With Marlborough to Malplaquet eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 143 pages of information about With Marlborough to Malplaquet.

With Marlborough to Malplaquet eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 143 pages of information about With Marlborough to Malplaquet.

The campaign of 1705 soon after came to a close, and the Duke set off on what we may call a diplomatic tour among the allied states, his travels and negotiations producing good results.  It was not till the beginning of 1706 that he went back to England, and thus it was late in the spring of that year when the campaign was reopened.

Rejoining his army in the Netherlands, he proposed to make another of his great marches, namely into Italy, there to join his friend Prince Eugene in an invasion of France from the south-east.  This plan was made impossible by the crookedness of the kings of Prussia and Denmark, and some others of the Allies.  Swallowing this disappointment also, as best he might, Marlborough started from the Dyle and advanced on the great and important stronghold of Namur, at the junction of the Sambre with the Meuse.  Namur had always been greatly esteemed by the French, and, in dread alarm, Louis ordered Villeroy to take immediate action.  The result was that the two hostile armies, each numbering about sixty thousand men, met face to face near the village of Ramillies, half way between Tirlemont and Namur, and near the head waters of the Great and Little Gheet and the Mehaigne.

Lieutenants Fairburn and Blackett from their position on a bit of rising ground could take in the general dispositions of the respective forces, and the same thought passed through both their minds.  The French and Bavarian troops were drawn up in the form of an arc, whose ends rested on the villages of Anderkirk, to the north, and Tavieres, on the Mehaigne, to the south.  The villages of Ramillies and Offuz, with a mound known as the Tomb of Ottomond at the back of the former, were held by a strong centre.  Marlborough, on his part, had disposed his men along a chord of that arc.  If it came to a question of moving men and guns from one wing to the other, it was plain that the Duke had the advantage, the distance along an arc being necessarily greater than that along its chord, and it was that thought which came into the heads of the two lieutenants.

Marlborough directed his right to attack the enemy around the village of Anderkirk, backing up the assault with a contingent from his centre.  Blackett and his friend were soon taking part in the gallop over the swampy ground in the neighbourhood of the village.  A sharp encounter followed, the Frenchmen beginning to waver.  Hereupon Villeroy in alarm promptly sent from his centre a large number of men to support his staggering left at Anderkirk, thereby leaving his centre weak.

All at once Marlborough withdrew his troops to the high ground opposite the hamlet of Offuz, as if for a fresh attack.  Then sending back a part to keep up the pretence of continuing the combat in the marsh, he took advantage of the concealment afforded by the higher ground, and, cleverly detaching a large body, ordered them to slip away round to seize Tavieres, on the Mehaigne.  George and his friend were thus

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With Marlborough to Malplaquet from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.