[No Surrender! by G. A. Henty]@TWC D-Link bookNo Surrender! CHAPTER 7: A Short Rest 7/25
They fell into disorder at once, and the cavalry captured a portion of their artillery. The Republican infantry, seeing the success of their cavalry, advanced stoutly and in good order.
In vain the leaders of the Vendeans strove to reanimate their men, and induce them to charge the enemy.
The panic that had begun spread rapidly and, in a few minutes, they became a mob of fugitives scattering in all directions, and leaving behind them sixteen cannon, and all the munitions of war they had captured. La Rochejaquelein who, after he had visited Lescure at Clisson, had rejoined the army with a party of gentlemen, covered the retreat with desperate valour; charging the enemy's cavalry again and again and, before falling back, allowing time for the fugitives to gain the shelter of the woods.
The loss of men was therefore small, but the fact that the peasants, who had come to be regarded as almost irresistible by the troops, should have been so easily defeated, raised the Blues from the depth of depression into which they had fallen; while the blow inflicted upon the Vendeans was correspondingly great.
It was some little time before the peasants could be aroused again. Small bodies, indeed, kept the field and, under their leaders, showed so bold a face whenever reconnoitring parties of the Blues went out from Fontenay, that the troops were not long before they again began to lose heart; while the generals, who had thought that the victory at Fontenay would bring the war to a conclusion, again began to pour in letters to the authorities at Paris, calling for reinforcements. On the side of the Vendeans, the priests everywhere exerted themselves to impress upon their flocks the necessity of again joining the army.
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