willing to die
is the same as to die; and it was not this man’s
fault if he survived after he was shot.
The winner of the battle of Waterloo
was not Napoleon, who was put to flight; nor Wellington,
giving way at four o’clock, in despair at five;
nor Blucher, who took no part in the engagement.
The winner of Waterloo was Cambronne.
To thunder forth such a reply at the
lightning-flash that kills you is to conquer!
Thus to answer the Catastrophe, thus
to speak to Fate, to give this pedestal to the future
lion, to hurl such a challenge to the midnight rainstorm,
to the treacherous wall of Hougomont, to the sunken
road of Ohain, to Grouchy’s delay, to Blucher’s
arrival, to be Irony itself in the tomb, to act so
as to stand upright though fallen, to drown in two
syllables the European coalition, to offer kings privies
which the Caesars once knew, to make the lowest of
words the most lofty by entwining with it the glory
of France, insolently to end Waterloo with Mardigras,
to finish Leonidas with Rabellais, to set the crown
on this victory by a word impossible to speak, to
lose the field and preserve history, to have the laugh
on your side after such a carnage, this
is immense!
It was an insult such as a thunder-cloud
might hurl! It reaches the grandeur of AEschylus!
Cambronne’s reply produces the
effect of a violent break. ’Tis like the
breaking of a heart under a weight of scorn. ’Tis
the overflow of agony bursting forth. Who conquered?
Wellington? No! Had it not been for Blucher,
he was lost. Was it Blucher? No! If
Wellington had not begun, Blucher could not have finished.
This Cambronne, this man spending his last hour, this
unknown soldier, this infinitesimal of war, realizes
that here is a falsehood, a falsehood in a catastrophe,
and so doubly agonizing; and at the moment when his
rage is bursting forth because of it, he is offered
this mockery, life! How could he restrain
himself? Yonder are all the kings of Europe,
the general’s flushed with victory, the Jupiter’s
darting thunderbolts; they have a hundred thousand
victorious soldiers, and back of the hundred thousand
a million; their cannon stand with yawning mouths,
the match is lighted; they grind down under their
heels the Imperial guards, and the grand army; they
have just crushed Napoleon, and only Cambronne remains, only
this earthworm is left to protest. He will protest.
Then he seeks for the appropriate word as one seeks
for a sword. His mouth froths, and the froth is
the word. In face of this mean and mighty victory,
in face of this victory which counts none victorious,
this desperate soldier stands erect. He grants
its overwhelming immensity, but he establishes its
triviality; and he does more than spit upon it.
Borne down by numbers, by superior force, by brute
matter, he finds in his soul an expression: “Excrement!”
We repeat it, to use that word, to do thus,
to invent such an expression, is to be the conqueror!
The spirit of mighty days at that
portentous moment made its descent on that unknown
man. Cambronne invents the word for Waterloo as
Rouget invents the “Marseillaise,” under
the visitation of a breath from on high. An emanation
from the divine whirlwind leaps forth and comes sweeping
over these men, and they shake, and one of them sings
the song supreme, and the other utters the frightful
cry.
This challenge of titanic scorn Cambronne
hurls not only at Europe in the name of the Empire, that
would be a trifle: he hurls it at the past in
the name of the Revolution. It is heard, and Cambronne
is recognized as possessed by the ancient spirit of
the Titans. Danton seems to be speaking!
Kleber seems to be bellowing!
At that word from Cambronne, the English
voice responded, “Fire!” The batteries
flamed, the hill trembled, from all those brazen mouths
belched a last terrible gush of grape-shot; a vast
volume of smoke, vaguely white in the light of the
rising moon, rolled out, and when the smoke dispersed,
there was no longer anything there. That formidable
remnant had been annihilated; the Guard was dead.
The four walls of the living redoubt lay prone, and
hardly was there discernible, here and there, even
a quiver in the bodies; it was thus that the French
legions, greater than the Roman legions, expired on
Mont-Saint-Jean, on the soil watered with rain and
blood, amid the gloomy grain, on the spot where nowadays
Joseph, who drives the post-wagon from Nivelles, passes
whistling, and cheerfully whipping up his horse at
four o’clock in the morning.
Chapter XVI
quot libras in Duce?
The battle of Waterloo is an enigma.
It is as obscure to those who won it as to those who
lost it. For Napoleon it was a panic; Blucher
sees nothing in it but fire; Wellington understands
nothing in regard to it. Look at the reports.
