<h2><SPAN name="Ch11" id="Ch11">Chapter 11</SPAN>: Leuthen.</h2>
<p>At four in the morning on Sunday, December 4th, Frederick
marched from Parchwitz; intending to make Neumarkt, a small town
some fourteen miles off, his quarters. When within two or three
miles of this town he learned, to his deep satisfaction, that the
Austrians had just established a great bakery there, and that a
party of engineers were marking out the site for a camp; also that
there were but a thousand Croats in the town. The news was
satisfactory, indeed, for two reasons: the first being that the
bakery would be of great use for his own troops; the second, that
it was clear that the Austrians intended to advance across the
Schweidnitz Water to give battle. It was evident that they could
have had no idea that he was pressing on so rapidly, or they would
never have established their bakery so far in advance, and
protected by so small a force.</p>
<p>He lost no time in taking advantage of their carelessness, but
sent a regiment of cavalry to seize the hills on both sides of the
town; then marched rapidly forward, burst in the gates, and hurled
the Croats in utter confusion from Neumarkt, while the cavalry
dashed down and cut off their retreat. One hundred and twenty of
them were killed, and five hundred and seventy taken prisoners. In
the town the Austrian bakery was found to be in full work, and
eighty thousand bread rations, still hot, were ready for
delivery.</p>
<p>This initial success, and the unexpected treat of hot bread,
raised the spirits of the troops greatly, and was looked upon as a
happy augury.</p>
<p>Two or three hours before Neumarkt had been captured, the
Austrian army was crossing the river, and presently received the
unpleasant news of what had happened. Surprised at the news that
the Prussians were so near, their generals at once set to work to
choose a good position. This was not a difficult task, for the
country was swampy, with little wooded rises and many villages.</p>
<p>They planted their right wing at the village of Nypern, which
was practically unapproachable on account of deep peat bogs. Their
centre was at a larger village named Leuthen, their left at
Sagschuetz. The total length of its front was about six miles.</p>
<p>The Prussians started before daybreak next morning in four
columns, Frederick riding on ahead with the vanguard. When near
Borne, some eight miles from Neumarkt, he caught sight in the dim
light of a considerable body of horse, stretching across the road
in front of him as far as he could make out the line. The Prussian
cavalry were at once ordered to charge down on their left
flank.</p>
<p>The enemy proved to be five regiments of cavalry, placed there
to guard the army from surprise. They, however, were themselves
surprised; and were at once overthrown, and driven in headlong
flight to take shelter behind their right wing at Nypern, five
hundred and forty being taken prisoners, and a large number being
killed or wounded.</p>
<p>Frederick rode on through Borne, ascended a small hill called
the Scheuberg, to the right of the road, and as the light increased
could, from that point, make out the Austrian army drawn up in
battle array, and stretching from Nypern to Sagschuetz. Well was it
for him that he had reviewed troops over the same ground, and knew
all the bogs and morasses that guarded the Austrian front. For a
long time he sat there on horseback, studying the possibilities of
the situation.</p>
<p>The Austrian right he regarded as absolutely impregnable.
Leuthen might be attacked with some chance of success, but
Sagschuetz offered by far the most favourable opening for attack.
