Memory of Flames

Memory of Flames Read Online Free PDF

Book: Memory of Flames Read Online Free PDF
Author: Isabel Reid (Translator) Armand Cabasson
Tags: Historical
chasseurs deployed as skirmishers, overcoming and routing a series of Austrian units one by one and then pursuing the fleeing troops so that they crashed into the advancing enemy lines, throwing them into disarray. The enemy positions yielded one after another, collapsing like a line of dominoes. At one point Saber found himself at the head of the entire II Army Corps, which had earned him the nickname ‘Spearhead’. In January 1814 the miracle he had been waiting for had finally materialised: he was promoted to colonel and had obtained permission from his previous colonel to transfer his friends, if they agreed, to the regiment he was to command. So he had taken Margont, Piquebois and Lefine with him.
    Since then, however, he had become puffed up with monstrous pride. He had hardly arrived before he was bombarding his brigade general with advice. He wanted to reorganise everything,
    to promote some and demote others. The regimental regulations were unsatisfactory because of this, the cavalry were not up to standard because of that, they were not following the right routes, they were not aggressive enough, not warlike enough with the enemy, the food provisions were not worthy of the French army ... Realising that the general paid no attention to his advice, he declared him ‘an arrant incompetent and an imbecile’ and addressed himself instead to the general of the division, Duhesme. The latter found himself with a choice: if he kept Saber, all the other colonels and generals would ask to be transferred! It was him or the others
     
    Duhesme got rid of Saber - or rather persuaded him to leave - by dispatching him to the National Guard of Paris, under the pretext that he was very good at training men. Marshal Moncey, who was second in command of the National Guard and was constantly begging for experienced officers to drill his multitude of militiamen, greeted him with open arms. So, in the end, Saber commanded his regiment for only thirty-five days. General Duhesme sent all Saber’s friends with him.
    Margont wanted to cut quickly through the disorganised crowd, but his appearance caused a stir and soon he was surrounded. News! Everyone wanted news; he just wanted some breathing space.
    ‘I don’t have any information!’ he declared.
    The guardsmen persisted. Yes, yes, of course he had information, he was a ... Actually, what was he? He had two colonel’s epaulettes, but bizarrely the silver braid was mixed with gold. His shako was also weird — there were two stripes at the top, one wide gold one and then one thin silver one. And his plume? In the infantry of the line, a colonel’s plume was white, and a major’s red. Margont’s was half red, half white. He must be a ‘half-colonel’ or a ‘major major’.
    ‘Make way for the lieutenant-colonel!’ boomed a captain.   Lieutenant-colonel? What was that then? Where did that fit in? Margont beckoned over Lefine, who was explaining to the new recruits how to operate the 1777 model of rifle, modified in the year
    9, and led him off to see Saber. The National Guard gloomily watched them go. Where was the Emperor? Were they winning the war or were they about to lose?
     
    Colonel Saber was buried in his office. It looked like a library where a bomb had gone off. He was scribbling a letter whilst at the same time dictating two others to his adjutants. Although he was still friends with Margont, Lefine and Piquebois, his attitude towards them had altered since his dazzling promotion. He was so busy criticising those more highly ranked than he that he scarcely had time to look downwards. It was said that Marshal Moncey had almost choked on his coffee when he read the first missive Saber had penned to him. Fortunately for Saber, there was no one available to replace him. At that very moment Saber was writing a tenth letter to the marshal. Margont could not make out the subject but the handwriting spoke for itself: words running into each other through haste, paper
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