DAVOUT (Louis-Nicolas). - Lot 44

Lot 44
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Estimation :
1000 - 1200 EUR
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Result : 3 640EUR
DAVOUT (Louis-Nicolas). - Lot 44
DAVOUT (Louis-Nicolas). Set of 9 autograph letters signed to his wife Aimée Leclerc. January 1807-February 1808. BEAUTIFUL CORRESPONDENCE FROM POLAND, INCLUDING 2 LETTERS FROM THE BATTLEFIELD OF PULTUSK, WITH A LETTER WRITTEN IN TILSIT DURING THE TREATY NEGOTIATIONS. - PULTUSK [in Poland], January 4 [1807]. Letter written from the battlefield of Pułtusk, where on December 26, 1806, General Bennigsen's Russians were defeated by Marshal Lannes with the support of the Gudin division, which included a detachment of Marshal Davout's corps: "... I AM WAITING IMPATIENTLY FOR THE POSSIBILITY OF GOING TO SEE THE EMPEROR IN WARSAW to tell him about our bad and uninhabitable house; I have decided to tell him because I owe you this proof of attachment. It takes nothing less than this motive to make me OVERWHELM THE TIMIDITY I HAVE TO TALK TO HIM ABOUT MY INTERESTS, even though by experience he has taught me to count on his benevolence. All I am waiting for to make this trip to Warsaw is the establishment of our billets, which the troops are taking...". (3 pp. in-4). - PULTUSK, January 7 [1807]. Letter written from the battlefield of Pułtusk, where on December 26, 1806, General Bennigsen's Russians were defeated by Marshal Lannes with the support of the Gudin division, which included a detachment of Marshal Davout's corps: "Yesterday... I gave you some news. I forgot to tell you about our parents. Their health is as good as mine. In a few days, I expect to tell you that HER MAJESTY HAS GIVEN THEM NEW MARKS OF HIS WELFARE...." (one p. in-4, address on spine, remnant of his name stamp with marshal's batons; tear to address leaf due to opening without damage to text). He writes of his ailing brother-in-law, General Marc-Antoine Bonin de La Boninière de Beaumont, in Warsaw. - Dietrichswald [now Gietrzwałd in Poland, near Olsztyn], April 9, 1807. "I send you... 14050 fcs in draft on the treasury, I have made them to the order of Inspector Chadelas [Inspector aux revues Jean-Charles Chadelas] who will be kind enough to collect the amount and spare you the steps you would have been obliged to take if they had been made out in your name. Knowing your discomfort, it pains me not to be able to make my more considerable consignment for the moment, but I hope at the end of this month or in the course of the next to have AN OCCASION TO SPEAK TO THE EMPEROR and I will take advantage of it, if he is not in major occupations, to speak to him about your position. I owe it to him all the more because I am the cause of it... I have decided to send to Berlin the two mares that were found to be in foal despite the assertions of the veterinary artist. They are Isabelle and the Beaupré mare. I highly recommended them to Gal Hulin [Pierre-Augustin Hulin, commander of Berlin], who has the foals of the stallion I have at Savigny [château of Marshal Davout, at Savigny-sur-Orge in today's Essonne department]...". (April 9, 1807. 2 pp. in-4). - TILSIT, July 1 [1807]. Letter from Tilsit, where the peace treaties between France, Russia and Prussia were being negotiated: "... AFFAIRES PRENNENT ICI UNE TELLE TOURNURE que je puis concevoir l'espérance de t'embrasser dans deux mois au plus tard... A thousand tender regards to our good mother, reassure her of the health of Dessart, de Beaupré and all that interests her [Marshal Davout's brother, General Nicolas-Marin Leclerc Des Essarts, chief of staff of the Friant division in the 3rd Corps of the Grande Armée commanded by the Marshal, and Marshal Davout's maternal uncle, General Jean-Charles Musquinet de Beaupré, attached to the staff of the 3rd Corps of the Grande Armée]. In recalling me to the memory of my sister-in-law, announce to her that HER BRAVE AND ESTIMABLE HUSBAND is enjoying perfect health [Marshal Davout's sister had married GENERAL LOUIS FRIANT, then divisional officer in the 3rd Corps of the Grande Armée under the Marshal's orders]..." He also speaks of his anxiety about his wife's impending delivery, which he did not know had taken place: Aimée Leclerc had given birth to their second daughter, Adèle Napoléone, on June 21 (3 pp. in-4). - Skierniewice [between Łódź and Warsaw, Poland], "this 15 bre [1807] at 6 a.m.. [...] ATTENTION TRUNCATED DESCRIPTION. FULL DESCRIPTION TO BE FOUND IN THE CATALOG
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