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diff --git a/14914.txt b/14914.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..81444e6 --- /dev/null +++ b/14914.txt @@ -0,0 +1,9575 @@ +The Project Gutenberg eBook, Narrative of Services in the Liberation of +Chili, Peru and Brazil, from Spanish and Portuguese Domination, Volume 1, +by Thomas Cochrane, Tenth Earl of Dundonald + + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + + + + +Title: Narrative of Services in the Liberation of Chili, Peru and Brazil, +from Spanish and Portuguese Domination, Volume 1 + +Author: Thomas Cochrane, Tenth Earl of Dundonald + +Release Date: February 5, 2005 [eBook #14914] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII) + + +***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK NARRATIVE OF SERVICES IN THE +LIBERATION OF CHILI, PERU AND BRAZIL, FROM SPANISH AND PORTUGUESE +DOMINATION, VOLUME 1*** + + +E-text prepared by Ted Garvin, Graeme Mackreth, and the Project Gutenberg +Online Distributed Proofreading Team + + + +NARRATIVE OF SERVICES IN THE LIBERATION OF CHILI, PERU, AND BRAZIL, +FROM SPANISH AND PORTUGUESE DOMINATION + +by + +THOMAS, EARL OF DUNDONALD, G.C.B. +Admiral of the Red; Rear-Admiral of the Fleet, etc. etc. + +VOL. I + +London: +James Ridgway, No 169, Piccadilly + +MDCCCLIX + + + + + + + +TO THE MOST NOBLE THE MARQUIS OF LANSDOWNE, K.G. ETC. ETC. + + +My Lord, + +I am proud to have been honoured with your Lordship's permission to +dedicate to you the following narrative of historical events, respecting +which the public has not previously been placed in a position to form a +correct judgment. Your Lordship's generous acquiescence enables me to +discharge a double debt: First--of thanks to one whose high political +character this country will ever warmly cherish;--Secondly--of deep-felt +gratitude for the countenance and efficient aid experienced from your +Lordship at a period when party faction made me the object of bitter +resentment; the injustice of which could in no way be better +demonstrated, than by the fact that--in the midst of unmerited obloquy, +it was my high privilege to preserve your Lordship's friendship and +esteem. + +I have the honour to be, + +Your Lordship's obliged and faithful Servant, + +DUNDONALD. + + + + +CONTENTS. + + +PREFACE + +CHAPTER I. + +Invitation to take command of Chilian Navy--Arrival at Valparaiso--First +expedition to Peru--Attack on Spanish shipping at Callao--Departure for +Huacho--Capture of Spanish convoys of money--Paita taken--Return to +Valparaiso to reorganise the squadron--Offer to give up my share of +prize money to the Republic--This offer declined by the Supreme +Director--Popular congratulations--Attempt on Lady Cochrane's life. + +CHAPTER II. + +Second expedition to Peru--Disappointment at not being provided with +troops--Failure of rockets--Departure for Arica--Capture of +Pisco--Capture of Spanish ships at Puna--Determine to make an attempt on +Valdivia--Arrival off that port, and capture of Spanish brig of war +_Potrillo_--Troops obtained from Conception--Flag-ship nearly +wrecked--Attack on forts, and conquest of Valdivia. + +CHAPTER III. + +Departure for Chiloe--Preparations of the enemy--Capture of Fort +Corona--Failure at Fort Aguy, and subsequent retreat--Return to +Valdivia--Capture of Osorio--Return to Valparaiso--Enthusiastic +reception--Chagrin of the ministry--Importance of conquest of Valdivia +in a political point of view--Promotion of officers under +arrest--Employment of Indians by the Spaniards--Career of +Benavides--Mutinous spirit of the seamen in consequence of their +captures being appropriated by Government--Resignation of my +commission--Refusal thereof--Renewed offer of an estate--This again +declined--Seamen obtain their wages--Private purchase of an +estate--Government gives notice of taking it--Appointment of flag +captain against my wishes--Annoyance given to me by Minister of +Marine--Renewed resignation of the command--Officers of the squadron +resign in a body--Government begs of me to retain the command--My +consent--General San Martin--The Senate--Zenteno--Corruption of parties +in the Administration. + +CHAPTER IV. + +Obstacles to equipping the squadron--Sailing of the liberating +expedition--Debarcation at Pisco--Long inaction of the army--General San +Martin removes to Ancon--Capture of the Esmeralda--Exchange of +prisoners--Acknowledgment of the service by General San Martin--Lady +Cochrane's visit to Mendoza. + +CHAPTER V. + +San Martin's violation, of truth--Removal of blockade--Spanish +depression--Troops dying of fever--San Martin's designs on +Guayaquil--Mutinous conduct of officers--Refusal to obey +orders--Deposition of Viceroy--San Martin gives me troops--Jealousy of +San Martin--Attack on Arica--Capture of Tacna--Capture of +Moquega--Refusal of more men--an armistice ratified--Distress of +Lima--Dissatisfaction of the army--Lady Cochrane in action--Devotion of +seamen. + +CHAPTER VI. + +Return to Callao--Lima abandoned--Hesitation of General San Martin to +occupy the City--Loss of the _San Martin_--Excesses of the +Spaniards--Proclamation of independence--San Martin assumes autocratic +power under the title of Protector--My remonstrance--His reply--Mutinous +state of the squadron from neglect. + +CHAPTER VII. + +Tampering with Chilian officers--The Archbishop of Lima--His +expulsion--Negociation for surrender of the Forts--This +counteracted--San Martin's bombastic Proclamations--His refusal to +encounter the enemy--The Spaniards relieve Callao--Delusive +proclamation--The unblushing falsehood--Spaniards carry off the +treasure--Discontent of the squadron. + +CHAPTER VIII. + +Prolonged destitution of squadron--The men mutiny in a body--The +seamen's letters--San Martin sends away the public treasure--My seizure +of it--Private property