The formation of the ground offered special facilities for the
movement being effected without the Austrians being aware of what
was taking place, for there was a depression behind the swells and
broken ground in front of the Austrian centre, by which the
Prussians could march from Borne, unseen by the enemy, until they
approached Sagschuetz.</p>
<p>It was three hours after Frederick had taken up his place before
the four columns had all reached Borne. As soon as they were in
readiness there, they were ordered to march with all speed as far
as Radaxford, thence to march in oblique order against the Austrian
left.</p>
<p>The Austrians, all this time, could observe a group of horsemen
on the hill, moving sometimes this way sometimes that, but more
than this they could not see. The conjectures were various, as hour
passed after hour. Daun believed that the Prussians must have
marched away south, with the intention of falling upon the
magazines in Bohemia, and that the cavalry seen moving along the
hills were placed there to defend the Prussians from being taken in
flank, or in rear, while thus marching. General Lucchesi, who
commanded the Austrian right wing, was convinced that the cavalry
formed the Prussian right wing, and that the whole army, concealed
behind the slopes, was marching to fall upon him.</p>
<p>In the belfry of the church at Leuthen, on the tops of
windmills, and on other points of vantage, Austrian generals with
their staffs were endeavouring to obtain a glimpse beyond those
tiresome swells, and to discover what was going on behind them, but
in vain. There were the cavalry, moving occasionally from crest to
crest, but nothing beyond that.</p>
<p>Lucchesi got more and more uneasy, and sent message after
message to headquarters that he was about to be attacked, and must
have a large reinforcement of horse. The prince and Daun at first
scoffed at the idea, knowing that the bogs in front of Nypern were
impassable; but at last he sent a message to the effect that, if
the cavalry did not come, he would not be responsible for the
issue.</p>
<p>It was thought, therefore, that he must have some good ground
for his insistence; and Daun sent off the reserve of horse, and
several other regiments drawn from the left wing, and himself went
off at a trot, at their head, to see what was the matter.</p>
<p>It was just as he started that the Prussians--with their music
playing, and the men singing:<br/>
<br/>
<em>Gieb dass ich thu mit fleiss was mir zu thun gebuhret<br/>
(Grant that with zeal and strength this day I do)<br/>
<br/></em> had passed Radaxford and reached Lobetintz, and were
about to advance in an oblique line to the attack. The king saw
with delight the removal of so large a body of horse from the very
point against which his troops would, in half an hour, be hurling
themselves. Nothing could have suited his plans better.</p>
<p>At a rapid pace, and with a precision and order as perfect as if
upon level ground, suddenly the Prussians poured over the swells on
the flank of Sagschuetz. Nadasti, who commanded the Austrians
there, was struck with astonishment at the spectacle of the
Prussian army, which he believed to be far away, pouring down on
his flank. The heads of the four columns, the artillery, and
Ziethen's cavalry appeared simultaneously, marching swiftly and
making no pause.</p>
<p>Being a good general, he lost not a moment in endeavouring to
meet the storm. His left was thrown back a little, a battery of
fourteen guns at the angle so formed opened fire, and he launched
his cavalry against that of Ziethen. For the moment Ziethen's men
were pushed back, but the fire from an infantry battalion, close
by, checked the Austrian horse. They fell back out of range, and
Ziethen, making a counter charge, drove them away.</p>
<p>In the meantime the Prussian infantry, as they advanced, poured
a storm of fire upon the Austrian line, aided by a battery of ten
heavy guns that Prince Maurice, who commanded here, had planted on
a rise. A clump of fir trees, held by Croats in advance of the
Austrian line, was speedily cleared; and then the Prussians broke
down the abattis that protected the enemy's front, charged
furiously against the infantry, and drove these before them,
capturing Nadasti's battery.</p>
<p>In ten minutes after the beginning of the fight, the position of
the Austrian left was already desperate. The whole Prussian army
was concentrated against it and, being on its flank, crumpled the
line up as it advanced. Prince Karl's aides-de-camp galloped at the
top of their speed to bring Daun and the cavalry back again, and
Austrian battalions from the centre were hurried down to aid
Nadasti's, but were impeded by the retreating troops; and the
confusion thickened, until it was brought to a climax by Ziethen's
horse, which had been unable to act until now. But fir wood,
quagmire, and abattis had all been passed by the Prussians, and
they dashed into the mass, sabring and trampling down, and taking
whole battalions prisoners.</p>
<p>Prince Karl exerted himself to the utmost to check the Prussian
advance. Batteries were brought up and advantageously posted at
Leuthen, heavy bodies of infantry occupied the village and its
church, and took post so as to present a front to the advancing
tide. Another quarter of an hour and the battle might have been
retrieved; but long before the dispositions were all effected, the
Prussians were at hand.</p>
<SPAN id="Map4" name="Map4"></SPAN>
<div class="c1"><ANTIMG src="images/4.jpg" alt="Battle of Leuthen" /></div>
<p>Nevertheless, by great diligence the Austrians had to some
extent succeeded. Leuthen was the centre of the new position.
