Clic to scroll down to next paragraph Waterloo Battlefield News 

The next reanactment of the Waterloo Battle shall happen near 18 june 2010. More news on the french version

The whole battlefield is managed for 25 years by Culure-espaces : French association for Museum management

La Morne plaine- 18 juin 1995  “With 10 years of experience and more than a million visitors every year, Culture Espaces deals with every aspect of modern heritage management and ensures they are applied within the framework of a suitable policy for each establishment.” 
    (to read on Culture-espaces'WEB-SITE  (English version)

Clic to scroll down to next paragraph Waterloo ! Waterloo ! morne plaine !
Comme une onde qui bout dans une urne trop pleine, Dans ton cirque de bois, de coteaux, de vallons, La pâle mort mêlait les sombres bataillons............................
The full text of this famous poetry is on our french version. We give you another text of the same writer:

The Retreat from Moscow   by Victor Hugo (1802-1885)
[Translation of the first section of L'Expiation from Les châtiments (1852)]
extract from  Hugo Menu  www.napoleonic-literature.com

It snowed. A defeat was our conquest red!
For once the eagle was hanging its head.
Sad days! the Emporer turned slowly his back
On smoking Moscow, blent orange and black.
The water burst, avalanche-like, to reign
Over the endless blanched sheet of the plain.
Nor chief nor banner in order could keep,
Clic to scroll down to next paragraph The wolves of warfare were 'wildered like sheep.
The wings from centre could hardly be known
Through snow o'er horses and carts o'erthrown,
Where froze the wounded. In the bivouacs forlorn
Strange sights and gruesome met the breaking morn:
Mute were the bugles, while the men bestrode
Steeds turned to marble, unheeding the goad
The shells and bullets came down with the snow
As though the heavens hated these poor troops below.
 Surprised at trembling, though it was with cold,
Who ne'er had trembled out of fear, the veterans bold
Marched stern; to grizzled moustache hoar-frost clung
'Neath banners that in leaden masses hung. 

It snowed, -- went snowing still. And chill the breeze
Whistled upon the glassy, endless seas,
Where naked feet on, on forever went,
With naught to eat, and not a sheltering tent.
They were not living troops as seen in war,
But merely phantoms of a dream, afar
In darkness wandering, amid the vapour dim, --
A mystery; of shadows a procession grim,
Clic to scroll down to next paragraphNearing a blackening sky, unto its rim.
Frightful, since boundless, solitude behold
Where only Nemesis wove, mute and cold,
A net all snowy with its soft meshes dense,
A shroud of magnitued for host immense;
Till every one felt as if left alone
In a wide wilderness where no light shone,
To die, with pity none, and none to see
That from this mournful realm none should get free.
Their foes the frozen North and Czar,--that, worst.
Cannon were broken up in haste accurst
To burn the frames and make the pale fire high,
Where those lay down who never woke, or woke to die.
Sad and commingled, groups that blindly fled
Were swallowed smoothly by the desert dread. 

'Neath folds of blankness, monuments were raised.
O'er regiments; and History, amazed,
Could not record the ruin of this retreat, --
Unlike a downfall known before, or the defeat
Of Hannibal, reversed and wrapped in gloom,
Of Atilla, when nations met their doom!
Clic to scroll down to next paragraphPerished an army,--fled French glory then,
Though there the Emperor! He stood and gazed
At the wild havoc, like a monarch dazed
In woodland hoar, who felt the shrieking saw:
He, living oak, beheld his branches fall, with awe.
Chiefs, soldiers, comrades died. But still warm love
Kept those that rose all dastard fear above,
As on his tent they saw his shadow pass,
Backwards and forwards; for they credited, alas!
His fortune's star! It could not, could not be
That he had not his work to do -- a destiny?
To hurl him headlong from his high estate,
Would be high treason in his bondman, Fate.
But all the while he felt himself alone,
Stunned with disasters few have ever known.
Sudden, a fear came o'er his troubled soul,--
What more was written on the Future's scroll?
Was this an expiation? It must be, yea!
He turned to God for one enlightening ray.
"Is this the vengeance, Lord of Hosts?" he sighed;
But the first murmur on his parched lips died.
"Is this the vengeance? Must my glory set?"
A pause: his name was called; of flame a jet
Sprang in the darkness; a Voice answered: "No!
Not yet."

Outside still fell the smothering snow.
Was it a voice indeed, or but a dream?
It was the vulture's, but how like the sea-bird's scream.

Victor HUGO (1802-1885:  Châtiments)


 
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