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Bonchamps "from a contemporary portrait", reproduced in Baguenier-Desormeaux, Bonchamps et le passage de la Loire (1896) |
We must not deceive ourselves; - we must not aim at worldly rewards - they would be below the purity of our motives and the sanctity of our cause. We must not even aspire to human glory; civil wars give not that.
Words of Bonchamps, reported in the
Memoirs of his wife p.7-8.
The Retreat to Saint-Florent
On 17th October 1793 the Grande Armée Catholique et Royale attacked Republican troops at Cholet. After a terrible battle that lasted thirty-six hours, the Republicans were left masters of the field.
The two Vendean generals, D'Elbée and Bonchamps, had both been seriously wounded. They were evacuated from the battlefield in full view of their demoralised troops. D'Elbée, despite sixteen wounds, was carried away by his brother-in-law Duhoux d'Hauterie on horseback. The faithful soldiers of Bonchamps took turns to bear the stretcher of their beloved chief, who had been hit by grapeshot in the belly. One of their number Louis Onillon, carried beside them the flag of the division of the Bords de la Loire (See Deniau, p. 57) According to the eye-witness account of Poirier de Beauvais, Bonchamps spent the night at Beaupréau, in the house of a Madame de Bonnet, arriving about nine o'clock in the evening. D'Elbee, who had preceded him there, was taken by ox-cart to a neighbouring farm and subsequently evacuated to Noirmoutier. Bonchamps too stayed only a short time in Beaupréau since by early morning on the 18th October he was in Saint-Florent-le-Vieil, at the house of Mme Duval in the lower town.
In the meantime, the defeated Vendean forces began to gather in Saint-Florent, where it had been Bonchamps intention to cross the Loire. In the absence of the senior commanders, the marquis de Donnissan, president of the Supreme Council, took charge of operations and, seconded by the Chevalier des Essarts, sent orders to surrounding parishes to assemble. Estimates have it as many as sixty thousand ragged soldiers gathered in the town, with perhaps twenty thousand women and children. With them arrived several thousand Republican prisoners under the guard of Cesbron d'Argonne, a fierce veteran of almost 60, until recently the royalist governor of Cholet. The prisoners were shut up in the Abbey buildings or assembled in the surrounding town. They clearly posed an acute dilemma, since they could neither be taken across the river, nor simply left behind to rejoin the enemy forces. The third alternative was clearly to kill them.