[No Surrender! by G. A. Henty]@TWC D-Link bookNo Surrender! CHAPTER 3: The First Successes 4/33
Thus Cathelineau's followers became possessed of firearms, some horses and, to their great delight, a cannon. Their leader did not waste a moment, but marched at once against Chemille, his force increasing at every moment, as the men flocked in from the villages.
There were, at Chemille, two hundred soldiers with three guns; but some of the fugitives from Tallais had already arrived there, bringing news of the desperate fury with which the peasants had attacked them and, at the sight of the throng approaching, with their captured cannon, the garrison lost heart altogether and bolted, leaving their three cannon, their ammunition, and the greater portion of their muskets behind them. The news spread with incredible rapidity.
From each village they passed through, boys were despatched as messengers, and their tidings were taken on by fresh relays.
By the afternoon all the country, for thirty miles round, knew that Cathelineau had captured Tallais and Chemille, and was in possession of a quantity of arms, and four cannon. From Saint Florent came the news that, early in the morning, a party of Republican soldiers had endeavoured to arrest Foret, who led the rising on the previous day; but that he had obtained word of their approach and, setting the church bells ringing, had collected a force and had beaten back those who came in search of him. Close by, a detachment of National Guards from Chollett had visited the chateau of Maulevrier.
The proprietor was absent, but they carried off twelve cannon, which had been kept as family relics. The gamekeeper, Nicholas Stofflet, who was in charge of the estate, had served sixteen years in the army.
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