CONTENTS
[RECOMMENDATION.]
[PREFACE.]
[NAPOLEON’S]
[MAXIM I.]
[MAXIM II.]
[MAXIM III.]
[MAXIM IV.]
[MAXIM V.]
[MAXIM VI.]
[MAXIM VII.]
[MAXIM VIII.]
[MAXIM IX.]
[MAXIM X.]
[MAXIM XI.]
[MAXIM XII.]
[MAXIM XIII.]
[MAXIM XIV.]
[MAXIM XV.]
[MAXIM XVI.]
[MAXIM XVII.]
[MAXIM XVIII.]
[MAXIM XIX.]
[MAXIM XX.]
[MAXIM XXI.]
[MAXIM XXII.]
[MAXIM XXIII.]
[MAXIM XXIV.]
[MAXIM XXV.]
[MAXIM XXVI.]
[MAXIM XXVII.]
[MAXIM XXVIII.]
[MAXIM XXIX.]
[MAXIM XXX.]
[MAXIM XXXI.]
[MAXIM XXXII.]
[MAXIM XXXIII.]
[MAXIM XXXIV.]
[MAXIM XXXV.]
[MAXIM XXXVI.]
[MAXIM XXXVII.]
[MAXIM XXXVIII.]
[MAXIM XXXIX.]
[MAXIM XL.]
[MAXIM XLI.]
[MAXIM XLII.]
[MAXIM XLIII.]
[MAXIM XLIV.]
[MAXIM XLV.]
[MAXIM XLVI.]
[MAXIM XLVII.]
[MAXIM XLVIII.]
[MAXIM XLIX.]
[MAXIM L.]
[MAXIM LI.]
[MAXIM LII.]
[MAXIM LIII.]
[MAXIM LIV.]
[MAXIM LV.]
[MAXIM LVI.]
[MAXIM LVII.]
[MAXIM LVIII.]
[MAXIM LIX.]
[MAXIM LX.]
[MAXIM LXI.]
[MAXIM LXII.]
[MAXIM LXIII.]
[MAXIM LXIV.]
[MAXIM LXV.]
[MAXIM LXVI.]
[MAXIM LXVII.]
[MAXIM LXVIII.]
[MAXIM LXIX.]
[MAXIM LXX.]
[MAXIM LXXI.]
[MAXIM LXXII.]
[MAXIM LXXIII.]
[MAXIM LXXIV.]
[MAXIM LXXV.]
[MAXIM LXXVI.]
[MAXIM LXXVII.]
[MAXIM LXXVIII.]
[Transcriber’s Notes]
RECOMMENDATION.
“After refreshing my memory by looking over again ‘The Officer’s Manual,’ or ‘Maxims of Napoleon,’ I think I may safely recommend the republication, in America, of the work in English, as likely to be called for by many officers, regular and volunteer. It contains a circle of maxims, deduced from the highest source of military science and experience, with practical illustrations of the principles taken from the most celebrated campaigns of modern times. The study of the book cannot fail to set all young officers on a course of inquiry and reflection greatly to their improvement.
“WINFIELD SCOTT.”
PREFACE.
The publisher has reissued this little volume as a publication timely for the occasion. A collection of maxims which directed the military operations of the greatest captain of modern times, cannot fail to prove of great use to such young officers as really desire a knowledge of the art of war. The maxims are illustrated by instances drawn from the campaigns of Gustavus Adolphus, Turenne, Frederick, and Napoleon. These great men were all governed by the same principles, and it is by applying these principles to the perusal of their respective campaigns, that every military man will recognize their wisdom, and make such use of them hereafter as his own particular genius shall point out.
“And here, perhaps,” says the translator, Col. D’Aguilar, “my task might have been considered finished; but perceiving how incomplete the collection was alone, I have endeavored to supply the deficiency by having recourse for further illustration to the memoirs of Montécuculli, and the instructions of Frederick to his generals. The analogy of their principles with those of Napoleon, has convinced me that the art of war is susceptible of two points of view: one, which relates entirely to the acquirements and genius of the general; the other, which refers to matters of detail.
“The first is the same in all ages, and with all nations, whatever be the arms with which they fight. Hence it follows that, in every age, great commanders have been governed by the same principles.
“The business of detail, on the contrary, is controlled by existing circumstances. It varies with the character of a people, and the quality of their arms.
“It is with a view to impress the justice of this remark, that I have sought for facts in different periods of history, to illustrate these maxims, and to prove that nothing is problematical in war; but that failure and success in military operations depend almost always on the natural genius and science of the chief.”
NAPOLEON’S
MAXIMS OF WAR.
MAXIM I.
The frontiers of states are either large rivers, or chains of mountains, or deserts. Of all these obstacles to the march of an army, the most difficult to overcome is the desert; mountains come next, and broad rivers occupy the third place.