FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   902   903   904   905   906   907   908   909   910   911   912   913   914   915   916   917   918   919   920   921   922   923   924   925   926  
927   928   929   930   931   932   933   934   935   936   937   938   939   940   >>  
hat might lead to immense consequences, if all went well.] [Footnote 498: Mueffling, "Passages," p. 238: Charras, vol. i., p. 226, discredits it.] [Footnote 499: Basil Jackson, _op. cit._, p. 24; Cotton, "A Voice from Waterloo," p. 20.] [Footnote 500: Grouchy suppressed this despatch, but it was published in 1842.] [Footnote 501: Mercer, vol. i., p. 270.] [Footnote 502: Petiet, "Souvenirs militaires," p. 204.] [Footnote 503: Ropes, pp. 212, 246, 359. I follow the "received" version of this despatch. For a comparison of it with the "Grouchy" version see Horsburgh, p. 155, note.] [Footnote 504: Ropes, pp. 266, 288; Houssaye, p. 316, with a good note.] [Footnote 505: Ollech, pp. 187-192; Delbrueck's "Gneisenau," vol. ii., p. 205. I cannot credit the story told by Hardinge in 1837 to Earl Stanhope ("Conversations," p. 110), that, on the night of the 16th June, Gneisenau sought to dissuade Bluecher from joining Wellington. Hardinge only had the story at second hand, and wrongly assigns it to Wavre. On the afternoon of the 17th Gneisenau ordered Ziethen _to keep open communications with Wellington_ (Ollech, p. 170). The story that Wellington rode over to Wavre on the night of the 18th on his horse "Copenhagen" is of course a myth.] [Footnote 506: "Blackwood's Magazine," October, 1896; "Cornhill," January, 1901.] [Footnote 507: Beamish's "King's German Legion," vol. ii., p. 352. Sir Hussey Vivian asserts that the allied position was by no means strong; but General Kennedy, in his "Notes on Waterloo" (p. 68), pronounces it "good and well occupied." A year previously Wellington noted it as a good position. Sir Hudson Lowe then suggested that it should be fortified: "Query, in respect to the construction of a work at Mt. Jean, being the commanding point at the junction of two principal chaussees" ("Unpublished Memoirs").] [Footnote 508: Wellington has been censured by Clausewitz, Kennedy and Chesney for leaving so large a force at Hal. Perhaps he desired to protect the King of France at Ghent, though he was surely relieved of responsibility by his despatch of June 18th, 3 a.m., begging the Duc de Berri to retire with the King to Antwerp. It seems to me more likely that he was so confident of an early advance of the Prussians (see his other despatch of the same hour and Sir A. Frazer's statement--"Letters," p. 553--"We expected the Prussian co-operation early in the day") as to assume that Napoleon would
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   902   903   904   905   906   907   908   909   910   911   912   913   914   915   916   917   918   919   920   921   922   923   924   925   926  
927   928   929   930   931   932   933   934   935   936   937   938   939   940   >>  



Top keywords:

Footnote

 

Wellington

 

despatch

 

Gneisenau

 

version

 

Hardinge

 

Kennedy

 
position
 
Ollech
 
Grouchy

Waterloo

 

fortified

 

suggested

 

Hudson

 

expected

 

Letters

 

statement

 

Frazer

 
respect
 

construction


Prussian

 

occupied

 

asserts

 
Vivian
 

allied

 

assume

 

Hussey

 

Napoleon

 
German
 

Legion


strong

 

pronounces

 

commanding

 

previously

 
General
 
operation
 

principal

 

desired

 

protect

 

France


Perhaps

 

begging

 

Antwerp

 

surely

 
relieved
 

responsibility

 

Beamish

 

Unpublished

 
Memoirs
 

chaussees