restored--San Martin's accusations against +me--The squadron paid wages--Attempt on the officers' fidelity--I am +asked to desert from Chili--Ordered to quit on refusal--Monteagudo's +letter--My reply--Justification of seizing the treasure--- No other +course possible. + +CHAPTER IX. + +Arrival at Guayaquil--Address to Guayaquilenos--Injurious +monopolies--Ministerial folly--Departure from Guayaquil--Arrival in +Mexico--Anchor at Acapulco--Mock Ambassadors--Plot against me--Return to +Guayaquil--Venganza taken possession of--Agreement with Junta--General +La Mar--Orders to withhold supplies--Abominable cruelty--Courtly +splendour--Destruction of a division of the Army--Dissatisfaction of +officers--Renewed overtures from San Martin--Their refusal by +me--Warning to the Chilian Government. + +CHAPTER X. + +Return to Valparaiso--Thanks of the Government--Reasons for +satisfaction--Illegitimate trade--Turned to good account--Denunciation +of Officers deserted--Investigation of accounts--San Martin's charges +against me--My refutation--Government refuses its publication--Cruelty +to Spanish prisoners--Retirement to Quintero--Political fruits of our +success--Destitute condition of squadron--Infamous attempt to promote +dissatisfaction therein--Object of this course--Steps taken to defeat +it--Disavowed by the Minister--Sympathy of officers--Attempt to get rid +of Gen. Freire--Its eventual result--Letter of the Captains. + +CHAPTER XI. + +Negociations with Bolivar--Exile of Monteagudo--Complaints of the +Limenos--Extravagance of the Government--Exculpation of San +Martin--Effects of popular dissension--Disagreement of Bolivar and San +Martin--Vote of Peruvian Congress--Extraordinary neglect of the Chilian +Squadron--San Martin's arrival at Valparaiso--I demand his +trial--Countenance of the Supreme Director--Squadron at length paid +wages--Revolt of Conception--General Freire apprises me of it--Freire +asks for my support--His letter not replied to--San Martin's influence. + +CHAPTER XII. + +The squadron taken from me--I accept invitation from Brazil--Letter to +the Supreme Director--San Martin quits Chili--His prudence--Opinion of +his Aide-de Camp--Ministerial neglect--Permission to quit Chili--Letter +to General Freire--For the first time made public--Letter to the +Captains and Officers--To the Chilian people--To the foreign +merchants--To the President of Peru--San Martin actuated by +revenge--This shewn from his letters. + +CHAPTER XIII. + +Freire marches on Valparaiso--Elected Supreme Director--He begs of me to +return--My reply--Subsequent letter to General Freire. + +CHAPTER XIV. + +Injustice to the squadron--Inconsistency of this--Estate taken from +me--My losses by litigation--Endeavours to enforce my claims--Petty +excuses for evading them--I am charged with expenses of the Army--And +with costs for making legal captures--My conduct approved at the time--- +Ministerial approbation--Paltry compensation at length given--Ministerial +corruption--Proved by San Martin--Cause of official animosity to +me--Conclusion. + +APPENDIX. + + + + + +PREFACE. + + +The first of these volumes forms a history of the consolidation of +Chilian independence, and of the subsequent liberation of Peru--through +the instrumentality of the Chilian squadron under my command; a service +which called forth from the Governments and people of the liberated +states the warmest expressions of gratitude to the naval service +collectively, and to myself personally, as having planned and conducted +the operations whereby these results were attained. + +It records also the strangely inconsistent fact that--beyond these marks +of national approbation--neither Chili nor Peru ever awarded to the +squadron or myself any more substantial reward--though, in a pecuniary +sense, deeply indebted to us; for, during the greater portion of the war +of independence, the subsistence of the crews, and the repairs and +equipment of the Chilian squadron were solely provided for by our own +exertions, without cost to the Government; since, in addition to the +capture of Spanish ships-of-war and merchant vessels--money, provisions, +and stores to a great extent fell into our hands; all of which--though +our own stipulated right--were voluntarily devoted to state exigencies, +in the full conviction that, at the expiration of the war, the value of +our sacrifices would, as a point of national honour, be returned to us +by Chili. As regards Peru, our still unpaid for captures of ships-of-war +formed her first naval force, for which the only requital has been, a +vote of her first National Assembly--almost its inaugural act--ascribing +to me the double praise of her liberation from the Spanish yoke, and of +her subsequent deliverance from an intolerable military tyranny. + +The volume contains another point, which forms a yet stranger sequel to +my services on the Western shores of South America. After the expiration +of thirty years, Chili granted me the absurdly inadequate sum of L.6,000 +_in full of all my claims!_ And this, with the knowledge that, after my +return to England I was involved in litigation on account of the legal +seizure of vessels under the orders of her former Government--by which +I was subjected to a loss, directly and indirectly, of _more than three +times the amount_. The Chilian portion of this history, therefore, +resolves itself into the fact, that not only did I reap no reward +whatever, for the liberation of Chili and Peru, but that the +independence of both countries was achieved _at a heavy pecuniary +sacrifice to myself!