[Gutenberg 34400] • Napoleon's Marshals
- Authors
- Dunn-Pattison, R.P.
- Tags
- military -- 1789-1815 , marshals -- france -- biography , napoleon i , france -- history , 1769-1821 -- relations with marshals , emperor of the french
- Date
- 1996-09-11T00:00:00+00:00
- Size
- 1.08 MB
- Lang
- en
This book is an illustrated version of the original Napoleon's Marshals by R. P. Dunn-Pattison. It was a popular saying in the Napoleonic army that every private soldier carried in his knapsack a Marshal's bâton, and the early history of many of these Marshals bears out this saying. But while the Revolution carried away all the barriers and opened the highest ranks to talent, be it never so humble in its origin, the history of the Marshals proves that heaven-born soldiers are scarce, and that the art of war, save in the case of one out of a million, can only be acquired by years of patient work in a subordinate position. Of the generals of the revolutionary armies only four, Moreau, Mortier, Suchet, and Brune, had no previous military training, and of these four, Moreau and Suchet alone had claim to greatness. The rough unlettered generals of the early years of the war soon proved that they could never rise above the science of the drill-sergeant. Once discipline and organisation were restored there was no room for a general like the gallant Macard, who, when about to charge, used to call out, "Look here, I am going to dress like a beast," and thereon divest himself of everything save his leather breeches and boots, and then, like some great hairy baboon, with strange oaths and yells lead his horsemen against the enemy. A higher type was required than this Macard, who could not understand that because an officer could sketch mountains he could not necessarily measure a man for a pair of boots.