The bulletins are confused, the commentaries involved.
Some stammer, others lisp. Jomini divides the
battle of Waterloo into four moments; Muffling cuts
it up into three changes; Charras alone, though we
hold another judgment than his on some points, seized
with his haughty glance the characteristic outlines
of that catastrophe of human genius in conflict with
divine chance. All the other historians suffer
from being somewhat dazzled, and in this dazzled state
they fumble about. It was a day of lightning brilliancy;
in fact, a crumbling of the military monarchy which,
to the vast stupefaction of kings, drew all the kingdoms
after it the fall of force, the defeat of
war.
In this event, stamped with superhuman
necessity, the part played by men amounts to nothing.
If we take Waterloo from Wellington
and Blucher, do we thereby deprive England and Germany
of anything? No. Neither that illustrious
England nor that august Germany enter into the problem
of Waterloo. Thank Heaven, nations are great,
independently of the lugubrious feats of the sword.
Neither England, nor Germany, nor France is contained
in a scabbard. At this epoch when Waterloo is
only a clashing of swords, above Blucher, Germany
has Schiller; above Wellington, England has Byron.
A vast dawn of ideas is the peculiarity of our century,
and in that aurora England and Germany have a magnificent
radiance. They are majestic because they think.
The elevation of level which they contribute to civilization
is intrinsic with them; it proceeds from themselves
and not from an accident. The aggrandizement which
they have brought to the nineteenth century has not
Waterloo as its source. It is only barbarous
peoples who undergo rapid growth after a victory.
That is the temporary vanity of torrents swelled by
a storm. Civilized people, especially in our
day, are neither elevated nor abased by the good or
bad fortune of a captain. Their specific gravity
in the human species results from something more than
a combat. Their honor, thank God! their dignity,
their intelligence, their genius, are not numbers which
those gamblers, heroes and conquerors, can put in
the lottery of battles. Often a battle is lost
and progress is conquered. There is less glory
and more liberty. The drum holds its peace; reason
takes the word. It is a game in which he who
loses wins. Let us, therefore, speak of Waterloo
coldly from both sides. Let us render to chance
that which is due to chance, and to God that which
is due to God. What is Waterloo? A victory?
No. The winning number in the lottery.
The quine won by Europe, paid by France.
It was not worth while to place a lion there.
Waterloo, moreover, is the strangest
encounter in history. Napoleon and Wellington.
They are not enemies; they are opposites. Never
did God, who is fond of antithèses, make a more
striking contrast, a more extraordinary comparison.
On one side, precision, foresight, geometry, prudence,
an assured retreat, reserves spared, with an obstinate
coolness, an imperturbable method, strategy, which
takes advantage of the ground, tactics, which preserve
the equilibrium of battalions, carnage, executed according
to rule, war regulated, watch in hand, nothing voluntarily
left to chance, the ancient classic courage, absolute
regularity; on the other, intuition, divination, military
oddity, superhuman instinct, a flaming glance, an indescribable
something which gazes like an eagle, and which strikes
like the lightning, a prodigious art in disdainful
impetuosity, all the mysteries of a profound soul,
associated with destiny; the stream, the plain, the
forest, the hill, summoned, and in a manner, forced
to obey, the despot going even so far as to tyrannize
over the field of battle; faith in a star mingled
with strategic science, elevating but perturbing it.
Wellington was the Barème of war; Napoleon was
its Michael Angelo; and on this occasion, genius was
vanquished by calculation. On both sides some
one was awaited. It was the exact calculator who
succeeded. Napoleon was waiting for Grouchy;
he did not come. Wellington expected Blucher;
he came.
Wellington is classic war taking its
revenge. Bonaparte, at his dawning, had encountered
him in Italy, and beaten him superbly. The old
owl had fled before the young vulture. The old
tactics had been not only struck as by lightning,
but disgraced. Who was that Corsican of six and
twenty? What signified that splendid ignoramus,
who, with everything against him, nothing in his favor,
without provisions, without ammunition, without cannon,
without shoes, almost without an army, with a mere
handful of men against masses, hurled himself on Europe
combined, and absurdly won victories in the impossible?