_ in compensation for which, as well as for my +recognised services--Chili has thought its national honour sufficiently +vindicated by allotting me _one-third of my losses only_, without other +compensation of any kind! I regret to add, that my necessities at the +time, arising for the most part from the pecuniary difficulties to which +I had been subjected on Chilian account, compelled me to accept the +amount tendered. + +The second volume is of a character somewhat similar. It narrates the +circumstances under which--by promises the most inviting, and +stipulations the most binding--I was induced to accept the command, or +rather organization of the first Brazilian navy. It details the complete +expulsion of all Portuguese armaments, naval and military, from the +Eastern shores of the South American Continent, by the squadron alone, +wholly unaided by military co-operation; in the course of which arduous +service, ships of war, merchant vessels, and valuable property to the +extent of several millions of dollars were captured under the Imperial +order, and their value--in spite of previous stipulations--_refused to +the captors_, on the falsely assumed ground that the provinces liberated +were Brazilian--though a Brazilian military force had been recently +beaten in an attempt to expel the Portuguese--and though these provinces +were, at the period of my assuming the command, in the uninterrupted +occupation of the very Portuguese fleets and armies afterwards expelled, +it was falsely pretended that the property captured was not enemy's +property--though expressly described as such in numerous Imperial +decrees--and more especially by the instructions given to me by His +Imperial Majesty to seize or destroy it wherever found. + +It was, in short, subsequently decided by a Court of Admiralty--for the +most part composed of Portuguese members, acting under the influence of +a Portuguese faction in the Administration--that neither myself nor the +squadron were entitled to the prizes made--though most inconsistently, +the same tribunal condemned the ships of war taken--as "_droits_" to the +crown--for which, compensation was awarded to the squadron by His +Imperial Majesty, but never paid by the ministers to whom the order was +directed. + +Not to anticipate the contents of the volume devoted to Brazilian +affairs. It being found after the expulsion of the enemy, that the +stipulations made with myself were too binding to be easily set aside, +several futile attempts were made to evade them, but this being found +impossible, the unworthy expedient was resorted to of summarily +dismissing me from the service, after the establishment of peace with +Portugal--an event entirely consequent on my individual services. By +this expedient--of the rectitude or otherwise of which the reader will +be able to judge from the documentary evidence laid before him--I was +got rid of without compensation for my claims, which for thirty years +were altogether repudiated; but, at the expiration of that period, fully +recognised as _having been due from the beginning!_ The Brazilian +Government, however, satisfied its own sense of justice by awarding me +less than _one-half the simple interest of the amount stipulated in my +patents_; thus retaining the whole of the principal admitted to be due. + +The preceding remarks form a _synopsis_ of my career on both sides of +the continent of South America; the narrative, where dispute might +arise, being carefully founded on, and in all cases accompanied by +documentary evidence, which admits neither dispute nor contradiction. + +The trifling amount awarded by Chili, would probably not have been +granted at all, but for the earnest remonstrance of Lord Palmerston, +warmly seconded by the efforts of the Hon. Mr. Jerningham, British +Minister to the Chilian Republic, by whose joint exertions the +Government was induced to admit--that national honour was involved in +fulfilling national obligations; though an infinitesimal view of either +the one or the other was certainly taken when awarding me the +insignificant sum previously mentioned. + +In Brazil the case was somewhat different. It is to His present Imperial +Majesty, Don Pedro II. that I owe any investigation of my claims, by the +appointment of a Commission (_Seccoes_), which reported that they ought +never to have been withheld, as being my stipulated right. But even the +limited amount awarded in consequence of this decision, was on the point +of being further diminished one half by its projected payment in a +depreciated currency--and, had it not been for the intervention of Lord +Clarendon, and of the Hon. Mr. Scarlett, British Minister at Rio de +Janeiro, of whose zealous exertions in my favour I cannot speak too +warmly--this further injustice would have been perpetrated without the +knowledge or sanction of His present Imperial Majesty. + +It may be asked, why--with the clear documentary evidence in my +possession--and now adduced--I have for so many years endured an amount +of obloquy and injustice, which might at any time have been set aside by +its publication? The reply is obvious. The withholding of my claims by +the Governments of both sides the South American Continent, and the +ruinous expense to which I was put on account of Chili, entailed upon me +many years of pecuniary difficulty. To have told even the +truth--unbacked as I then was, by the British Government--would have +been to have all my claims set at defiance, so that compulsory +discretion was a sufficient reason for my silence. It was long before I +could induce a British Minister to satisfy himself of the rectitude of +my conduct--the soundness of my claims--or the dishonesty of those who, +believing me to be powerless, laughed at reiterated demands for my +stipulated rights. Yet more I have never sought from those to whom I +gave liberty and dominion. + +There is, however, a reason for the present publication, of which I have +never lost sight. Amidst all the injustice which it has been my lot to +sustain, I have ever determined--for the sake of my family--to