Life of Napoleon Bonaparte (Classic Reprint)

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Excerpt from Life of Napoleon Bonaparte

But the present was bad enough, and momentarily grew worse. The road was lined with charred ruins and devastated fields, and the waysides were dotted with groups of listless, desperate soldiers who fell out and sank on the ground as the straggling ranks of their comrades tramped on. Skirting the battle-field of Borodino, the marching battal ions looked askance on the ghastly heaps of unburied corpses; but the wounded survivors were dragged from field hospitals and other cav ernous Shelters to be carried onward with the departing army. They were a sight which in some cases turned melancholy into madness. In order to transport them the wagons were lightened by throwing the spoils Of Moscow into the pond at Semlino. On the thirtieth despatches of grave import reached the Emperor, informing him that Schwarzen berg had retreated behind the Bug, leaving an Open road from Brest for Tchitchagofi''s veterans to attack the right ?ank of the columns ?ying from Moscow. Victor, learning Of Napoleon''s straits, had left fifteen thousand men in Smolensk, and was advancing to join saint-cyr on the. Dwina in order to assure the safety of the main army from that Side. To him came the dismal news that Wittgenstein had resumed the offensive against saint-cyr, and that the line Of attack on the French left was as open from the north as was that on the other side from the south. Davout''s rear-guard was steadily disintegrating under hardships and before the harassing attacks of the Russian riders under Platofi. Partizan warfare was assuming alarming dimensions. In a Single swoop two thousand French recruits under Baraguey d''hilliers had been made prisoners, and Similar events were growing all too fre quent. In consequence of these crushing discouragements the whole army was rearrayed. We must march as we did in Egypt, ran the order: the baggage in the middle, as densely surrounded as the road will permit with a half battalion in front, a half battalion behind, battal ions right and left, so that when we face we can fire in every direction. Ney''s corps was then assigned to the place of danger in the rear - a place he kept with desperate gallantry until he earned the title brav est of the brave.

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This book is a reproduction of an important historical work. Forgotten Books uses state-of-the-art technology to digitally reconstruct the work, preserving the original format whilst repairing imperfections present in the aged copy. In rare cases, an imperfection in the original, such as a blemish or missing page, may be replicated in our edition. We do, however, repair the vast majority of imperfections successfully; any imperfections that remain are intentionally left to preserve the state of such historical works.

Details

Publisher - Forgotten Books

Language - English

Hardback

Contributors

Author

William Milligan Sloane


Published Date -

ISBN - 9780666703958

Dimensions - 22.9 x 15.2 x 2.5 cm

Page Count - 465

Paperback

Author(s) - William Milligan Sloane


Published Date -

ISBN - 9781331262497

Dimensions -

Page Count -

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