Whence had issued that fulminating convict, who almost
without taking breath, and with the same set of combatants
in hand, pulverized, one after the other, the five
armies of the emperor of Germany, upsetting Beaulieu
on Alvinzi, Wurmser on Beaulieu, Melas on Wurmser,
Mack on Melas? Who was this novice in war
with the effrontery of a luminary? The academical
military school excommunicated him, and as it lost
its footing; hence, the implacable rancor of the old
Caesarism against the new; of the regular sword against
the flaming sword; and of the exchequer against genius.
On the 18th of June, 1815, that rancor had the last
word. and beneath Lodi, Montebello, Montenotte, Mantua,
Arcola, it wrote: Waterloo. A triumph of
the médiocres which is sweet to the majority.
Destiny consented to this irony. In his decline,
Napoleon found Wurmser, the younger, again in front
of him.
In fact, to get Wurmser, it sufficed
to blanch the hair of Wellington.
Waterloo is a battle of the first
order, won by a captain of the second.
That which must be admired in the
battle of Waterloo, is England; the English firmness,
the English resolution, the English blood; the superb
thing about England there, no offence to her, was herself.
It was not her captain; it was her army.
Wellington, oddly ungrateful, declares
in a letter to Lord Bathurst, that his army, the army
which fought on the 18th of June, 1815, was a “detestable
army.” What does that sombre intermingling
of bones buried beneath the furrows of Waterloo think
of that?
England has been too modest in the
matter of Wellington. To make Wellington so great
is to belittle England. Wellington is nothing
but a hero like many another. Those Scotch Grays,
those Horse Guards, those regiments of Maitland and
of Mitchell, that infantry of Pack and Kempt, that
cavalry of Ponsonby and Somerset, those Highlanders
playing the pibroch under the shower of grape-shot,
those battalions of Rylandt, those utterly raw recruits,
who hardly knew how to handle a musket holding their
own against Essling’s and Rivoli’s old
troops, that is what was grand. Wellington
was tenacious; in that lay his merit, and we are not
seeking to lessen it: but the least of his foot-soldiers
and of his cavalry would have been as solid as he.
The iron soldier is worth as much as the Iron Duke.
As for us, all our glorification goes to the English
soldier, to the English army, to the English people.
If trophy there be, it is to England that the trophy
is due. The column of Waterloo would be more
just, if, instead of the figure of a man, it bore
on high the statue of a people.
But this great England will be angry
at what we are saying here. She still cherishes,
after her own 1688 and our 1789, the feudal illusion.
She believes in heredity and hierarchy. This people,
surpassed by none in power and glory, regards itself
as a nation, and not as a people. And as a people,
it willingly subordinates itself and takes a lord for
its head. As a workman, it allows itself to be
disdained; as a soldier, it allows itself to be flogged.
It will be remembered, that at the
battle of Inkermann a sergeant who had, it appears,
saved the army, could not be mentioned by Lord Paglan,
as the English military hierarchy does not permit any
hero below the grade of an officer to be mentioned
in the reports.
That which we admire above all, in
an encounter of the nature of Waterloo, is the marvellous
cleverness of chance. A nocturnal rain, the wall
of Hougomont, the hollow road of Ohain, Grouchy deaf
to the cannon, Napoleon’s guide deceiving him,
Bulow’s guide enlightening him, the
whole of this cataclysm is wonderfully conducted.
On the whole, let us say it plainly,
it was more of a massacre than of a battle at Waterloo.
Of all pitched battles, Waterloo is
the one which has the smallest front for such a number
of combatants. Napoleon three-quarters of a league;
Wellington, half a league; seventy-two thousand combatants
on each side. From this denseness the carnage
arose.
The following calculation has been
made, and the following proportion established:
Loss of men: at Austerlitz, French, fourteen per
cent; Russians, thirty per cent; Austrians, forty-four
per cent. At Wagram, French, thirteen per cent;
Austrians, fourteen. At the Moskowa, French,
thirty-seven per cent; Russians, forty-four. At
Bautzen, French, thirteen per cent; Russians and Prussians,
fourteen. At Waterloo, French, fifty-six per
cent; the Allies, thirty-one. Total for Waterloo,
forty-one per cent; one hundred and forty-four thousand
combatants; sixty thousand dead.
To-day the field of Waterloo has the
calm which belongs to the earth, the impassive support
of man, and it resembles all plains.
