In 1795 - the year Napoleon Bonaparte was appointed Commander-in-Chief
of the French army in Italy - the seventeen-year-old
Jean-Nicolas-Auguste Noël entered the Artillery School at Châlons. A
year later, with Napoleon proclaiming himself the liberator of Italy,
Noël was appointed second lieutenant in the 8th Regiment of Horse
Artillery. Written in 1850, With Napoleon's Guns is his remarkable
memoir of two decades in the Emperor's service.
A trained artilleryman himself, Napoleon dramatically transformed the
role of artillery from a cumbersome and tactically limited force into a
fluid, independent and highly mobile trans d'artillerie. This new
organization required fresh, new officers who could act on their own
initiative - officers such as Noël.
From the optimism of the early years in Italy, through the privations of
the retreat from Moscow and the horrors of the Battle of Leipzig to the
disillusionment of the Emperor's defeat at Waterloo, Noël charts both
his personal career and, at close hand, the rise and fall of the First
Empire with frankness and percipience. Based on his journal he kept from
his cadetship at Châlons, With Napoleon's Guns is a revealing account of
an officer at the heart of Napoleon's army.