bad; because if he had been beaten he could not have
retreated, as there was only one road leading through
the forest in his rear. He also committed a fault
which might have proved the destruction of all his
army, without its ever having commenced the campaign,
or being drawn out in battle; he allowed himself to
be surprised. On the 15th I was at Charleroi,
and had beaten the Prussians without his knowing anything
about it. I had gained forty-eight hours of manoeuvres
upon him, which was a great object; and if some of
my generals had shown that vigour and genius which
they had displayed on other occasions, I should have
taken his army in cantonments without ever fighting
a battle. But they were discouraged, and fancied
that they saw an army of 100,000 men everywhere opposed
to them. I had not time enough myself to attend
to the minutiae of the army. I counted upon surprising
and cutting Wellington up in detail. I knew of
Bulow’s arrival at eleven o’clock, but
I did not regard it. I had still eighty chances
out of a hundred in my favour. Notwithstanding
the great superiority of force against me I was convinced
that I should obtain the victory, I had about 70,000
men, of whom 15,000 were cavalry. I had also 260
pieces of cannon; but my troops were so good that
I esteemed them sufficient to beat 120,000. Of
all those troops, however, I only reckoned the English
as being able to cope with my own. The others
I thought little of. I believe that of English
there were from 35,000 to 40,000. These I esteemed
to be as brave and as good as my own troops; the English
army was well known latterly on the Continent, and
besides, your nation possesses courage and energy.
As to the Prussians, Belgians, and others, half the
number of my troops, were sufficient to beat them.
I only left 34,000 men to take care of the Prussians.
The chief causes of the loss of that battle were,
first of all, Grouchy’s great tardiness and neglect
in executing his orders; next, the ‘grenadiers
a cheval’ and the cavalry under General Guyot,
which I had in reserve, and which were never to leave
me, engaged without orders and without my knowledge;
so that after the last charge, when the troops were
beaten and the English cavalry advanced, I had not
a single corps of cavalry in reserve to resist them,
instead of one which I esteemed to be equal to double
their own number. In consequence of this the
English attacked, succeeded, and all was lost.
There was no means of rallying. The youngest general
would not have committed the fault of leaving an army
entirely without reserve, which, however, occurred
here, whether in consequence of treason or not I cannot
say. These were the two principal causes of the
loss of the battle of Waterloo.”