[The Life of Napoleon I (Volume 1 of 2) by John Holland Rose]@TWC D-Link book
The Life of Napoleon I (Volume 1 of 2)

CHAPTER VI
18/59

Meanwhile the French were rolling in the other extremity of the Austrian line.

Marmont, dashing forward with the horse artillery, took the enemy's left wing in flank and silenced many of their pieces.
Under cover of this attack, Fiorella's division was able to creep up within striking distance; and the French cavalry, swooping round the rear of this hard-pressed wing, nearly captured Wuermser and his staff.
A vigorous counterattack by the Austrian reserves, or an immediate wheeling round of the whole line, was needed to repulse this brilliant flank attack; but the Austrian reserves had been expended in the north of their line; and an attempt to change front, always a difficult operation, was crushed by a headlong charge of Massena's and Augereau's divisions on their centre.

Before these attacks the whole Austrian line gave way; and, according to Colonel Graham, nothing but this retreat, undertaken "without orders," saved the whole force from being cut off.

The criticisms of our officer sufficiently reveal the cause of the disaster.

The softness and incapacity of Wuermser, the absence of a responsible second in command, the ignorance of the number and positions of the French, the determination to advance towards Castiglione and to wait thereabouts for Quosdanovich until a battle could be fought with combined forces on the 7th, the taking up a position almost by haphazard on the Castiglione-Medole line, and the failure to detect Fiorella's approach, present a series of defects and blunders which might have given away the victory to a third-rate opponent.[61] The battle was by no means sanguinary: it was a series of manoeuvres rather than of prolonged conflicts.


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