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| Napoleon in 1806 Édouard Detaille (PD) |
Ney spoke gruffly, "Sire, I am concerned that you are dispatching the Guard tomorrow. That will signal to everyone in Europe that you will be traveling soon."
The Emperor sighed, put a battery of cannon to his front, give him a squadron of hussars, and Michel Ney would draw his saber and bellow the charge at the top of his lungs. But the peculiarities of tactics and strategy, particularly strategy, were well beyond his ken.
"My dear Maréchal, how long do you thing it will take for the Russians and Austrians to approach the frontier?"
"Certainly weeks, Sire, but ..."
"Where are the two armies which could conceivably march on Paris any day now?"
"Why Belgium of course, Blücher and his Prussians, then you've got Wellington and his mongrel army. But march on Paris? Not while the diplomats continue to squabble in Vienna."
"Ah Ney, you are a good soldier but you see, there is only one move available to me, one logical move, and that is to move north and attack Wellington and Blücher in their cantonments. While they might expect it, my spies have spread the word that I'm having trouble recruiting my cavalry up to strength, let alone properly mounting them. I let them think that my infantry is still being equipped and that my artillery is woefully inadequate. But they are duped, when we march it will be with a hundred and fifty thousand veteran troops and nearly 300 cannon."
"You said we, I thought I was to be left behind, that whole 'iron cage' thing, for which I apologize once again ..."
"Ney, Ney, Ney, your apology was accepted. I understand, you bet on what you thought was a sure thing. The might of France against my rag tag army of banditti marching up from the Mediterranean coast. I might have done the same. But the dice rolled one way and you came up short."
"Am I to accompany the army with you? And in what capacity I might ask."
"You march with my headquarters. I may have need of your sword at some point, you will be a spare marshal, if you will, if anything happens to Davout or Soult, I can throw you into command. The men know you, I'm not sure they fully trust you, but they do respect you. It's that or spend the campaign under house arrest. Your choice."
Ney bowed his head, he was desperate, he needed this. After all, the Bourbons had insulted his beloved wife, they had looked down on him, even referring to him as "that Alsatian brute" behind his back. Though he had thrown in his lot with Louis, he regretted it now, deeply.
"I will go where you command, Sire. Into Hell itself, if need be."
Napoléon laughed, "If we lose we may indeed see Hell, a firing squad at the very least. Now go, we march in the morning."
The Emperor opened his eyes well before dawn. He sat up and grimaced, his piles were acting up. Though the physicians had given him a salve, it smelled badly and didn't really relieve the pain. He was eating a very plain diet in the hope that by the time he had to take to his saddle, the piles might subside.
A sharp rap came on the outer door, he heard Ali respond. A moment later Ali was at his bedchamber.
"Sire, le Maréchal Berthier is here."
"Very well, send him in."
The Emperor ran his fingers through his hair, he hoped he looked somewhat presentable, but Berthier had seen him disheveled before and wouldn't say a word.
"Ah, Berthier, good morning. You have news for me I trust?"
"Yes Sire. Certain royalist officers have been, shall we say, relieved from their posts as of late last night. Général de Division Bourmont had already moved with his staff to the frontier. Unfortunately ..."
Berthier coughed and had to clear his throat.
"Bourmont was shot and killed by his own men as he was reconnoitering the area to the front of his division. The pickets were not informed and they assumed the general and his party were a Prussian cavalry patrol. A number of his staff were also killed and wounded."
"Ah, a shame," the Emperor's voice had a hint of glee in it.
He had been looking for a reason to get rid of Bourmont, but a number of people, important people, had vouched for the man. One of those who sang Bourmont's praises had been Fouché, whose body now lay moldering beneath the soil of the Forêt de Marly, alongside that of Talleyrand.
"Who will take 14th Division in his stead?" Napoléon asked, knowing the answer.
"The commander of the 1st Brigade, Général de Brigade Baron Etienne Hulot de Mazarny is very capable. However, Gérard has been making noises, he vouched for Bourmont and he is demanding an investigation."
"Well, now I have a job for Ney, recall Gérard to Paris at once, place him under house arrest for the time being. Write the orders, Ney is to have IV Corps. He should be able to handle that."
"Sire, it shall be done. Your carriage is ready, the headquarters is ready. The Guard is already on the roads north. The borders have been sealed and Paris itself has been placed under martial law for the time being. Maréchal St. Cyr has been given carte blanche to deal with any insurrectionists."
"Very well."
As Berthier left, Napoléon shouted, "Ali! Let's get a move on man! We march!"


Wellington's army was less mongrel than he'd hoped for. The Portuguese government had refused to send him troops; he'd hoped for those experienced fellows whom he respected. So he was left with an awful lot of boys just off the farms of Britain, Ireland, and the Low Countries and not many professionals. (I've heard this point made often enough but I don't think I've seen a citation of the proportion who were professional soldiers.)
ReplyDeleteMany of the men who had served with him in Spain were in the United States fighting the War of 1812 (or returning from there). He was left with a lot of young troops in both his own army and the armies of his allies, the Belgians, Dutch, and various small German principalities. The Portuguese can't be blamed for keeping their troops at home, why fight in Belgium for someone else?
Deleteinterestingly enough, Portugal did send some poor bloody infantry to die in the fields of Flanders in WW1...
DeleteIndeed they did.
DeleteWe Read!
ReplyDeleteWe write!
DeleteSarge, I am enjoying this far more than I have a right to. Well done!
ReplyDeleteGlad to hear that.
DeleteI looked at the header picture, the one with Napoleon's hand inside his coat and thought of old Bug Bunny cartoons. When they wanted to depict someone as crazy they them think they were Napoleon (with the hand in the coat), these days thinking you are someone you're not is no longer considered crazy. Odd isn't it?
ReplyDeleteMuch of what we grew up with in learning about Napoléon was British propaganda. For instance, the Emperor was of average height for that era, not short as the British depicted him. The hand in the coat thing? Not sure where that came from, though there are many stories surrounding that.
DeleteAs a British person I can say that British propaganda and influence ops backed by 'The Golden Cavalry of St George' were as much an instrument of war as the army and navy.
DeleteRetired
The hand in the coat thing. I’m betting on fleas. Discretely scratching because bathing was few and far between.
Deletejuvat
Retired - Excellent observation and you Brits were very good at it.
Deletejuvat - Who knows?
DeleteI too was wondering about the tummy scratching pose. I guess that just makes me another member of the unknowing.
DeleteVery good chapter., even with the strange names. I now recognize Ali (even though not Mohamed), and Berthier (disassociated from Mannlicher-) so some progress on the characters.
JB
Perhaps I am far too familiar with foreign names to feel your pain. Hang in there, at least we won't be doing Russian names in this tale.
Delete