Lucchesi was hastening up, while Nadasti swung backwards and tried,
as he arrived, to form the left flank of the new position. All this
was being done under a storm of shot from the whole of the Prussian
artillery, which was so terrible that many battalions fell into
confusion as fast as they arrived.</p>
<p>Leuthen, a straggling hamlet of over a mile in length, and with
two or three streets of scattered houses, barns, farm buildings,
and two churches, was crowded with troops; ready to fight but
unable to do so, line being jammed upon line until sometimes a
hundred deep, pressed constantly behind by freshly arriving
battalions, and in front by the advancing Prussians. Some regiments
were almost without officers.</p>
<p>Into this confused, straggling, helpless mass, prevented from
opening out by the houses and inclosures, the Prussians, ever
keeping their formation, poured their volleys with terrible effect;
in such fashion as Drake's perfectly-handled ships poured their
broadsides into the huge helpless Spanish galleons at Gravelines.
With a like dogged courage as that shown by the Spanish, the
Austrian masses suffered almost passively, while those occupying
the houses and churches facing the Prussians resisted valiantly and
desperately. From every window, every wall, their musketry fire
flashed out; the resistance round the churchyard being specially
stubborn. The churchyard had a high and strong wall, and so
terrible was the fire from the roof of the church, and other spots
of advantage, that the tide of Prussian victory was arrested for a
time.</p>
<p>At last they made a rush. The churchyard gate was burst in, and
the Austrians driven out. Leuthen was not yet won, but Frederick
now brought up the left wing, which had till this time been held in
reserve. These came on with levelled bayonets, and rushed into the
fight.</p>
<p>The king was, as always, in the thick of the battle; giving his
orders as coolly as if at a review, sending fresh troops where
required, changing the arrangements as opportunity offered, keeping
the whole machine in due order; and by his presence animating all
with the determination to win or die, and an almost equal readiness
to accept either alternative.</p>
<p>At last, after an hour's stubborn resistance, the Austrians were
hurled out of Leuthen, still sternly resisting, still contesting
every foot of the ground. Lucchesi now saw an opportunity of
retrieving, with his great cavalry force, the terrible consequences
of his own blunder, and led them impetuously down upon the flank of
the Prussians. But Frederick had prepared for such a stroke; and
had placed Draisen, with the left wing of the cavalry, in a hollow
sheltered from the fire of the Austrian batteries, and bade him do
nothing, attempt nothing, but cover the right flank of the infantry
from the Austrian horse. He accordingly let Lucchesi charge down
with his cavalry, and then rushed out on his rear, and fell
suddenly and furiously upon him.</p>
<p>Astounded at this sudden and unexpected attack, and with their
ranks swept by a storm of Prussian bullets, the Austrian cavalry
broke and fled in all directions, Lucchesi having paid for his
fault by dying, fighting to the last. His duty thus performed,
Draisen was free to act, and fell upon the flank and rear of the
Austrian infantry; and in a few minutes the battle was over, and
the Austrians in full retreat.</p>
<p>They made, however, another attempt to stand at Saara; but it
was hopeless, and they were soon pushed backwards again and, hotly
pressed, poured over the four bridges across the Schweidnitz river,
and for the most part continued their flight to Breslau. Until the
Austrians had crossed the river the Prussian cavalry were on their
rear, sabring and taking prisoners, while the infantry were halted
at Saara, the sun having now set.</p>
<p>Exhausted as they were by their work, which had begun at
midnight and continued until now without pause or break, not yet
was their task completely done. The king, riding up the line, asked
if any battalion would volunteer to follow him to Lissa, a village
on the river bank. Three battalions stepped out. The landlord of
the little inn, carrying a lantern, walked by the king's side.</p>
<p>As they approached the village, ten or twelve musket shots
flashed out in the fields to the right. They were aimed at the
lantern, but no one was hurt. There were other shots from Lissa,
and it was evident that the village was still not wholly
evacuated.</p>
<p>The infantry rushed forward, scattered through the fields, and
drove out the lurking Croats. The king rode quietly on into the
village, and entered the principal house. To his astonishment, he
found it full of Austrian officers, who could easily have carried
him off, his infantry being still beyond the village. They had but
a small force remaining there and, believing that the Prussians had
halted for the night at Saara, they were as much astonished as
Frederick at his entrance. The king had the presence of mind to
hide his surprise.</p>
<p>"Good evening, gentlemen!" he said. "Is there still room left
for me, do you think?"</p>
<p>The Austrian officers, supposing, of course, that he had a large
force outside, bowed deeply, escorted him to the best room in the
