
{—- UTF-8 BOM —-}LES CAHIERS DU CAPITAINE COIGNET
PUBLIÉS PAR LORÉDAN LARCHEY
PARIS
DÉTAILS SUR L'AUTEUR ET SUR SON OEUVRE.—PARALLÈLE DE COIGNET ET DE FRICASSE {XV}.—ENSEIGNEMENTS A TIRER DE CES CAHIERS {XX}.—LA DISCIPLINE ET L'ESPRIT MILITAIRE DU PREMIER EMPIRE {XXVIII}.—POURQUOI IL NE FAUT RIEN OUBLIER DE SON HISTOIRE {XXXVII}.
LORÉDAN LARCHEY. - TABLE DES MATIÈRES
PREMIER CAHIER - MON ENFANCE.—JE SUIS TOUR À TOUR BERGER, CHARRETIER, GARÇON D'ÉCURIE, HOMME DE CONFIANCE CHEZ UN MARCHAND DE CHEVAUX.
DEUXIÈME CAHIER - DÉPART POUR L'ARMÉE.—MA VIE MILITAIRE JUSQU'À LA BATAILLE DE MONTEBELLO.
TROISIÈME CAHIER - LA JOURNÉE DE MARENGO.—POINTE EN ESPAGNE.
QUATRIÈME CAHIER - MA DÉCORATION—JE SUIS EMPOISONNÉ.—RETOUR AU PAYS.—LE CAMP DE BOULOGNE ET LA PREMIÈRE CAMPAGNE D'AUTRICHE.
CINQUIÈME CAHIER. - CAMPAGNES DE PRUSSE ET DE POLOGNE.—ENTREVUE DE TILSIT.—ON ME FAIT CAPORAL.—CAMPAGNES D'ESPAGNE ET D'AUTRICHE.—JE SUIS NOMMÉ SERGENT.
A vivid portrait of a French soldier’s life unfolds through the pages of this memoir, written by a veteran who served from the turbulent days of the Revolution through the height of the Empire. The author’s own hand, reproduced in fac‑simile, lets listeners hear his steady cadence as he recounts the hardships of the front, the camaraderie among grenadiers, and the unchanging spirit that survived every promotion and battle.
Beyond battlefield anecdotes, the work offers a rare glimpse into the everyday world of early‑19th‑century military culture—its discipline, its jokes, and the simple pleasures of tavern gatherings where stories were swapped over coffee. The editor’s notes trace the manuscript’s journey from a modest bookseller’s stall to a cherished, though scarce, publication, underscoring the authenticity of the voice. Listeners will be drawn into the honest, unvarnished reflections of a man who, despite his rank, remained a true sergeant at heart.
Language
fr
Duration
~11 hours (689K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2011-04-20
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1776–1860
A French soldier turned memoirist, he left one of the clearest firsthand accounts of life in Napoleon’s armies. His notebooks follow an ordinary man through extraordinary campaigns, with vivid detail and a plainspoken voice.
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