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goes and puts out calculations that have stood the brunt of years。 Archimedes and Todleben were; no doubt; clever men in their way and good citizens; yet one characteristic of delicate men's minds they lackedveneration; they showed a sad disrespect for the wisdom of the ancients; deranged the calculations which so much learning and patient thought had hallowed; disturbed the minds of white…haired veterans; took sieges out of the grasp of science; and plunged them back into the field of wild conjecture。
Our generals then sat down at fourteen hundred yards' distance; and planned the trenches artistically; and directed them to be cut at artful angles; and so creep nearer and nearer the devoted town。 Then the Prussians; whose hearts had been in their shoes at first sight of the French shakos; plucked up; and turned not the garrison only but the population of the town into engineers and masons。 Their fortifications grew almost as fast as the French trenches。
The first day of the siege; a young but distinguished brigadier in the French army rode to the quarters of General Raimbaut; who commanded his division; and was his personal friend; and respectfully but firmly entreated the general to represent to the commander…in…chief the propriety of assaulting that new bastion before it should become dangerous。 〃My brigade shall carry it in fifteen minutes; general;〃 said he。
〃What! cross all that open under fire? One…half your brigade would never reach the bastion。〃
〃But the other half would take it。〃
〃That is not so certain。〃
General Raimbaut refused to forward the young colonel's proposal to headquarters。 〃I will not subject you to TWO refusals in one matter;〃 said he; kindly。
The young colonel lingered。 He said; respectfully; 〃One question; general; when that bastion cuts its teeth will it be any easier to take than now?〃
〃Certainly; it will always be easier to take it from the sap than to cross the open under fire to it; and take it。 Come; colonel; to your trenches; and if your friend should cut its teeth; you shall have a battery in your attack that will set its teeth on edge。 Ha! ha!〃
The young colonel did not echo his chief's humor; he saluted gravely; and returned to the trenches。
The next morning three fresh tiers of embrasures grinned one above another at the besiegers。 The besieged had been up all night; and not idle。 In half these apertures black muzzles showed themselves。
The bastion had cut its front teeth。
Thirteenth day of the siege。
The trenches were within four hundred yards of the enemy's guns; and it was hot work in them。 The enemy had three tiers of guns in the round bastion; and on the top they had got a long 48…pounder; which they worked with a swivel joint; or the like; and threw a great roaring shot into any part of the French lines。
As to the commander…in…chief and his generals; they were dotted about a long way in the rear; and no shot came as far as them; but in the trenches the men began now to fall fast; especially on the left attack; which faced the round bastion。 Our young colonel had got his heavy battery; and every now and then he would divert the general efforts of the bastion; and compel it to concentrate its attention on him; by pounding away at it till it was all in sore places。 But he meant it worse mischief than that。 Still; as heretofore; regarding it as the key to Philipsburg; he had got a large force of engineers at work driving a mine towards it; and to this he trusted more than to breaching it; for the bigger holes he made in it by day were all stopped at night by the townspeople。
This colonel was not a favorite in the division to which his brigade belonged。 He was a good soldier; but a dull companion。 He was also accused of hauteur and of an unsoldierly reserve with his brother officers。
Some loose…tongued ones even called him a milk…sop; because he was constantly seen conversing with the priesthe who had nothing to say to an honest soldier。
Others said; 〃No; hang it; he is not a milk…sop: he is a tried soldier: he is a sulky beggar all the same。〃 Those under his immediate command were divided in opinion about him。 There was something about him they could not understand。 Why was his sallow face so stern; so sad? and why with all that was his voice so gentle? somehow the few words that did fall from his mouth were prized。 One old soldier used to say; 〃I would rather have a word from our brigadier than from the commander…in…chief。〃 Others thought he must at some part of his career have pillaged a church; taken the altar…piece; and sold it to a picture…dealer in Paris; or whipped the earrings out of the Madonna's ears; or admitted the female enemy to quarter upon ungenerous conditions: this; or some such crime to which we poor soldiers are liable: and now was committing the mistake of remording himself about it。 〃Always alongside the chaplain; you see!〃
This cold and silent man had won the heart of the most talkative sergeant in the French army。 Sergeant La Croix protested with many oaths that all the best generals of the day had commanded him in turn; and that his present colonel was the first that had succeeded in inspiring him with unlimited confidence。 〃He knows every point of warthis one;〃 said La Croix; 〃I heard him beg and pray for leave to storm this thundering bastion before it was armed: but no; the old muffs would be wiser than our colonel。 So now here we are kept at bay by a place that Julius Caesar and Cannibal wouldn't have made two bites at apiece; no more would I if I was the old boy out there behind the hill。〃 In such terms do sergeants denote commanders…in…chiefat a distance。 A voluble sergeant has more influence with the men than the minister of war is perhaps aware: on the whole; the 24th brigade would have followed its gloomy colonel to grim death and a foot farther。 One thing gave these men a touch of superstitious reverence for their commander。 He seemed to them free from physical weakness。 He never SAT DOWN to dinner; and seemed never to sleep。 At no hour of the day or night were the sentries safe from his visits。
Very annoying。 But; after awhile; it led to keen watchfulness: the more so that the sad and gloomy colonel showed by his manner he appreciated it。 Indeed; one night he even opened his marble jaws; and told Sergeant La Croix that a watchful sentry was an important soldier; not to his brigade only; but to the whole army。 Judge whether the maxim and the implied encomium did not circulate next morning; with additions。
Sixteenth day of the siege。 The round bastion opened fire at eight o'clock; not on the opposing battery; but on the right of the French attack。 Its advanced position enabled a portion of its guns to rake these trenches slant…wise: and depressing its guns it made the round shot strike the ground first and ricochet over。
On this our colonel opened on them with all his guns: one of these he served himself。 Among his other warlike accomplishments; he was a wonderful shot with a cannon。 He showed them capital practice this morning: drove two embrasures into one; and knocked about a ton of masonry off the parapet。 Then taking advantage of this; he served two of his