whom my +character is an heir-loom--that no obloquy shall follow me to the grave, +for none have I merited. On the day these volumes see the light, this +resolution will be partially fulfilled. On that day I shall have +completed the eighty-third year of a career strangely chequered, yet not +undistinguished; and, therefore, the opinions of either Chilians or +Brazilians are now of small moment to me in comparison with a reputation +which has been demmed worthy of belonging to history. None of the +present ruling powers in either Chili or Brazil can possibly be offended +with me for giving a guardedly temperate documentary narrative of what +must hereafter form the basis of their national annals. I do not for a +moment contemplate that men of enlightened views such as now direct the +affairs of both countries have either part or sympathy with +self-interested adventurers who in popular revolutions too often rise to +the surface, and for a time make confusion worse confounded; till +replaced--as a matter of course, no less than by necessity--by men of +greater grasp of mind and more exalted aspirations. + +But this is as it maybe--my reputation as a British seaman is to me of +the highest moment, and it shall not be sullied after my death by the +aspersions of those who wilfully revenged the thwarting of their +anti-Imperial designs, by imputations which can alone enter into the +minds of men devoid of generous impulses and therefore incapable of +appreciating higher motives. I have not followed their example, but +where it is necessary to bring forward such persons--they will be viewed +through the medium of their own documents, which are incontestible and +irresistible, and which would as easily convict me of untruth as they +convict my maligners of practices unworthy the honour of a nation. + +To my own countrymen these volumes can scarcely be matter of +indifference; though, perhaps, few reflect that the numerous fleets of +British merchantmen which now frequent both shores of South America, are +the consequence of the deliverance of these vast territories from an +exclusive colonial yoke. It is true that England had previously formed a +treaty with Portugal, permitting English vessels to trade to her South +American Colonies, but such was the influence of Portuguese merchants +with the local governments, that it was nearly inoperative; so that, +practically, the Portuguese were in the exclusive possession of that +commerce which my expulsion of the fleet and army of the mother country +unreservedly threw open to British enterprise. The same, even in a +higher degree, may be said with regard to Chili and Peru. + +Yet, scarcely had my mission to Chili become known, than the influence +of Spain induced the British Ministry to pass a "Foreign Enlistment +Act," the penal clauses of which were evidently aimed at me, for +having entered into the service of unacknowledged governments without +permission--though I had shortly before been most unjustly driven from +the service of my native country. + +In blind animosity towards me, my former English persecutors failed to +perceive the advantage to British commerce, of freeing both sides of +South America from lingering war and internal dissension. An amusing +instance of this occurred on my return to England. Having occasion to +wait upon the then Attorney-General relative to a patent which I had in +hand, he brusquely inquired "_whether I was not afraid to appear before +him?_" On my replying that "I was not aware of having reason to fear +appearing in the presence of any man," he told me the question had been +officially put to him, whether I could be punished under the "Foreign +Enlistment Act," for the part I had taken in the liberation of Chili, +Peru, and Brazil? To this I replied, that "if Government was indiscreet +enough further to persecute me for having thrown open to British +commerce the largest field for enterprise of modern times, they could +take what steps they chose, for that I, having accepted service in South +America before the passing of the Act, was not afraid of the +consequences of having infringed its provisions." It is almost needless +to say that no such prosecution was instituted, though the will was +good, despite the national benefits conferred. + +I will not enter farther into the subject in a preface to volumes which +themselves form only a summary of events in which I was a principal +actor, but at the same time, one, which I hope will prove satisfactory +and decisive. It would have been easy to have dilated the narrative, but +my object is solely to leave behind me a faithful record of events which +must one day become history, and there is no history like documentary +history. + +To those high personages who have advocated my cause with other nations, +the present volume will give satisfaction, as affording additional proof +that their advocacy rested upon no visionary basis. To the members of +the press, who have adopted the same views, this exposition will be +equally satisfactory. To all these I owe the thanks of recognising in +me, a love for that service, from which--for a time I was unjustly +expelled. It is my intention, if God spare my life, to add to these +Memoirs a narrative of my former experience in the British navy, and, +what may be of greater utility, an exposition of that which, from +jealousy and other causes no less unworthy, _I was not permitted to +effect_. To these I shall add a few remarks upon my connexion with the +liberation of Greece, developing some remarkable facts, which have as +yet escaped the notice of historians. These reminiscences of the past +will, at least, be instructive to future generations and if any remarks +of mine will conduce to the permanent greatness and security of my +country, I shall deem the residue of my life well spent