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If the Central Junta had at one time dissembledthe danger of the country (or ratherpartaken too much of that unreasoning confidencewhich was one characteristic of theSpaniards), they never attempted to conceal itsdisasters, nor to extenuate them. On such occasionstheir language was frank and dignified,becoming the nation which they represented.In announcing the loss of Coruña and Ferrol,they pronounced the surrender of those strongplaces to have been cowardly and scandalous,and promised to condemn the persons who hadthus betrayed their duty, to condign punishment.The enemy meantime failed not to blazonforth their triumphs in this Galician campaign:to represent the battle of Coruña as avictory on their part was a falsehood, which allcircumstances, except those of the action itself,tended to confirm; ... and the results of the campaignhad been so rapid, and apparently socomplete, as to excite their own wonder. ThreeBritish regiments, they said, the 42d, 50th, and52d, had been entirely destroyed in the action,and Sir John Moore killed in attempting to chargeat their head, with the vain hope of restoringthe fortune of the day. The English had lostevery thing which constitutes an army, artillery,9horses, baggage, ammunition, magazines, andmilitary chests. 80 pieces of cannon they hadlanded, they had re-embarked no more than 12.200,000 weight of powder, 16,000 muskets, and2,000,000 of treasure (about 83,000) had falleninto the hands of the pursuers, and treasure yetmore considerable had been thrown down theprecipices along the road between Astorga andCoruña, where the peasantry and the soldierswere now collecting it. 5000 horses had beencounted which they had slaughtered upon theway, ... 500 were taken at Coruña, and the carcassesof 1200 were infecting the streets whenthe conquerors entered that town. The Englishwould have occupied Ferrol and seized the squadronthere, had it not been for the precipitanceof their retreat, and the result of the battle towhich they had been brought at last. Thus thenhad terminated their expedition into Spain! thus,after having fomented the war in that unhappycountry, had they abandoned it to its fate! Inanother season of the year not a man of themwould have escaped; now the facility of breakingup the bridges, the rapidity of the wintertorrents, shortness of days, and length of nights,had favoured their retreat. But they were drivenout of the peninsula, harassed, routed, and disheartened.The kingdom of Leon, the provinceof Zamora, and all Galicia, which they had beenso desirous to cover, were conquered and subdued;and Romana, whom they had broughtfrom the Baltic, was, with the wreck of his army,10reduced to less than 2500 men, wandering betweenVigo and Santiago, and closely pursued....This was the most stinging of all the French reproaches.Wounded to the heart as we werethat an English army should so have retreated,still we knew that wherever our men had beenallowed to face the enemy they had beaten them;and that, however the real history of the battleof Coruña might be concealed from the Frenchpeople, the French army had received a lessonthere, which they would remember whenever itmight be our fortune to encounter them again.But that we should have drawn such a force inpursuit of Romana, who, if he were taken prisoner,would be put to death with the forms ofjustice, by a tyrant who made mockery of justice,was of all the mournful reflections which thisdisastrous expedition excited, the most painfuland the most exasperating.
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