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9780307275684

Warriors Portraits from the Battlefield

Warriors Portraits from the Battlefield
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  • ISBN-13: 9780307275684
  • ISBN: 030727568X
  • Publication Date: 2007
  • Publisher: Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group

AUTHOR

Hastings, Max

SUMMARY

BONAPARTE'S BLESSED FOOL THE WARS OF NAPOLEON produced a flowering of memoirs, both English and French, of extraordinary quality. Each writer's work reflects in full measure his national characteristics. None but a Frenchman, surely, could have written the following lines about his experience of conflict: "I may, I think, say without boasting that nature has allotted to me a fair share of courage; I will add that there was a time when I enjoyed being in danger, as my thirteen wounds and some distinguished services prove, I think, sufficiently." Baron Marcellin de Marbot was the model for Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's fictional Brigadier Gerard: brave, swashbuckling, incapable of introspection, glorying without inhibition in the experience of campaigning from Portugal to Russia in the service of his emperor. Marbot was the most eager of warriors, who shared with many of his French contemporaries a belief that there could be no higher calling than to follow Bonaparte to glory. Few modern readers could fail to respect the courage of a soldier who so often faced the fire of the enemy, through an active service career spanning more than forty years. And no Anglo-Saxon could withhold laughter at the peacock vanity and chauvinism of the hussar's account of the experience, rich in anecdotage and comedy, the latter often unintended. Jean-Baptiste-Antoine-Marcellin de Marbot was born in 1782 at Beaulieu in the Correze, son of a country gentleman of liberal inclinations who became a general in France's revolutionary army. With his round face and snub nose, the child Marcellin was known to his family as "the kitten," and for some years during the nation's revolutionary disorders attended a local girls' school. He was originally destined for a naval career, but a friend urged his father that life aboard a warship mouldering in some seaport under British blockade was no prospect for an ambitious youth. Instead, in 1799 a vacancy was procured for him in the hussars. The seventeen-year-old boy was delighted, and from the outset gloried in his new uniform. His father, however, was uneasy about his shyness, and for some time was prone to refer to his son in company as "Mademoiselle Marcellin"rich pickings there for a modern psychologist. In those days when every hussar was expected to display a moustache as part of his service dress, the beardless teenager at first painted whiskers on his face. Marbot met Bonaparte for the first time when accompanying his father to take up a posting with the army in Italy. They were amazed to encounter the hero of the Pyramids at Lyons, on his way back to Paris from Egypt, having abandoned his army to seek a throne, a quest to which General Marbot, a committed republican, declined to give his assistance. In Italy, young Marcellin won his spurs. Despatched with a patrol to seize Austrian prisoners, the sergeant in command professed sudden illness. The boy seized the opportunity and assumed leadership of the troop: "When . . . I took command of the fifty men who had come under my orders in such unusual circumstances, a mere trooper as I was and seventeen years old, I resolved to show my comrades that if I had not yet much experience or military talent, I at least possessed pluck. So I resolutely put myself at their head and marched on in what we knew was the direction of the enemy." Marbot's patrol surprised an Austrian unit, took the necessary prisoners, and returned in triumph to the French lines where their self-appointed commander was rewarded with promotion to sergeant, followed soon afterwards by a commission. He survived the terrible siege of Genoa, where his father died in his arms followiHastings, Max is the author of 'Warriors Portraits from the Battlefield', published 2007 under ISBN 9780307275684 and ISBN 030727568X.

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