in recording +them. + +At my advanced age, such a task as that now partially executed, would, +perhaps, have presented insuperable difficulties, but for the assistance +rendered me by Mr. Earp, who, with great perseverance, has +unravelled--what, in the lapse of time, had become the almost +inextricable confusion of my papers. That, however, has, with his +assistance, been accomplished in such a way as to base upon original +documents every incident contained in the work--the more important of +these documents being adduced, so as to admit of neither doubt nor +question. The same course will be pursued in the forthcoming English +portion of my career, with a result, I trust, equally clear and +convincing. + +DUNDONALD. + + + + +CHAPTER I. + +INVITATION TO TAKE COMMAND OF CHILIAN NAVY--ARRIVAL AT VALPARAISO--FIRST +EXPEDITION TO PERU--ATTACK ON SPANISH SHIPPING AT CALLAO--DEPARTURE FOR +HUACHO--CAPTURE OF SPANISH CONVOYS OF MONEY--PAITA TAKEN--RETURN TO +VALPARAISO TO REORGANIZE THE SQUADRON--OFFER TO GIVE UP MY SHARE OF +PRIZEMONEY TO THE REPUBLIC--THIS OFFER DECLINED BY THE SUPREME +DIRECTOR--POPULAR CONGRATULATIONS--ATTEMPT ON LADY COCHRANE'S LIFE. + + +In the year 1817, Don Jose Alvarez, accredited agent of the government +of Chili--as yet unacknowledged by European powers--applied to me to +undertake the organization of a naval force in that country, capable of +contending against the Spaniards; who, notwithstanding the successful +revolt of the Chilenos by land, still maintained their predominance on +the waters of the Pacific. + +Having at that time no professional employment, in consequence of my +unjust expulsion from the British naval service, by the machinations of +the powerful political party which I had offended--and finding that +Chili was making great efforts to create a navy, in furtherance of which +object a war steamer had been placed on the stocks in London--I accepted +the invitation, engaging to superintend her building and equipment, and +to take her to Valparaiso when completed. + +Meanwhile, Alvarez received orders from his Government, that, if his +proposals had been accepted, no time must be lost in my departure, as +the position of Chili was critical, the Spaniards threatening Valparaiso +by sea, and being still in possession of the continent from Conception +to Chiloe, where they were organizing the savage Indian tribes to carry +desolation into the newly emancipated provinces. Reliable information +had also been received, that the Court of Madrid was making strenuous +efforts to recover its lost possessions by a powerful reinforcement to +its Pacific squadron, against which the Chileno ships of war, in their +present state, were not in a condition to contend. + +Alvarez therefore begged me not to wait for the steamer, the completion +and equipment of which he would hasten, but at once to sail for Chili in +the _Rose_ merchantman, then on the eve of departure. Knowing that the +whole of Peru was in the hands of the Spaniards, and that they were also +in possession of Valdivia, the strongest fortified harbour to the +southward--from both of which there would be considerable difficulty in +dislodging them after the arrival of the anticipated reinforcements--I +embarked without delay; and on the 28th of November, 1818, landed at +Valparaiso, accompanied by Lady Cochrane and our two children. + +Our reception, both from the authorities and the people, was +enthusiastic, the Supreme Director, General O'Higgins, coming from the +seat of Government, Santiago, to welcome us. This excellent man was the +son of an Irish gentleman of distinction in the Spanish service, who had +occupied the important position of Viceroy of Peru. The son had, +however, joined the patriots, and whilst second in command had not long +before inflicted a signal defeat upon the Spaniards in the interior; in +reward for which service the gratitude of the nation had elevated him to +the Supreme Directorate. + +A variety of _fetes_ was given at Valparaiso in honour of our arrival, +these being prolonged for so many days as to amount to a waste of time. +The same scenes were, however, re-enacted at the distant capital, +whither the Supreme Director insisted on taking us, till I had to remind +His Excellency that our purpose was rather fighting than feasting. +Nevertheless, the reception we had met impressed me with so high a sense +of Chilian hospitality, that, heartbroken as I had been by the infamous +persecution which had driven me from the British navy, I decided upon +Chili as my future home; this decision, however, being only an +exemplification of the proverb _"L'homme propose--Dieu dispose."_ + +The Chilian squadron had just returned from a successful cruise, the +gallant Admiral Blanco Encalada, who commanded it, having captured a +noble Spanish 50-gun frigate, the _Maria Isabel_, in the bay of +Talcahuano. + +The squadron consisted of the recently captured Spanish frigate, now +named the _O'Higgins_, in honour of the Supreme Director; the _San +Martin_, 56 guns, formerly the _Cumberland_ Indiaman, which had been +bought into the service; the _Lautaro_, 44 guns, also a purchased +Indiaman; the _Galvarino_, 18 guns, recently the British sloop of war +_Hecate_; the _Chacabuco_, 20 guns; and the _Aracauno_, 16 guns; a force +which, though deficient in organization and equipment, was very +creditable to the energy of a newly emancipated people. + +A few days after my arrival a commission was issued, conferring upon me +the title of "Vice-Admiral of Chili, Admiral and Commander in Chief of +the Naval Forces of the Republic." Admiral Blanco, with patriotic +liberality, relinquishing his position in my favour, though, from his +recent achievement, justly entitled to retain it; paying me also the +additional compliment of personally announcing to the ships' companies +the change which had been effected. + +My advent was regarded by the captains of the squadron with great +jealousy, the more so, as I had brought with me from England officers +upon whom I could place implicit reliance. It so happened that two of +the Chilian commanders, Captains Guise and Spry, had shortly before +arrived from England with the _Hecate_, which had been sold out of the +British navy, and bought by them on speculation. The Buenos Ayrean +Government having declined to purchase her, they had brought her on to +Chili, where the Government took her and received her former owners into +its service. These officers, together with Captain Worcester, a North +American, got up a cabal, the object of which was to bring about a +divided command between myself and Admiral Blanco, or, as they +expressed it--"two commodores and no Cochrane." Finding that Admiral +Blanco would not listen to this, they persuaded one or two of the +inferior ministers--whose jealousy it was not difficult to excite--that +it was dangerous and discreditable to a republican Government to allow a +nobleman and a foreigner to command its navy, and still more so, to +allow him to retain his title; the object being to place Admiral Blanco +in the chief command, with myself as his second--by which arrangement, +as he had not been accustomed to manage British seamen, they expected to +control him as they pleased. Admiral Blanco, however, insisted on +reversing our positions, offering his services as second in command, in +which arrangement I gladly acquiesced. This insignificant squabble would +not be worth narrating, but for its bearing on subsequent events; as +well as enabling me to confer a pleasing testimony to the patriotic +disinterestedness of Admiral Blanco, who is still one of the brightest +ornaments of the Republic which he so eminently aided to establish. + +On the 22nd of December my flag was hoisted on board the _O'Higgins_, +after which the greatest despatch was used to get the squadron ready for +sea. Anxious to avoid delay, on the 16th of January I sailed with four +ships only, the _O'Higgins, San Martin, Lautaro,_ and _Chacabuco_; +leaving Admiral Blanco to follow with the _Gaharino, Aracauno,_ and +_Puyrredon_. A mutiny having broken out on board the _Chacabuco_, it +became necessary to enter Coquimbo, where the leading mutineers were +landed, tried, and punished. + +I shall here narrate an incident which occurred on our departure. Lady +Cochrane, with her children, had returned from Santiago to Valparaiso, +to take leave of me on embarkation. She had just gone ashore, and the +last gun had been fired to summon all hands on board, when, hearing a +loud _hurrah_ near the house where she resided, she went to the window, +and saw our little boy--now Lord Cochrane, but then scarcely more than +five years old--mounted on the shoulders of my flag-lieutenant, waving +his tiny cap over the heads of the people, and crying out with all his +might, _"Viva la patria!"_ the mob being in a frenzied state of +excitement. + +The child had slipped out of Lady Cochrane's house with the officer, +insisting on being carried to his father; with which request the +lieutenant, nothing loth, complied. To the horror of Lady Cochrane, she +saw her boy hurried down to the beach amidst the shouts of the +multitude, and, before she could interfere, placed in a boat and rowed +off to the flag-ship, which was at the time under weigh, so that he +could not be sent ashore again; there being no alternative but to take +him with us, though without clothes--which were afterwards made for him +by the sailors--and with no other attendance save that which their rough +but kindly natures could administer. + +On our way along the coast we received information that the _Antonio_ +was about to sail from Callao for Cadiz, with a considerable amount of +treasure, so that, in the hope of intercepting her, we cruized just out +of sight of the port till the 21st of February. As she did not make her +appearance, preparations were made to put in execution a plan which had +been formed to attack the Spanish shipping during the Carnival, when, in +the height of that festival, less vigilance than ordinary might +reasonably be expected. We had previously ascertained that the naval +force in the harbour consisted of the frigates _Esmeralda_ and +_Venganza_, a corvette, three brigs of war, a schooner, twenty-eight +gun-boats, and six heavily-armed merchantmen; the whole being moored +close in under the batteries, which mounted upwards of 160 guns, whilst +the aggregate force of the shipping was 350 guns, as appeared from an +official account of their armament. + +A direct attack with our small force seemed, therefore, a thing not at +present to be attempted; but in its place I had formed the design to cut +out the frigates during the carnival, which terminated on the 23rd. +Knowing that two North American ships of war were daily expected at +Callao, it was arranged to take in the _O'Higgins_ and _Lautaro_, under +American colours, leaving the _San Martin_ out of sight behind San +Lorenzo, and if the _ruse_ were successful, to make a feint of sending a +boat ashore with despatches, and in the meantime suddenly to dash at the +frigates, and cut them out. Unfortunately, one of those thick fogs, so +common on the Peruvian coast, arose, in which the _Lautaro_ parted +company, and did not rejoin the flag-ship for four days afterwards, +when the carnival being at an end, our plan was rendered abortive. + +The fog, which in the climate of Peru often continues for a considerable +length of time, lasted till the 29th, when hearing heavy firing, and +imagining that one of the ships was engaged with the enemy, I stood with +the flag-ship into the bay; the other ships, imagining the same thing, +also steered in the direction of the