I blogged this week on History Hoydens about the Duchess of Richmond’s ball. The ball, in the midst of which British and Dutch-Belgian soldiers got the news that the French were on the march, is a key set piece in my Waterloo book (which I am currently buried in finishing). It occurs just as the mystery/spy plot and the various emotional dilemmas of the characters are coming to a head. I thought I’d repeat the post here, because I find the topic so interesting (and because I need to get back to revising my book :-).
I love parties. The picture above is from New Years Eve this year, when I spent a lovely evening drinking champagne and watching fireworks with some of my closest friends. But in my writing lately, I’ve been consumed with a much more more lavish party nearly two hundred years in the past. On 15 June 1815 the Duchess of Richmond gave a ball at the house in the Rue de Blanchisserie that she had her husband had taken in Brussels. Among the guests were many officers in the Allied Army, gathered in Belgium preparing for battle against Napoleon Bonaparte, recently escaped from exile on Elba and restored to power in France. A number of the aristocratic British ex-patriates who had taken up residence in Brussels that spring were present as well. So were a gilded assortment of diplomats, along with Belgian royals and dignitaries. Of course the Duke of Wellington, commander of the Allied Army, was on the guest list for the ball. He was an old friend of the Duke and Duchess of Richmond, looked on as a sort of indulgent uncle by their large family of children. Three of the Richmonds’ sons were in the army.
The ballroom was a converted carriage house, where the Lennox children played battledore-and-shuttlecock and the youngest members of the family did their lessons. The duchess draped the rose trellis wallpaper with swags of crimson, gold, and black, the Royal colors of the Netherlands. Ribbons, wreaths, and flowers garlanded the pillars. It was a warm evening ,but the younger Lennoxes threw open the French windows that ran along one side of the room, letting in a welcome breeze. The duchess, a daughter of the Duke of Gordon, had engaged kilted sergeants and privates from the 92nd Foot and the 42nd Royal Highlanders to entertain the company with sword dances.
Rumors that the French were on the move swirled throughout the ballroom. Wellington was late, adding to the talk. By the time he arrived with a group of his aides-de-camp, as skilled at waltzing as they were at war, the duke had known for some hours that Napoleon has crossed the frontier from France. But he believed the reported attacks to the east were a feint. He thought the real attack would come from the west, to separate them from the sea and their supply lines. He needed confirmation before he could order the army to march. Meanwhile, he needed to forestall panic and also to confer with a number of his officers, who were conveniently gathered together at the ball.
Wellington confessed to the duchess’s daughter, Georgiana Lennox, that the army was off tomorrow, but he gave every appearance of sang-froid. As the company moved into the hall on the way to supper, a mud-spattered officer, Harry Webster, pushed his way through the crowd. He had a message for the Prince of Orange. The twenty-three-year-old prince, commander of the Dutch-Belgian army based on his birth not his experience, tucked the message away unread, but Wellington asked to see it. Wellington read the message and at once ordered Webster to summon four horses for the Prince of Orange’s carriage. The message, from Constant de Rebecque, whom the prince had left in charge at his headquarters, revealed that Bonaparte had crossed the Sambre river at Charleroi. He was attacking not from the west but on the Allies’ eastern flank, trying to separate them from their Prussian allies.
Wellington maintained a cheerful demeanor through supper, laughing with young Georgiana Lennox and his Brussels flirt, Lady Frances Webster. But after supper, he asked the Duke of Richmond if he had a map of Belgium in the house. In the duke’s study, Wellington stared down at the map spread on the desk and declared that Bonaparte had humbugged him. He had ordered the army to concentrate at the crossroads of Quatre Bras, but he feared he would not be able to hold the French there. He pressed his thumb against the small village near which he would then have to fight Napoleon. Waterloo.
Meanwhile in the hall and ballroom, the illusion that they were at an ordinary ball had well and truly broken. The front door banged open and shut. Soldiers called for their horses, girls darted across the floor shouting the names of their beloveds, parents scanned the crowd for sons. The musicians had begun to play again in the ballroom, but the strains of the waltz vied with the call of bugles from outside. Georgiana Lennox slipped off to help her eldest brother, Lord March, pack up his things. She thought the young ladies still waltzing were “heartless,” but for many of them it would be the last chance to dance with husbands, sweethearts, and brothers.
