Narrative of the Most Remarkable Events Which Occurred In and Near Leipzig eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 125 pages of information about Narrative of the Most Remarkable Events Which Occurred In and Near Leipzig.

Narrative of the Most Remarkable Events Which Occurred In and Near Leipzig eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 125 pages of information about Narrative of the Most Remarkable Events Which Occurred In and Near Leipzig.

To enable you to pursue the train of events, as far as I was capable of informing myself respecting them, I will endeavour to relate them as they occurred.  It was not till the arrival of marshal Marmont with his corps of the army in this neighbourhood that any idea of the probability of a general engagement at Leipzig began to be entertained.  That circumstance happened in the beginning of October.  These guests brought along with them every species of misery and distress, which daily increased in proportion as those hosts of destroyers kept gradually swelling into a large army.  They were joined from time to time by several other corps; the city was nearly surrounded by bivouacs; and, gracious God! what proceedings! what havoc!—­We had frequently been informed that all Saxony, from Lusatia to the Elbe, resembled one vast desert, where nothing was to be seen but towns laid waste and plundered, villages reduced to ashes, naked and famishing inhabitants;—­that there was no appearance of any other living creature; nay, not even a trace of vegetation remaining.  These accounts we naturally regarded as exaggerations, little imagining that in a short time we should have to give to our distant friends the same details of horror respecting our own vicinity.  Too true it is that no nation has made such progress in the art of refinement, and is so ingenious in devising infernal torments, as that, which, under the name of allies and protectors, has made us so inexpressibly wretched.  Ever since the battle of Luetzen, Leipzig had been one of the principal resources of the grand French army, and they showed it no mercy.  Numberless hospitals transformed it into one great infirmary; many thousands of troops, quartered in the habitations of the citizens, one prodigious corps de garde; and requisitions of meat, bread, rice, brandy, and other articles, one vast poor-house, where the indigent inhabitants were in danger of starving.  But for this well-stored magazine, the great French army had long since been obliged to abandon the Elbe.  No wonder then that this point should have been guarded with the utmost care.  It required commissaries and inspectors, such as those who had the control over our store-houses and granaries, to complete the master-piece, to reduce that Leipzig, which had once patiently sustained, without being entirely exhausted, the burdens of a war that lasted seven years—­to reduce it, I say, in six months, to so low an ebb, that even the opulent were in danger of perishing with hunger; that reputable citizens could no longer procure the coarsest fare; and that, though their hearts overflowed with pity and compassion, they were absolutely incapable of affording the slightest relief, not so much as a crust of bread, to the sick and wounded soldier.  It is impossible to give you any idea of the dexterity and rapidity with which the French soldiers will so totally change the look of a village, a field, or a garden, that you shall not know it again, how well soever you may have been acquainted with it before.  Such was the fate of Leipzig, and of the beautiful environs of our inner city-walls.

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Narrative of the Most Remarkable Events Which Occurred In and Near Leipzig from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.