house, and then slipped out at the back, collected what troops they
could as they went, and hurried across the bridge. The Prussians
were not long in entering, and very speedily cleared out the rest
of the Austrians. They then crossed the bridge, and with a few guns
followed in pursuit.</p>
<p>The army at Saara, on hearing the firing, betook itself again to
arms and marched to the king's assistance, the twenty-five thousand
men and their bands again joining in the triumphant hymn, "Nun
danket alle Gott," as they tramped through the darkness. When they
arrived at Lissa they found that all was safe, and bivouacked in
the fields.</p>
<p>Never was there a greater or more surprising victory, never one
in which the military genius of the commander was more strikingly
shown. The Austrians were in good heart. They were excellent
soldiers and brave, well provided with artillery, and strongly
placed; and yet they were signally defeated by a force little over
one-third their number. Had there been two more hours of daylight,
the Austrians would have been not only routed but altogether
crushed. Their loss was ten thousand left on the field, of whom
three thousand were killed. Twelve thousand were taken prisoners,
and one hundred and sixteen cannon captured.</p>
<p>To this loss must be added that of seventeen thousand prisoners
taken when Breslau surrendered, twelve days later, together with a
vast store of cannon and ammunition, including everything taken so
shortly before from Bevern. Liegnitz surrendered, and the whole of
Silesia, with the exception only of Schweidnitz, was again wrested
from the Austrians. Thus in killed, wounded, and prisoners the loss
of the Austrians amounted to as much as the total force of the
Prussians.</p>
<p>The latter lost in killed eleven hundred and forty one, and in
wounded about five thousand. Prince Maurice, upon whose division
the brunt of the battle had fallen, was promoted to the rank of
field marshal.</p>
<p>Fergus Drummond had been with the king throughout that terrible
day. Until the battle began his duties had been light, being
confined to the carrying of orders to Prince Maurice; after which
he took his place among the staff and, dismounting, chatted with
his acquaintances while Karl held his horse.</p>
<p>When, however, the fir tree wood was carried, and the king rode
forward and took his place there during the attack upon the
Austrian position at Sagschuetz, matters became more lively. The
balls from the Austrian batteries sung overhead, and sent branches
flying and trees crashing down. Sagschuetz won, the king followed
the advancing line, and the air was alive with bullets and case
shot.</p>
<SPAN id="PicG" name="PicG"></SPAN>
<div class="c1"><ANTIMG src="images/g.jpg" alt="The roar of battle was so tremendous that his horse was well-nigh unmanageable" /></div>
<p>After that Fergus knew little more of the battle, being
incessantly employed in carrying orders through the thick of it to
generals commanding brigades, and even to battalions. The roar of
battle was so tremendous that his horse, maddened with the din and
the sharp whiz of the bullets, at times was well-nigh unmanageable,
and occupied his attention almost to the exclusion of other
thoughts; especially after it had been struck by a bullet in the
hind quarters, and had come to understand that those strange and
maddening noises meant danger.</p>
<p>Not until after all was over was Fergus aware of the escapes he
had had. A bullet had cut away an ornament from his headdress, one
of his reins had been severed at a distance of an inch or two from
his hand, a bullet had pierced the tail of his coatee and buried
itself in the cantle of his saddle, and the iron guard of his
claymore had been pierced. However, on his return to the king after
carrying a despatch, he was able to curb his own excitement and
that of his horse, and to make the formal military salute as he
reported, in a calm and quiet voice, that he had carried out the
orders with which he had been charged.</p>
<p>It was with great gratification that he heard the king say that
evening, as he and his staff supped together at the inn at
Lissa:</p>
<p>"You have done exceedingly well today, Captain Drummond. I am
very pleased with you. You were always at my elbow when I wanted
you, and I observed that you were never flurried or excited; though
indeed, there would have been good excuse for a young soldier being
so, in such a hurly burly. You are over young for further
promotion, for a year or two; but I must find some other way of
testifying my satisfaction at your conduct."</p>
<p>And, indeed, when the list of promotions for bravery in the
field was published, a few days later, Fergus's name appeared among
those who received the decoration of the Prussian military order,
an honour fully as much valued as promotion.</p>
<p>For a time he lost the service of Karl, who had been seriously
although not dangerously wounded, just before the Austrians were
driven out of Leuthen.</p>
<p>The news of the battle filled the Confederates with stupefaction
and dismay. Prince Karl was at once recalled, and was relieved from
military employment, Daun being appointed to the supreme command.
