[Memoirs of Napoleon Bonaparte by Louis Antoine Fauvelet de Bourrienne]@TWC D-Link bookMemoirs of Napoleon Bonaparte CHAPTER III 36/43
To spare the blood which would have been shed the next day it was necessary that no time should be given them to rally, but to follow them with vigour, though without incurring fresh hazards.
The General ordered Montchoisy, who commanded a reserve at the Place de la Resolution, to form a column with two twelve-pounders, to march by the Boulevard in order to turn the Place Vendome, to form a junction with the picket stationed at headquarters, and to return in the same order of column. "General Brune, with two howitzers, deployed in the streets of St. Nicaise and St.Honore.General Cartaux sent two hundred men and a four-pounder of his division by the Rue St.Thomas-du-Louvre to debouch in the square of the Palais Egalite.
General Bonaparte, who had his horse killed under him, repaired to the Feuillans. "The columns began to move, St.Roch and the theatre of the Republic were taken, by assault, when the rebels abandoned them, and retreated to the upper part of the Rue de la Loi, and barricaded themselves on all sides. Patrols were sent thither, and several cannon-shots were fired during the night, in order to prevent them from throwing up defences, which object was effectually accomplished. "At daybreak, the General having learned that some students from the St. Genevieve side of the river were marching with two pieces of cannon to succour the rebels, sent a detachment of dragoons in pursuit of them, who seized the cannon and conducted them to the Tuileries.
The enfeebled Sections, however, still showed a front.
They had barricaded the Section of Grenelle, and placed their cannon in the principal streets.
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