(c) first book’s author: “Bernard Cornwell, who is better known as the author of the fictional Sharpe novels set during the Peninsular War”
Bernard Cornwell
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bernard_Cornwell
(best known for his novels about Napoleonic Wars rifleman Richard Sharpe [a fictional British military man])
(d) “In all probability, Napoleon could not ultimately have won the war, because of the size and determination of the forces ranged against him across Europe. But what gives the story is enduring power is the fact that the outcome of the [Waterloo] battle was far from certain.”
range
(vt): "1a : to set in a row or in the proper order
b : to place among others in a position or situation"
(vi): "3a : to correspond in direction or line : ALIGN"
www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/range
(e) “The third [error, out of four--on the part of French] was the aimless wandering in the pouring rain of the Compte d’Erlon and his 20,000 troops between the battle at Quatre Bras against the Anglo-Dutch and the battle at Ligny that the Prussians were losing. Had he intervened in either, the impact could have been decisive.”
(i) The “compte” (French noun for the action “count” or “counting”--from Latin noun computus computation) is a misnomer (ie, misspelled).
It should be “comte” (French noun for the nobility title “count”--from Latin noun masculine & feminine comes companion, servant, (medieval) a count, an earl).
(ii) Jean-Baptiste Drouet, Comte d'Erlon
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jean-Baptiste_Drouet,_Comte_d'Erlon
(f) the aftermath (the night when the Battle of Waterloo ended): “Amid the cries of dying men and horses, the clinking of hammer against chisel beside the burial pits could be heard—the sound of teeth being removed from dead men by entrepreneurial camp followers intending to supply denture-makers in London.”
Julia Armfield, Smiling with Dead Men’s Teeth. British Library, July 30, 203 (blog).
britishlibrary.typepad.co.uk/untoldlives/2013/07/smiling-with-dead-mens-teeth.html
(g) “Mr O’Keefe paints a vivid picture of a France that had grown weary of Napoleon and, with the exception of a few old loyalists and anti-monarchists, was quite happy to consign Mr O’Keefe paints a vivid picture of a France that had grown weary of Napoleon and, with the exception of a few old loyalists and anti-monarchists, was quite happy to consign la gloire to the past. to the past.”
gloire (noun feminine; Latin [noun feminine] glōria glory): "glory"
en.wiktionary.org/wiki/gloire |