The Prince withdrew to his government of the Netherlands, and there
passed the remainder of his days in peace and quiet. His army was
hunted by Ziethen's cavalry to Koeniggraetz, losing two thousand
prisoners and a large amount of baggage; and thirty-seven thousand
men only, of the eighty thousand that stood in battle array at
Leuthen, reached the sheltering walls of the fortress, and those in
so dilapidated and worn out a condition that, by the end of a week
after arriving there, no less than twenty-two thousand were in
hospital.</p>
<p>Thus, after eight months of constant and weary anxiety,
Frederick, by the two heavy blows he had dealt successfully at the
Confederates, stood in a far better position than he had occupied
at the opening of the first campaign; when, as his enemies fondly
believed, Prussia would be captured and divided without the
smallest difficulty.</p>
<p>Frederick wintered at Breslau, whither came many visitors from
Prussia, and there was a constant round of gaieties and festivity.
Frederick himself desired nothing so much as peace. Once or twice
there had been some faint hope that this might be brought about by
his favourite sister, Wilhelmina, who had been ceaseless in her
efforts to effect it; but the two empresses and the Pompadour were
alike bent on avenging themselves on the king, and the reverses
that they had suffered but increased their determination to
overwhelm him.</p>
<p>Great as Frederick's success had been, it did not blind him to
the fact that his position was almost hopeless. When the war began,
he had an army of a hundred and fifty thousand of the finest
soldiers in the world. The two campaigns had made frightful gaps in
their ranks. At Prague he had fought with eighty thousand men, at
Leuthen he had but thirty thousand. His little kingdom could
scarcely supply men to fill the places of those who had fallen,
while his enemies had teeming populations from which to gather
ample materials for fresh armies. It seemed, even to his hopeful
spirit, that all this could have but one ending; and that each
success, however great, weakened him more than his adversaries.</p>
<p>The winter's rest was, however, most welcome. For the moment
there was nothing to plan, nothing to do, save to order that the
drilling of the fresh levies should go on incessantly; in order
that some, at least, of the terrible gaps in the army might be
filled up before the campaign commenced in the spring.</p>
<p>1758 began badly, for early in January the Russians were on the
move. The empress had dismissed, and ordered to be tried by court
martial, the general who had done so little the previous year; had
appointed Field Marshal Fermor to command in his place, and ordered
him to advance instantly and to annex East Prussia in her name.</p>
<p>On the 16th of January he crossed the frontier, and six days
later entered Koenigsberg and issued a proclamation to the effect
that his august sovereign had now become mistress of East Prussia,
and that all men of official or social position must at once take
the oath of allegiance to her.</p>
<p>East Prussia had been devastated the year before by marauders,
and its hatred of Russia was intense; but the people were powerless
to resist. Some fled, leaving all behind them; but the majority
were forced to take the required oath, and for a time East Prussia
became a Russian province. Nevertheless its young men constantly
slipped away, when opportunity offered, to join the Prussian army;
and moneys were frequently collected by the impoverished people to
despatch to Frederick, to aid him in his necessities.</p>
<p>A far greater assistance was the English subsidy of 670,000
pounds, which was paid punctually for four years, and was of
supreme service to him. It was spent thriftily, and of all the
enormous sums expended by this country in subsidizing foreign
powers, none was ever laid out to a tenth of the advantage of the
2,680,000 pounds given to Frederick.</p>
<p>In the north the campaign also opened early. Ferdinand of
Brunswick bestirred himself, defeated the French signally at
Krefeld, and drove them headlong across the Rhine. Frederick, too,
took the field early, and on the 15th of March moved from Breslau
upon Schweidnitz. The siege began on the 1st of April, and on the
16th the place surrendered. Four thousand nine hundred prisoners of
war were taken, with fifty-one guns and 7000 pounds in money.</p>
<p>Three days later Frederick, with forty thousand men, was off;
deceived Daun as to his intentions, entered Moravia, and besieged
Olmuetz. Keith was with him again, and Fergus had returned to his
staff. The march was conducted with the marvellous precision and
accuracy that characterized all Frederick's movements, but Olmuetz