At night, moreover, a sort of visionary
mist arises from it; and if a traveller strolls there,
if he listens, if he watches, if he dreams like Virgil
in the fatal plains of Philippi, the hallucination
of the catastrophe takes possession of him. The
frightful 18th of June lives again; the false monumental
hillock disappears, the lion vanishes in air, the
battle-field resumes its reality, lines of infantry
undulate over the plain, furious gallops traverse
the horizon; the frightened dreamer beholds the flash
of sabres, the gleam of bayonets, the flare of bombs,
the tremendous interchange of thunders; he hears, as
it were, the death rattle in the depths of a tomb,
the vague clamor of the battle phantom; those shadows
are grenadiers, those lights are cuirassiers;
that skeleton Napoleon, that other skeleton is Wellington;
all this no longer exists, and yet it clashes together
and combats still; and the ravines are empurpled,
and the trees quiver, and there is fury even in the
clouds and in the shadows; all those terrible heights,
Hougomont, Mont-Saint-Jean, Frischemont, Papelotte,
Plancenoit, appear confusedly crowned with whirlwinds
of spectres engaged in exterminating each other.
Chapter XVII
is Waterloo to be considered
good?
There exists a very respectable liberal
school which does not hate Waterloo. We do not
belong to it. To us, Waterloo is but the stupefied
date of liberty. That such an eagle should emerge
from such an egg is certainly unexpected.
If one places one’s self at
the culminating point of view of the question, Waterloo
is intentionally a counter-revolutionary victory.
It is Europe against France; it is Petersburg, Berlin,
and Vienna against Paris; it is the statu quo against
the initiative; it is the 14th of July, 1789, attacked
through the 20th of March, 1815; it is the monarchies
clearing the decks in opposition to the indomitable
French rioting. The final extinction of that
vast people which had been in eruption for twenty-six
years such was the dream. The solidarity
of the Brunswicks, the Nassaus, the Romanoffs, the
Hohenzollerns, the Hapsburgs with the Bourbons.
Waterloo bears divine right on its crupper. It
is true, that the Empire having been despotic, the
kingdom by the natural reaction of things, was forced
to be liberal, and that a constitutional order was
the unwilling result of Waterloo, to the great regret
of the conquerors. It is because revolution cannot
be really conquered, and that being providential and
absolutely fatal, it is always cropping up afresh:
before Waterloo, in Bonaparte overthrowing the old
thrones; after Waterloo, in Louis XVIII. granting
and conforming to the charter. Bonaparte places
a postilion on the throne of Naples, and a sergeant
on the throne of Sweden, employing inequality to demonstrate
equality; Louis XVIII. at Saint-Ouen countersigns
the declaration of the rights of man. If you
wish to gain an idea of what revolution is, call it
Progress; and if you wish to acquire an idea of the
nature of progress, call it To-morrow. To-morrow
fulfils its work irresistibly, and it is already fulfilling
it to-day. It always reaches its goal strangely.
It employs Wellington to make of Foy, who was only
a soldier, an orator. Foy falls at Hougomont
and rises again in the tribune. Thus does progress
proceed. There is no such thing as a bad tool
for that workman. It does not become disconcerted,
but adjusts to its divine work the man who has bestridden
the Alps, and the good old tottering invalid of Father
Elysee. It makes use of the gouty man as well
as of the conqueror; of the conqueror without, of
the gouty man within. Waterloo, by cutting short
the demolition of European thrones by the sword, had
no other effect than to cause the revolutionary work
to be continued in another direction. The slashers
have finished; it was the turn of the thinkers.
The century that Waterloo was intended to arrest has
pursued its march. That sinister victory was
vanquished by liberty.
In short, and incontestably, that
which triumphed at Waterloo; that which smiled in
Wellington’s rear; that which brought him all
the marshals’ staffs of Europe, including, it
is said, the staff of a marshal of France; that which
joyously trundled the barrows full of bones to erect
the knoll of the lion; that which triumphantly inscribed
on that pedestal the date “June 18, 1815”;
that which encouraged Blucher, as he put the flying
army to the sword; that which, from the heights of
the plateau of Mont-Saint-Jean, hovered over France
as over its prey, was the counter-revolution.
It was the counter-revolution which murmured that
infamous word “dismemberment.” On
arriving in Paris, it beheld the crater close at hand;
it felt those ashes which scorched its feet, and it
changed its mind; it returned to the stammer of a
charter.
