Page:The invasion of the Crimea Vol 6.djvu/447

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.

THE MAIN FIGHT. 403 not been really mucli luirt — that they had hardly oiiap. VI. indeed been attacked — and that their discomfiture was nothing more than the consequence of their 5«?iPmod. leader's mistake, would be to aggravate distrust ; whilst any allusion by Bosquet to that facile theory which would cast all blame on the Eng- lish might deepen the ominous curses of disheart- ened French troops, and cause them, perhaps, to be followed by that cry of ' treason ' which often precedes headlong flight. If the Russians, disdaining the thorn that had vexed them all day at the Barrier, had come on in their strength against Bosquet's retreating troops, would the French have proved able to recover their confidence in the moment of trial, and to make, after all, a good stand ? If not, could Lord Eaglan have broken the torrent of Russian battalions by pressing upon it in flank with the few English troops within reach ? These are questions inviting surmise, without foreshadow- ing answers ; but at least it may be taken for granted that Bosquet's discomfiture now placed the Allies in jeopardy. A great change in the TheAUies state of the battle had been almost suddenly '"•'®°^*^ wrought. Little time had yet passed since that moment when the Algerine and the Zonave bat- talions came bounding into the field with what seemed an evident mission to enter upon the triumph already prepared for them ; and now, the French were disclosing — nay, even incul- cating — a belief that the battle was utterly lost. From what seemed all but contact with