was a strong place and stoutly defended.</p>
<p>The Prussian engineers, who did not shine at siege work, opened
their trenches eight hundred yards too far away. The magazines were
too far off, and Daun, who as usual carefully abstained from giving
battle, so cut up the convoys that, after five weeks of vain
endeavours, the king was obliged to raise the siege; partly owing
to the loss of the convoy that would have enabled him to take the
town, which was now at its last extremity; and partly that he knew
that the Russians were marching against Brandenburg.</p>
<p>He made a masterly retreat, struck a heavy blow at Daun by
capturing and destroying his principal magazine, and then took up a
very strong position near Koeniggraetz. Here he could have
maintained himself against all Daun's assaults, for his position
was one that Daun had himself held and strongly fortified; but the
news from the north was of so terrible a nature that he was forced
to hurry thither.</p>
<p>The Cossacks, as the Russian army advanced, were committing most
horrible atrocities; burning towns and villages, tossing men and
women into the fire, plundering and murdering everywhere; and the
very small Prussian force that was watching them was powerless to
check the swarming marauders.</p>
<p>Frederick therefore, evading Daun's attempts to arrest his
march, crossed the mountains into Silesia again. At Landshut he
gave his army two days' rest; wrote and sent a paper to his brother
Prince Henry, who was commander of the army defending Saxony from
invasion, telling him that he was on the point of marching against
the Russians and might well be killed; and giving him orders as to
the course to be pursued, in such an event.</p>
<p>He left Keith, in command of forty thousand men, to hold Daun in
check should the latter advance against Silesia; and he again took
Fergus with him, finding the young officer's talk a pleasant means
of taking his mind off the troubles that beset him.</p>
<p>In nine days the army, which was but fifteen thousand strong,
marched from Landshut to Frankfort-on-Oder. Here the king learned
that though Kuestrin, which the Russians were besieging, still held
out, the town had been barbarously destroyed by the enemy.</p>
<p>In fierce anger the army pressed forward. The Russian army
itself, officers and men, were indignant in the extreme at the
brutalities committed by the Cossacks, but were powerless to
restrain them; for indeed these ruffians did not hesitate to attack
and kill any officer who ventured to interfere between them and
their victims.</p>
<p>The next morning, early, Frederick reached the camp of his
general Dohna; who had been watching, although unable to interfere
with the Russians' proceedings. The king had a profound contempt
for the Russians, in spite of the warning of Keith, who had served
with them, that they were far better soldiers than they appeared to
be; and he anticipated a very easy victory over them.</p>
<p>Early on the 22nd of August the army from Frankfort arrived.
Dohna's strength was numerically about the same as the king's, and
with his thirty thousand men Frederick had no doubt that he would
make but short work of the eighty thousand Russians, of whom some
twenty-seven thousand were the Cossack rabble, who were not worth
being considered, in a pitched battle. Deceiving the Russians as to
his intentions by opening a heavy cannonade on one of their
redoubts, as if intending to ford the river there, he crossed that
evening twelve miles lower down and, after some manoeuvring, faced
the Russians, who had at once broken up the siege on hearing of his
passage.</p>
<p>Fermor sent away his baggage train to a small village called
Kleinkalmin, and planted himself on a moor, where his front was
covered by quagmires and the Zaborn stream. Hearing, late at night
on the evening of the 24th, that Frederick was likely to be upon
them the next morning, the Russian general drew out into the open
ground north of Zorndorf, which stands on a bare rise surrounded by
woods and quagmires, and formed his army into a great square, two
miles long by one broad, with his baggage in the middle--a
formation which had been found excellent by the Russians in their
Turkish wars, but which was by no means well adapted to meet
Frederick's methods of impetuous attack. Being ignorant as to the
side upon which Frederick was likely to attack, and having decided
to stand on the defensive, he adopted the methods most familiar to
him.</p>
<p>Frederick had cut all the bridges across the rivers Warta and
Oder, and believed that he should, after defeating the Russians,
drive them into the angle formed by the junction of these two
streams, and cause them to surrender at discretion. Unfortunately,
