FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   450   451   452   453   454   455   456   457   458   459   460   461   462   463   464   465   466   467   468   469   470   471   472   473   474  
475   476   477   478   479   480   481   482   483   484   485   486   487   488   489   490   491   492   493   494   495   496   497   498   499   >>   >|  
g of senile vanity.] [Footnote 259: "Toll," vol. i., pp. 256 _et seq._ Mueffling was assured by Phull in 1819 that the Drissa plan was only part of a grander design which had never had a fair[*Scanner's note: fair is correct] chance!] [Footnote 260: Bernhardi's "Toll" (vol. i., p. 231) gives Barclay's chief "army of the west" as really mustering only 127,000 strong, along with 9,000 Cossacks; Bagration, with the second "army of the west," numbered at first only 35,000, with 4,000 Cossacks; while Tormasov's corps observing Galicia was about as strong. Clausewitz gives rather higher estimates.] [Footnote 261: Labaume, "Narrative of 1812," and Segur.] [Footnote 262: See the long letter of May 28th, 1812, to De Pradt; also the Duc de Broglie's "Memoirs" (vol. i., ch. iv.) for the hollowness of Napoleon's Polish policy. Bignon, "Souvenirs d'un Diplomate" (ch. xx.), errs in saying that Napoleon charged De Pradt--"Tout agiter, tout enflammer." At St. Helena, Napoleon said to Montholon ("Captivity," vol. iii., ch. iii.): "Poland and its resources were but poetry in the first months of the year 1812."] [Footnote 263: "Toll," vol. i., p. 239; Wilson, "Invasion of Russia," p. 384.] [Footnote 264: We may here also clear aside the statements of some writers who aver that Napoleon intended to strike at St. Petersburg. Perhaps he did so for a time. On July 9th he wrote at Vilna that he proposed to march _both on Moscow and St. Petersburg_. But that was while he still hoped that Davoust would entrap Bagration, and while Barclay's retreat on Drissa seemed likely to carry the war into the north. Napoleon always aimed first at the enemy's army; and Barclay's retreat from Drissa to Vitepsk, and thence to Smolensk, finally decided Napoleon's move towards Moscow. If he had any preconceived scheme--and he always regulated his moves by events rather than by a cast-iron plan--it was to strike at Moscow. At Dresden he said to De Pradt: "I must finish the war by the end of September.... I am going to Moscow: one or two battles will settle the business. I will burn Tula, and Russia will be at my feet. Moscow is the heart of that Empire. I will wage war with Polish blood." De Pradt's evidence is not wholly to be trusted; but I am convinced that Napoleon never seriously thought of taking 200,000 men to the barren tracts of North Russia late in the summer, while the English, Swedish, and Russian fleets were ready to worry his flank and
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   450   451   452   453   454   455   456   457   458   459   460   461   462   463   464   465   466   467   468   469   470   471   472   473   474  
475   476   477   478   479   480   481   482   483   484   485   486   487   488   489   490   491   492   493   494   495   496   497   498   499   >>   >|  



Top keywords:
Napoleon
 

Footnote

 

Moscow

 

Russia

 
Drissa
 

Barclay

 
Bagration
 

Cossacks

 
strike
 
retreat

Polish

 

Petersburg

 

strong

 

English

 

entrap

 
summer
 
tracts
 

barren

 

Vitepsk

 
Swedish

Perhaps

 

proposed

 

Smolensk

 

Davoust

 

Russian

 

fleets

 

September

 

finish

 
evidence
 
Empire

business

 
battles
 

settle

 

Dresden

 

taking

 

thought

 

preconceived

 
decided
 

scheme

 
regulated

events

 

wholly

 

trusted

 
convinced
 
finally
 

Poland

 

numbered

 

Tormasov

 

mustering

 

observing