Waterloo
Extract
Introduction
‘
After the publication of so many accounts of the
battle of 18 June, it may be fairly asked on what
grounds I expect to awaken fresh interest in a
subject so long before the public.’ Those
words were written by Sergeant-Major Edward Cotton
of the 7th Hussars as long ago as 1849, in his
preface to a guidebook to the battlefield entitled
A Voice from Waterloo. True enough then, how much
more true are they when applied to yet another
book on the battle published a century-and-a-half
and over one hundred books later. The answer that
Cotton gave then is the one I would also give today:
that while there are still doubts, mysteries, debates
and confusions about the battle – let alone
tremendous national bias evident in its retelling – there
is always scope for another account.
‘Never was a battle so confusedly described as that of Waterloo,’ wrote
the Swiss historian (and Marshal Ney’s chief of staff) General Henri Jomini,
and that is partly because it was such a momentous engagement. The Duke of Wellington
himself likened the description of a battle to that of a ball – perhaps
he had in mind the Duchess of Richmond’s famous one three days before Waterloo
- where there is so much simultaneous movement of so many people across so large
an area with so many different outcomes that to record it all from a single standpoint
becomes nigh-impossible.
Yet what we can say for certain about the battle of Waterloo – that it
ended forever the greatest personal world-historical epic since that of Julius
Cæsar – is easily enough to drive us on to want to discover more.
The political career of Napoleon Bonaparte, that master of continental Europe
whose life was nonetheless punctuated by the three islands on which he was
born, was exiled and died, came to a shuddering and total halt on the evening
of Sunday, 18th June 1815. The Grande Armée which he had led across
the sands of Egypt, the meadows of Prussia, the plains of Iberia, the hamlets
of Austria and the snows of Russia, was finally and completely routed on the
slopes of Mont St. Jean twelve miles south of Brussels.
Of course Waterloo did not spell the end of the entire Bonapartist epic – that
did not take place until Napoleon’s great-nephew the Prince Imperial
was speared to death by Zulu assegais in 1879 – but it did condemn the
Emperor Napoleon I to ignominious exile and a subsequent early death on the
Atlantic rock of St Helena. It also finally brought to an end no fewer than
twenty-three almost unbroken years of French Revolutionary and subsequently
Napoleonic Wars, and ushered in a period of peace in Europe that was to last – with
a few short if sharp exceptions – for a century, until those self-same
Low Countries fields were churned up once more with the mud and blood consequent
upon similar hegemonic European ambitions.
What Lord Byron disapprovingly called ‘the crowning carnage, Waterloo’,
and Alfred, Lord Tennyson, with more reverence in his panegyric poem to Wellington,
described as ‘that world-earthquake, Waterloo!’, brought the eighteenth-century
to a full-stop, or rather to a final exclamation mark. Despite taking place
one-seventh of the way into the calendar 19th century, Waterloo was nonetheless
essentially an 18th century phenomenon. Historians sometimes write of ‘the
long’ 18th century, a period starting with the English revolution of
1688 and ending in 1815, and it is right to see Waterloo as the end of both
a geopolitical and a military era.
Ghastly as the carnage undoubtedly was at Waterloo, henceforth the wars of
the future were to be fought with the infinitely more ghastly methods of trenches
(the Crimea), barbed wire, railways and machine-guns (the American Civil War),
directed starvation (the Franco-Prussian War), concentration camps (the Boer
War), and mustard gas and aerial bombardment (the First World War). By the
time of the Great War, chivalry was utterly dead as an element of war-making.
By contrast with today, when an enemy head of state constitutes a legitimate
military target, Wellington refused an artillery officer under his command
permission to fire his battery at Napoleon. The gorgeously-coloured uniforms
worn in the Napoleonic Wars were replaced, by the time of the Boer War, with
khaki and subsequently camouflaged uniforms, as troops sought to blend in with
the surrounding country rather than bedazzle their enemies. For all that Waterloo
was, as in all battles, essentially about bringing death and maiming to the
enemy, there was also a tangible spirit of élan, esprit, éclat
and – at least initially - aesthetic beauty to the scene.