firing, when the fog clearing for a +moment, we discovered each other, as well as a strange sail near us; +which, when taken possession of by the flag-ship, proved to be a Spanish +gun-boat, with a lieutenant and twenty men, who, on being made +prisoners, informed us that the firing was a salute in honour of the +Viceroy, who had that morning been on a visit of inspection to the +batteries and shipping, and was then on board the brig of war _Pezuela_, +which we saw crowding sail in the direction of the batteries. + +The fog again coming on, suggested to me the possibility of a direct +attack, which, if not altogether successful, would give the Spaniards +such an idea of our determination of purpose, as would inspire them with +respect for the Chilian squadron, and might induce their ships to +refrain from the protection of their commerce; in which case a blockade +would prevent the necessity of separating our small force in chase of +them, should they evince a desire of getting to sea. + +Accordingly, still maintaining our disguise under American colours, the +_O'Higgins_ and _Lautaro_ stood towards the batteries, narrowly escaping +going ashore in the fog. The Viceroy having no doubt witnessed the +capture of the gun-boat, had, however, provided for our reception, the +garrison being at their guns, and the crews of the ships of war at their +quarters. Notwithstanding the great odds, I determined to persist in an +attack, as our withdrawing without firing a shot, would produce an +effect upon the minds of the Spaniards the reverse of that intended; +having sufficient experience in war to know that moral effect, even if +the result of a degree of temerity, will not unfrequently supply the +place of superior force. + +The wind falling light, I did not venture on laying the flag-ship and +the _Lautaro_ alongside the Spanish frigates, as at first intended, but +anchored with springs on our cables, abreast of the shipping, which was +arranged in a half-moon of two lines, the rear rank being judiciously +disposed so as to cover the intervals of the ships in the front line. A +dead calm succeeding, we were for two hours exposed to a heavy fire from +the batteries, in addition to that from the two frigates, the brigs +_Pezuela_ and _Maypeu_, and seven or eight gun-boats; nevertheless, the +northern angle of one of the principal forts was silenced by our fire. + +A breeze springing up, we weighed anchor, standing to and fro in front +of the batteries, and returning their fire; when Captain Guise, who +commanded the _Lautaro_, being severely wounded, that ship sheered off, +and never again came within range. As from want of wind, or doubt of the +result, neither the _San Martin_ nor _Chacabuco_ had ever got within +fire, the flag-ship was thus left alone to continue the action; but as +this, from want of co-operation on the part of the other ships, was +useless, I was reluctantly compelled to relinquish the attack, and +withdrew to the island of San Lorenzo, about three miles distant from +the forts; the Spaniards, though nearly quadruple our numbers, exclusive +of their gun-boats, not venturing to follow us. + +The annexed was the Spanish naval force present: _Frigates_.--Esmeralda, +44 guns; Venganza, 42 guns; Sebastiana, 28 guns. + +_Brigs_.--Maypeu, 18 guns; Pezuela, 22 guns; Potrilla, 18 guns; and one, +name unknown, 18 guns. + +_Schooner_, name unknown, one long 24, and 20 culverins. + +_Armed Merchantmen_.--Resolution, 36 guns; Cleopatra, 28 guns; La Focha, +20 guns; Guarmey, 18 guns; Fernando, 26 guns; San Antonio, 18 guns. + +Total, fourteen vessels, of which ten were ready for sea; and +twenty-seven gun-boats. + +In this action my little boy had a narrow escape. As the story has been +told by several Chilian writers somewhat incorrectly, I will +recapitulate the circumstances. + +When the firing commenced, I had placed the boy in my after-cabin, +locking the door upon him; but not liking the restriction, he contrived +to get through the quarter gallery window, and joined me on deck, +refusing to go down again. As I could not attend to him, he was +permitted to remain, and, in a miniature midshipman's uniform, which the +seamen had made for him, was busying himself in handing powder to the +gunners. + +Whilst thus employed, a round shot took off the head of a marine close +to him, scattering the unlucky man's brains in his face. Instantly +recovering his self-possession, to my great relief, for believing him +killed, I was spell-bound with agony, he ran up to me exclaiming, "I am +not hurt, papa: the shot did not touch me; Jack says, the ball is not +made that can kill mamma's boy." I ordered him to be carried below; but, +resisting with all his might, he was permitted to remain on deck during +the action. + +Our loss in this affair was trifling, considering that we were under the +fire of more than two hundred guns; but the ships were so placed that +the enemy's frigates lay between us and the fortress, so that the shot +of the latter only told upon our rigging, which was considerably +damaged. + +The action having been commenced in a fog, the Spaniards imagined that +all the Chilian vessels were engaged, and were not a little surprised, +as it again cleared, to find that their own frigate, the quondam _Maria +Isabella_, was their only opponent. So much were they dispirited by this +discovery, that as soon as possible after the close of the contest, +their ships of war were dismantled, the top masts and spars being formed +into a double boom across the anchorage so as to prevent approach. The +Spaniards were also previously unaware of my being in command of the +Chilian squadron, but on becoming acquainted with this fact, bestowed +upon me the not very complimentary title of "El Diablo," by which I was +afterwards known amongst them. The title might have