with a LEONIDAS. They are indeed indispensible
to the Spanish soldiery, in order that, man to man,
they may not be inferior to their enemies in the field
of battle. But inferior they are and long must
be in warlike skill and coolness; inferior in assembled
numbers, and in blind mobility to the preconceived
purposes of their leader. If therefore the Spaniards
are not superior in some superior quality, their fall
may be predicted with the certainty of a mathematical
calculation. Nay, it is right to acknowledge,
however depressing to false hope the thought may be,
that from a people prone and disposed to war, as the
French are, through the very absence of those excellencies
which give a contra-distinguishing dignity to the
Spanish character; that, from an army of men presumptuous
by nature, to whose presumption the experience of constant
success has given the confidence and stubborn strength
of reason, and who balance against the devotion of
patriotism the superstition so naturally attached
by the sensual and disordinate to the strange fortunes
and continual felicity of their Emperor; that, from
the armies of such a people a more manageable enthusiasm,
a courage less under the influence of accidents, may
be expected in the confusion of immediate conflict,
than from forces like the Spaniards, united indeed
by devotion to a common cause, but not equally united
by an equal confidence in each other, resulting from
long fellowship and brotherhood in all conceivable
incidents of war and battle. Therefore, I do not
hesitate to affirm, that even the occasional flight
of the Spanish levies, from sudden panic under untried
circumstances, would not be so injurious to the Spanish
cause; no, nor so dishonourable to the Spanish character,
nor so ominous of ultimate failure, as a paramount
reliance on superior valour, instead of a principled
reposal on superior constancy and immutable resolve.
Rather let them have fled once and again, than direct
their prime admiration to the blaze and explosion
of animal courage, in slight of the vital and sustaining
warmth of fortitude; in slight of that moral contempt
of death and privation, which does not need the stir
and shout of battle to call it forth or support it,
which can smile in patience over the stiff and cold
wound, as well as rush forward regardless, because
half senseless of the fresh and bleeding one.
Why did we give our hearts to the present cause of
Spain with a fervour and elevation unknown to us in
the commencement of the late Austrian or Prussian
resistance to France? Because we attributed to
the former an heroic temperament which would render
their transfer to such domination an evil to human
nature itself, and an affrightening perplexity in the
dispensations of Providence. But if in oblivion
of the prophetic wisdom of their own first leaders
in the cause, they are surprised beyond the power
of rallying, utterly cast down and manacled by fearful
thoughts from the first thunder-storm of defeat in
the field, wherein do they differ from the Prussians