Let us behold in Waterloo only that
which is in Waterloo. Of intentional liberty
there is none. The counter-revolution was involuntarily
liberal, in the same manner as, by a corresponding
phenomenon, Napoleon was involuntarily revolutionary.
On the 18th of June, 1815, the mounted Robespierre
was hurled from his saddle.
Chapter XVIII
A recrudescence of divine right
End of the dictatorship. A whole European system
crumbled away.
The Empire sank into a gloom which
resembled that of the Roman world as it expired.
Again we behold the abyss, as in the days of the barbarians;
only the barbarism of 1815, which must be called by
its pet name of the counter-revolution, was not long
breathed, soon fell to panting, and halted short.
The Empire was bewept, let us acknowledge
the fact, and bewept by heroic eyes.
If glory lies in the sword converted into a sceptre,
the Empire had been glory in person. It had diffused
over the earth all the light which tyranny can give
a sombre light. We will say more; an obscure
light. Compared to the true daylight, it is night.
This disappearance of night produces the effect of
an eclipse.
Louis XVIII. re-entered Paris.
The circling dances of the 8th of July effaced the
enthusiasms of the 20th of March. The Corsican
became the antithesis of the Bearnese. The flag
on the dome of the Tuileries was white. The exile
reigned. Hartwell’s pine table took its
place in front of the fleur-de-lys-strewn
throne of Louis XIV. Bouvines and Fontenoy were
mentioned as though they had taken place on the preceding
day, Austerlitz having become antiquated. The
altar and the throne fraternized majestically.
One of the most undisputed forms of the health of
society in the nineteenth century was established over
France, and over the continent. Europe adopted
the white cockade. Trestaillon was celebrated.
The device non pluribus impar re-appeared on the
stone rays representing a sun upon the front of the
barracks on the Quai d’Orsay.
Where there had been an Imperial Guard, there was now
a red house. The Arc du Carrousel, all laden
with badly borne victories, thrown out of its element
among these novelties, a little ashamed, it may be,
of Marengo and Arcola, extricated itself from its
predicament with the statue of the Duc d’Angoulême.
The cemetery of the Madeleine, a terrible pauper’s
grave in 1793, was covered with jasper and marble,
since the bones of Louis XVI. and Marie Antoinette
lay in that dust.
In the moat of Vincennes a sepulchral
shaft sprang from the earth, recalling the fact that
the Duc d’Enghien had perished in the very
month when Napoleon was crowned. Pope Pius vii.,
who had performed the coronation very near this death,
tranquilly bestowed his blessing on the fall as he
had bestowed it on the elevation. At Schoenbrunn
there was a little shadow, aged four, whom it was
seditious to call the King of Rome. And these
things took place, and the kings resumed their thrones,
and the master of Europe was put in a cage, and the
old regime became the new regime, and all the shadows
and all the light of the earth changed place, because,
on the afternoon of a certain summer’s day, a
shepherd said to a Prussian in the forest, “Go
this way, and not that!”
This 1815 was a sort of lugubrious
April. Ancient unhealthy and poisonous realities
were covered with new appearances. A lie wedded
1789; the right divine was masked under a charter;
fictions became constitutional; prejudices, superstitions
and mental reservations, with Article 14 in the heart,
were varnished over with liberalism. It was the
serpent’s change of skin.
Man had been rendered both greater
and smaller by Napoleon. Under this reign of
splendid matter, the ideal had received the strange
name of ideology! It is a grave imprudence in
a great man to turn the future into derision.
The populace, however, that food for cannon which is
so fond of the cannoneer, sought him with its glance.
Where is he? What is he doing? “Napoleon
is dead,” said a passer-by to a veteran of Marengo
and Waterloo. “He dead!” cried the
soldier; “you don’t know him.”
Imagination distrusted this man, even when overthrown.
The depths of Europe were full of darkness after Waterloo.
Something enormous remained long empty through Napoleon’s
disappearance.
The kings placed themselves in this
void. Ancient Europe profited by it to undertake
reforms. There was a Holy Alliance; Belle-Alliance,
Beautiful Alliance, the fatal field of Waterloo had
said in advance.
In presence and in face of that antique
Europe reconstructed, the features of a new France
were sketched out. The future, which the Emperor
had rallied, made its entry. On its brow it bore
the star, Liberty. The glowing eyes of all young
generations were turned on it. Singular fact!
people were, at one and the same time, in love with
the future, Liberty, and the past, Napoleon. Defeat
had rendered the vanquished greater. Bonaparte
fallen seemed more lofty than Napoleon erect.