The Duchess of Richmond’s ball has been dramatized by many novelists, including Thackeray in Vanity Fair, Georgette Heyer in An Infamous Army, and Bernard Cornwell, in Waterloo, part of the Richard Sharpe series. I wrote about the ball myself in one of my historical romances, Shores of Desire, and as I said above, it’s a key event in my current WIP. Even though this is the second time I’ve approached the ball, I was a bit intimidated by such an iconic historical event. I’m currently on my third draft, and I’m starting to be fairly happy with how the scenes are shaping up. I had to write them in layers. The historical details, the physical setting–from the glitter of the ball to the chaos it dissolved into–the more intimate emotional landscape of my characters, real and fictional, saying farewell to loved ones. It was particularly interesting to have both Mélanie and Raoul there, with the complex emotions both are feeling. Charles surprised me by turning into something more of an action hero in this book that he’s been before. He ended up being at the battlefield much of the time.
Have you read fictional accounts of the Duchess of Richmond’s ball or seen it dramatized on film? What party scenes stand out in your memory from historical fiction? Writers, is there an historical entertainment you both want to dramatize and find yourself intimidated by?
I’ve just posted a new letter from Raoul to Lady Frances in the Fraser Correspondence, inspired by JMM’s suggestion that Raoul would entrust to Frances any letters he left for Charles.
January 24, 2011 at 7:42 pm
I did see it in “Vanity Fair”.
Honestly, with all those officers whose only qualifications were that they were born of the gentry – no wonder Napoleon almost took over Europe.
January 24, 2011 at 8:00 pm
Which version of “Vanity Fair” did you see, JMM? One of the most prominent examples of officer in positions based on birth rather than experience was the Prince of Orange, heir to the throne of the Netherlands, who was commander of the Dutch-Belgian forces at Waterloo. He was only 23, not stupid and not a bad soldier, but he made some impetuous errors ordering soldiers to form line when they should have formed square to meet a cavalry attack, which were ruinously costly in lost lives. He’s a fairly major character in my book.
January 25, 2011 at 8:20 pm
The recent one with Reese. Yeah, I know. The mini-series was probably better.
January 25, 2011 at 8:59 pm
I’m pretty sure that is the ball from Slightly Tempted. That is Morgan’s story in the Bedwyn series. It’s not the most in-depth as far as the war going on, but it’s a great romance series.
The story proves JMM’s point about the only requirement for officers were that they were from the gentry. I would have to agree with her statement. Morgan comments in the book, ‘Sometimes I think the officers of my acquaintance are like toy soldiers playing at war games.’ She is tired of being told not ‘worry her pretty head’ about the war while listening to the officers wax poetic about becoming heroes of war.
The scenes from the ball are quite short. That part of the story focuses more about afterwards when she helps tend the wounded soldiers while waiting for her brother to return.
January 25, 2011 at 11:20 pm
I enjoyed the one with Reese (though they get the date of the ball wrong). The mini-series can go into the story in more depth. The scenes around the ball and Waterloo are powerful in both.
January 25, 2011 at 11:24 pm
Thanks, Susan! I love Mary Balogh, but I haven’t read “Slightly tempted.” There were quite a few young men at Waterloo who had never fought before and had delusions of heroic grandeur (a lot of the more experienced troop were still in America, though quite a few Peninsular veterans fought in the war). My Waterloo book has a lot of scenes of nursing the wounded as well, after the battle but during it as well. There was fighting at Quatre Bras on June 16 (the day after the ball) so wounded soldiers were brought into Brussels on the 17th and on the 18th during Waterloo. The later part of my book moves back and forth between Brussels and the battlefield.
February 15, 2011 at 3:22 pm
Tracy, Are you still considering suggestions for the title of your Waterloo book? Something you wrote about the Duchess of Richmond’s ball tickled the mind. What do you think of Heartless Waltz?
February 15, 2011 at 3:34 pm
I am still taking title suggestions (in fact I was brainstorming with my friend Veronica at lunch yesterday). I really like Heartless Waltz or The Heartless Waltz. It’s definitely going on the list! Thanks!
September 24, 2011 at 10:13 pm
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