There was also plenty of chivalry shown on both sides at Waterloo; witness
the reaction of the British infantry during the great French cavalry attack,
when, according to Ensign Howell Rees Gronow of the 1st Foot Guards: Among
the fallen we perceived the gallant colonel of the hussars lying under his
horse, which had been killed. All of a sudden two riflemen of the Brunswickers
left their battalion, and after taking from their helpless victim his purse,
watch, and other articles of value, they deliberately put the colonel’s
pistols to the poor fellow’s head, and blew out his brains. ‘Shame!’ ‘Shame!’ was
heard from our ranks, and a feeling of indignation ran through the whole line.
Captain (later Lieutenant-Colonel) William Tomkinson of the 16th Light Dragoons
similarly recorded the occasion when, ‘An officer of cuirassiers rode
close to one of our squares with a detachment of men. He saw he had no chance
of success, and by himself alone rode full gallop against the square, was shot
and killed. Our men and officers regretted his fate.’
The generation after Waterloo saw, in the title of the great work of the distinguished
historian Paul Johnson’s, The Birth of the Modern, and in one sense the
battle was the midwife to this great act of world-historical obstetrics. With
Napoleonic ambitions no longer subjecting Europe to campaign after campaign,
Mankind could finally look ahead to a period of peace and progress.
Yet Napoleon himself had also been, at least in the early days of his rule,
a great force for social and political modernisation. His absolute power had
of course corrupted his regime absolutely, but before that happened he had
swept away much of the obscurantism and backwardness of many of Europe’s
anciens régimes. Tyro and tyrant that he undeniably became, responsible
for the deaths of hundreds of thousands though he undoubtedly was, a standing
obstacle to peace that he certainly turned into, nonetheless Napoleon was not
all bad, and certainly nothing like the ideological totalitarian monsters who
followed him.
The battle which brought the Napoleonic juggernaut to its final halt and shattering
collapse is worthy of all the exhaustive study and minute analysis that has
been devoted to it. As one of its earliest and most perceptive chroniclers,
General Sir James Shaw Kennedy (who had fought in the campaign) wrote in the
peroration of his classic Notes on the Battle of Waterloo, There can be no
doubt that, so long as history is read, the battle of Waterloo will be much
and eagerly discussed; and that, so long as the art of war is studied, its
great features, and most important details, will form subjects of anxious inquiry
and consideration by military men. And not just by military men. The enduring
fascination of Waterloo is not just its sheer size, or its historical results,
or the fact that Napoleon and Wellington had never faced each other across
a battlefield before and never would again, or the strategy and tactics employed,
or the tales of valour, or the famous and colourful individuals and regiments
involved, or even the fact it was ‘a close run thing’; it is the
unique combination of all of those factors, and of so many more besides.
The battle which brought the Napoleonic juggernaut to its final halt and shattering
collapse is worthy of all the exhaustive study and minute analysis that has
been devoted to it. As one of its earliest and most perceptive chroniclers,
General Sir James Shaw Kennedy (who had fought in the campaign) wrote in the
peroration of his classic Notes on the Battle of Waterloo, There can be no
doubt that, so long as history is read, the battle of Waterloo will be much
and eagerly discussed; and that, so long as the art of war is studied, its
great features, and most important details, will form subjects of anxious inquiry
and consideration by military men. And not just by military men. The enduring
fascination of Waterloo is not just its sheer size, or its historical results,
or the fact that Napoleon and Wellington had never faced each other across
a battlefield before and never would again, or the strategy and tactics employed,
or the tales of valour, or the famous and colourful individuals and regiments
involved, or even the fact it was ‘a close run thing’; it is the
unique combination of all of those factors, and of so many more besides.