Those who had triumphed were alarmed. England
had him guarded by Hudson Lowe, and France had him
watched by Montchenu. His folded arms became
a source of uneasiness to thrones. Alexander called
him “my sleeplessness.” This terror
was the result of the quantity of revolution which
was contained in him. That is what explains and
excuses Bonapartist liberalism. This phantom
caused the old world to tremble. The kings reigned,
but ill at their ease, with the rock of Saint Helena
on the horizon.
While Napoleon was passing through
the death struggle at Longwood, the sixty thousand
men who had fallen on the field of Waterloo were quietly
rotting, and something of their peace was shed abroad
over the world. The Congress of Vienna made the
treaties in 1815, and Europe called this the Restoration.
This is what Waterloo was.
But what matters it to the Infinite?
all that tempest, all that cloud, that war, then that
peace? All that darkness did not trouble for a
moment the light of that immense Eye before which a
grub skipping from one blade of grass to another equals
the eagle soaring from belfry to belfry on the towers
of Notre Dame.
Chapter XIX
the battle-field at night
Let us return it is a necessity
in this book to that fatal battle-field.
On the 18th of June the moon was full.
Its light favored Blucher’s ferocious pursuit,
betrayed the traces of the fugitives, delivered up
that disastrous mass to the eager Prussian cavalry,
and aided the massacre. Such tragic favors of
the night do occur sometimes during catastrophes.
After the last cannon-shot had been
fired, the plain of Mont-Saint-Jean remained deserted.
The English occupied the encampment
of the French; it is the usual sign of victory to
sleep in the bed of the vanquished. They established
their bivouac beyond Rossomme. The Prussians,
let loose on the retreating rout, pushed forward.
Wellington went to the village of Waterloo to draw
up his report to Lord Bathurst.
If ever the sic vos non
vobis was applicable, it certainly is to that village
of Waterloo. Waterloo took no part, and lay half
a league from the scene of action. Mont-Saint-Jean
was cannonaded, Hougomont was burned, La Haie-Sainte
was taken by assault, Papelotte was burned, Plancenoit
was burned, La Belle-Alliance beheld the embrace of
the two conquerors; these names are hardly known,
and Waterloo, which worked not in the battle, bears
off all the honor.
We are not of the number of those
who flatter war; when the occasion presents itself,
we tell the truth about it. War has frightful
beauties which we have not concealed; it has also,
we acknowledge, some hideous features. One of
the most surprising is the prompt stripping of the
bodies of the dead after the victory. The dawn
which follows a battle always rises on naked corpses.
Who does this? Who thus soils
the triumph? What hideous, furtive hand is that
which is slipped into the pocket of victory? What
pickpockets are they who ply their trade in the
rear of glory? Some philosophers Voltaire
among the number affirm that it is precisely
those persons have made the glory. It is the same
men, they say; there is no relief corps; those who
are erect pillage those who are prone on the earth.
The hero of the day is the vampire of the night.
One has assuredly the right, after all, to strip a
corpse a bit when one is the author of that corpse.
For our own part, we do not think so; it seems to
us impossible that the same hand should pluck laurels
and purloin the shoes from a dead man.
One thing is certain, which is, that
generally after conquerors follow thieves. But
let us leave the soldier, especially the contemporary
soldier, out of the question.
Every army has a rear-guard, and it
is that which must be blamed. Bat-like creatures,
half brigands and lackeys; all the sorts of vespertillos
that that twilight called war engenders; wearers of
uniforms, who take no part in the fighting; pretended
invalids; formidable limpers; interloping sutlers,
trotting along in little carts, sometimes accompanied
by their wives, and stealing things which they sell
again; beggars offering themselves as guides to officers;
soldiers’ servants; marauders; armies on the
march in days gone by, we are not speaking
of the present, dragged all this behind
them, so that in the special language they are called
“stragglers.” No army, no nation,
was responsible for those beings; they spoke Italian
and followed the Germans, then spoke French and followed
the English. It was by one of these wretches,
a Spanish straggler who spoke French, that the Marquis
of Fervacques, deceived by his Picard jargon, and taking
him for one of our own men, was traitorously slain
and robbed on the battle-field itself, in the course
of the night which followed the victory of Cerisoles.