he had not heard that the great Russian train had been sent to
Kleinkalmin. Had he done so he could have seized it, and so have
possessed himself of the Russian stores and all their munitions of
war, and have forced them to surrender without a blow; for the
Cossacks had wasted the country far and wide, and deprived it of
all resources. But he and his army were so burning with
indignation, and the desire to avenge the Cossack cruelties, that
they made no pause, and marched in all haste right round the
Russian position, so as to drive them back towards the junction of
the two rivers.</p>
<SPAN id="Map5" name="Map5"></SPAN>
<div class="c1"><ANTIMG src="images/5.jpg" alt="Battle of Zorndorf" /></div>
<p>Fermor's Cossacks brought him in news of Frederick's movements,
which were hidden from him by the forests; and seeing that he was
to be attacked on the Zorndorf side, instead of from that on which
he had expected it to come, he changed his front, and swung round
the line containing his best troops to meet it.</p>
<p>On arriving at Zorndorf, Frederick found that the Cossacks had
already set the village on fire. This was no disadvantage to him,
for the smoke of the burning houses rolled down towards the
Russians, and so prevented them from making observation of the
Prussian movements. The king rode up to the edge of the Zaborn
hollow and, finding it too deep and boggy to be crossed, determined
to attack at the southwest with his left and centre, placing his
cavalry in rear, and throwing back his right wing.</p>
<p>The first division marched forward to the attack, by the west
end of the flaming village. The next division, which should have
been its support, marched by the east end of Zorndorf. Its road was
a longer one, and there was consequently a wide gap between the two
divisions. Heralded by the fire of two strong batteries--which
swept the southwestern corner of the Russian quadrilateral, their
crossfire ploughing its ranks with terrible effect--the first
division, under Manteufel, fell upon the enemy.</p>
<p>The fire of the Prussian batteries had sorely shaken the
Russians, and had produced lively agitation among the horses of the
light baggage train in the centre of the square; and, heralding
their advance with a tremendous fire of musketry, the Prussian
infantry forced its way into the mass. Had the second division been
close at hand, as it should have been, the victory would already
have been won; but although also engaged it was not near, and
Fermor poured out a torrent of horse and foot upon Manteufel's
flank and front. Without support, and surrounded, the Prussians
could do nothing, and were swept back, losing twenty-four pieces of
cannon; while the Russians, with shouts of victory, pressed upon
them.</p>
<p>At this critical moment Seidlitz, with five thousand horse,
dashed down upon the disordered mass of Russians, casting it into
irretrievable confusion. At the same time the infantry rallied and
pressed forward again.</p>
<p>In fifteen minutes the whole Russian army was a confused mass.
Fermor, with the Russian horse, fled to Kratsdorf and, had not the
bridge there been burnt by Frederick, he would have made off,
leaving his infantry to their fate. These should now, according to
all rules, have surrendered; but they proved unconquerable save by
death. Seidlitz's cavalry sabred them until fatigued by slaughter,
the Prussian infantry poured their volleys into them, but they
stood immovable and passive, dying where they stood.</p>
<p>At one o'clock in the day the battle ceased for a moment. The
Prussians had marched at three in the morning and, seeing that
although half the Russian army had been destroyed, the other half
had gradually arranged itself into a fresh front of battle,
Frederick formed his forces again, and brought up his right wing
for the attack on the side of the Russian quadrilateral which still
stood. Forward they went, their batteries well in advance; but
before the infantry came within musket range, the Russian horse and
foot rushed forward to the attack, and with such force that they
captured one of the batteries, took a whole battalion prisoners,
and broke the centre.</p>
<p>Here were the regiments of Dohna, perfectly clean and well
accoutred; but, being less accustomed to war than Frederick's
veterans, they gave way at once before the Russian onslaught and,
in spite of Frederick's efforts to prevent them, fled from the
field and could not be rallied until a mile distant from it.</p>
<p>The veterans stood firm, however; until Seidlitz, returning from
pursuit, again hurled his horsemen upon the Russian masses, broke
them up, and drove their cavalry in headlong flight before him.</p>
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