The rascal sprang from this marauding. The detestable
maxim, Live on the enemy! produced this leprosy, which
a strict discipline alone could heal. There are
reputations which are deceptive; one does not always
know why certain generals, great in other directions,
have been so popular. Turenne was adored by his
soldiers because he tolerated pillage; evil permitted
constitutes part of goodness. Turenne was so
good that he allowed the Palatinate to be delivered
over to fire and blood. The marauders in the
train of an army were more or less in number, according
as the chief was more or less severe. Hoche and
Marceau had no stragglers; Wellington had few, and
we do him the justice to mention it.
Nevertheless, on the night from the
18th to the 19th of June, the dead were robbed.
Wellington was rigid; he gave orders that any one caught
in the act should be shot; but rapine is tenacious.
The marauders stole in one corner of the battlefield
while others were being shot in another.
The moon was sinister over this plain.
Towards midnight, a man was prowling
about, or rather, climbing in the direction of the
hollow road of Ohain. To all appearance he was
one of those whom we have just described, neither
English nor French, neither peasant nor soldier, less
a man than a ghoul attracted by the scent of the dead
bodies having theft for his victory, and come to rifle
Waterloo. He was clad in a blouse that was something
like a great coat; he was uneasy and audacious; he
walked forwards and gazed behind him. Who was
this man? The night probably knew more of him
than the day. He had no sack, but evidently he
had large pockets under his coat. From time to
time he halted, scrutinized the plain around him as
though to see whether he were observed, bent over
abruptly, disturbed something silent and motionless
on the ground, then rose and fled. His sliding
motion, his attitudes, his mysterious and rapid gestures,
caused him to resemble those twilight larvae which
haunt ruins, and which ancient Norman legends call
the Alleurs.
Certain nocturnal wading birds produce
these silhouettes among the marshes.
A glance capable of piercing all that
mist deeply would have perceived at some distance
a sort of little sutler’s wagon with a fluted
wicker hood, harnessed to a famished nag which was
cropping the grass across its bit as it halted, hidden,
as it were, behind the hovel which adjoins the highway
to Nivelles, at the angle of the road from Mont-Saint-Jean
to Braine l’Alleud; and in the wagon, a sort
of woman seated on coffers and packages. Perhaps
there was some connection between that wagon and that
prowler.
The darkness was serene. Not
a cloud in the zenith. What matters it if the
earth be red! the moon remains white; these are the
indifférences of the sky. In the fields,
branches of trees broken by grape-shot, but not fallen,
upheld by their bark, swayed gently in the breeze of
night. A breath, almost a respiration, moved
the shrubbery. Quivers which resembled the departure
of souls ran through the grass.
In the distance the coming and going
of patrols and the general rounds of the English camp
were audible.
Hougomont and La Haie-Sainte
continued to burn, forming, one in the west, the other
in the east, two great flames which were joined by
the cordon of bivouac fires of the English, like a
necklace of rubies with two carbuncles at the extremities,
as they extended in an immense semicircle over the
hills along the horizon.
We have described the catastrophe
of the road of Ohain. The heart is terrified
at the thought of what that death must have been to
so many brave men.
If there is anything terrible, if
there exists a reality which surpasses dreams, it
is this: to live, to see the sun; to be in full
possession of virile force; to possess health and
joy; to laugh valiantly; to rush towards a glory which
one sees dazzling in front of one; to feel in one’s
breast lungs which breathe, a heart which beats, a
will which reasons; to speak, think, hope, love; to
have a mother, to have a wife, to have children; to
have the light and all at once, in the space
of a shout, in less than a minute, to sink into an
abyss; to fall, to roll, to crush, to be crushed;
to see ears of wheat, flowers, leaves, branches; not
to be able to catch hold of anything; to feel one’s
sword useless, men beneath one, horses on top of one;
to struggle in vain, since one’s bones have
been broken by some kick in the darkness; to feel
a heel which makes one’s eyes start from their
sockets; to bite horses’ shoes in one’s
rage; to stifle, to yell, to writhe; to be beneath,
and to say to one’s self, “But just a
little while ago I was a living man!”
There, where that lamentable disaster
had uttered its death-rattle, all was silence now.
The edges of the hollow road were encumbered with
horses and riders, inextricably heaped up. Terrible
entanglement! There was no longer any slope,
for the corpses had levelled the road with the plain,
and reached the brim like a well-filled bushel of barley.
A heap of dead bodies in the upper part, a river of
blood in the lower part such was that road
on the evening of the 18th of June, 1815. The
blood ran even to the Nivelles highway, and there overflowed
in a large pool in front of the abatis of trees which
barred the way, at a spot which is still pointed out.
It will be remembered that it was
at the opposite point, in the direction of the Genappe
road, that the destruction of the cuirassiers
had taken place. The thickness of the layer of
bodies was proportioned to the depth of the hollow
road. Towards the middle, at the point where
it became level, where Delort’s division had
passed, the layer of corpses was thinner.
The nocturnal prowler whom we have
just shown to the reader was going in that direction.
He was searching that vast tomb. He gazed about.
He passed the dead in some sort of hideous review.
He walked with his feet in the blood.
All at once he paused.
A few paces in front of him, in the
hollow road, at the point where the pile of dead came
to an end, an open hand, illumined by the moon, projected
from beneath that heap of men. That hand had on
its finger something sparkling, which was a ring of
gold.
The man bent over, remained in a crouching
attitude for a moment, and when he rose there was
no longer a ring on the hand.
He did not precisely rise; he remained
in a stooping and frightened attitude, with his back
turned to the heap of dead, scanning the horizon on
his knees, with the whole upper portion of his body
supported on his two forefingers, which rested on
the earth, and his head peering above the edge of
the hollow road. The jackal’s four paws
suit some actions.
Then coming to a decision, he rose to his feet.
At that moment, he gave a terrible
start. He felt some one clutch him from behind.
He wheeled round; it was the open
hand, which had closed, and had seized the skirt of
his coat.
An honest man would have been terrified;
this man burst into a laugh.
“Come,” said he, “it’s
only a dead body. I prefer a spook to a gendarme.”
But the hand weakened and released
him. Effort is quickly exhausted in the grave.
“Well now,” said the prowler,
“is that dead fellow alive? Let’s
see.”
He bent down again, fumbled among
the heap, pushed aside everything that was in his
way, seized the hand, grasped the arm, freed the head,
pulled out the body, and a few moments later he was
dragging the lifeless, or at least the unconscious,
man, through the shadows of hollow road. He was
a cuirassier, an officer, and even an officer of considerable
rank; a large gold epaulette peeped from beneath the
cuirass; this officer no longer possessed a helmet.
A furious sword-cut had scarred his face, where nothing
was discernible but blood.
However, he did not appear to have
any broken limbs, and, by some happy chance, if that
word is permissible here, the dead had been vaulted
above him in such a manner as to preserve him from
being crushed. His eyes were still closed.
On his cuirass he wore the silver
cross of the Legion of Honor.
The prowler tore off this cross, which
disappeared into one of the gulfs which he had beneath
his great coat.
Then he felt of the officer’s
fob, discovered a watch there, and took possession
of it. Next he searched his waistcoat, found a
purse and pocketed it.
When he had arrived at this stage
of succor which he was administering to this dying
man, the officer opened his eyes.
“Thanks,” he said feebly.
The abruptness of the movements of
the man who was manipulating him, the freshness of
the night, the air which he could inhale freely, had
roused him from his lethargy.
The prowler made no reply. He
raised his head. A sound of footsteps was audible
in the plain; some patrol was probably approaching.
The officer murmured, for the death
agony was still in his voice:
“Who won the battle?”
“The English,” answered the prowler.
The officer went on:
“Look in my pockets; you will find a watch and
a purse. Take them.”
It was already done.
The prowler executed the required feint, and said:
“There is nothing there.”
“I have been robbed,”
said the officer; “I am sorry for that.
You should have had them.”
The steps of the patrol became more and more distinct.
“Some one is coming,”
said the prowler, with the movement of a man who is
taking his departure.
The officer raised his arm feebly, and detained him.
“You have saved my life. Who are you?”
The prowler answered rapidly, and in a low voice:
“Like yourself, I belonged to
the French army. I must leave you. If they
were to catch me, they would shoot me. I have
saved your life. Now get out of the scrape yourself.”
“What is your rank?”
“Sergeant.”
“What is your name?”
“Thenardier.”
“I shall not forget that name,”
said the officer; “and do you remember mine.
My name is Pontmercy.”