been rendered more +appropriate, had my efforts been better seconded by the other vessels. + +On the following day, having repaired damages, the flag-ship and +_Lautaro_ again went in and commenced a destructive fire upon the +Spanish gun-boats, the neutral vessels in the harbour removing out of +the line of shot. As the gun-boats withdrew to a position closer under +the batteries, where we could make little impression upon them without +getting severely punished by the fire of the fortress, we contented +ourselves with the demonstration made. + +On the 2nd of March, I despatched Capt. Foster with the gun-boat +captured from the Spaniards, and the launches of the _O'Higgins_ and +_Lautaro_--to take possession of the island of San Lorenzo, when an +unworthy instance of Spanish cruelty presented itself in the spectacle +of thirty-seven Chilian soldiers taken prisoners eight years before. The +unhappy men had ever since been forced to work in chains under the +supervision of a military guard--now prisoners in turn; their sleeping +place during the whole of this period being a filthy shed, in which they +were every night chained by one leg to an iron bar. The joy of the poor +fellows at their deliverance, after all hope had fled, can scarcely be +conceived. + +From the liberated patriots and the Spanish prisoners, I learned that in +Lima there were a number of Chilian officers and seamen taken on board +the _Maypeu_, whose condition was even more deplorable than their own, +the fetters on their legs having worn their ancles to the bone, whilst +their commander, by a refinement of cruelty, had for more than a year +been lying under sentence of death as a rebel. Upon this, I sent a flag +of truce to the viceroy, Don Joaquim de la Pezuela, requesting him to +permit the prisoners to return to their families, in exchange for the +Spanish prisoners on board the squadron, and others in Chili--where +there were great numbers, who were comparatively well treated. The +Viceroy denied the charge of ill-treatment--asserted his right, if he +thought proper, to regard his prisoners as pirates; retorting that after +the battle of Maypeu, General San Martin had treated the Spanish +Commissioner as a spy, and had repeatedly threatened him with death. The +exchange of prisoners was uncourteously refused, the Viceroy concluding +his reply with an expression of surprise that a British nobleman should +command the maritime forces of a Government "unacknowledged by all the +Powers of the globe." To this latter observation, I considered it +incumbent upon me to reply that "a British nobleman was a free man, and +therefore had a right to adopt any country which was endeavouring to +re-establish the rights of aggrieved humanity; and that I had hence +adopted the cause of Chili, with the same freedom of judgment that I had +previously exercised when refusing the offer of an Admiral's rank in +Spain, made to me not long before, by the Spanish Ambassador in London;" +this offer having been made by the Duke de San Carlos, in the name of +Ferdinand the Seventh. + +Our means being clearly inadequate to any decisive attack on the Spanish +ships of war, I resolved to try the effect of an explosion vessel, and +accordingly established a laboratory on the island of San Lorenzo, under +the superintendence of Major Miller, the Commandant of Marines. Whilst +engaged in this duty, that able and gallant officer was so severely +burned by an accidental explosion, as to render his further services on +this occasion unavailable. + +On the 22nd of March--our preparations being completed--we again stood +towards the batteries, the flag-ship going close in under the combined +fire of the forts and shipping, in order to divert the attention of the +enemy from the explosion vessel, which was set adrift in the direction +of the frigates, but, unfortunately, when within musket shot of them, +she was struck by a round shot and foundered, causing complete failure +in our object. The _San Martin_ and the _Lautaro_ keeping far astern, +there was no alternative but to withdraw from further attack, leaving +the explosion vessel to her fate. + +As other attempts, with our want of means, would answer no better +purpose than useless demonstration, and as the ships were now destitute +of water and provisions, we were obliged to fall back upon Huacho, +leaving the _Chacabuco_ to watch the movements of the enemy. + +The inhabitants of Huacho, who were well disposed to co-operate in any +effort for the emancipation of Peru, afforded us every assistance in +provisioning and watering the ships, for which the commandant, Cevallos, +shot two influential persons who had been foremost in aiding us, and +severely punished others; at the same time seizing our water casks, and +sending me an insolent letter of defiance, on which a party of seamen +and marines was landed and put the garrison to flight; the officer +commanding the party however withdrew from pursuit at hearing salutes +fired on the arrival of Admiral Blanco with the _Galvarino_ and +_Puyrredon_, mistaking this for an engagement with a newly-arrived +enemy. The whole of the Government property found in the Spanish +custom-house was captured. + +The people of Huacho having volunteered information that a quantity of +specie belonging to the Philippine Company had been placed for safety on +board a vessel in the river Barranca, she was forthwith overhauled, and +the treasure transferred to the flag-ship. + +Leaving Admiral Blanco at Huacho with the _San Martin_ and _Puyrredon_, +on the 4th of April we sailed for Supe, with the _O'Higgins_ and +_Galvarino_, having previously ascertained that a sum of money destined +for the payment of Spanish troops was on its way from Lima to Guambucho; +on the following day a party of marines being landed at Patavilca, +captured the treasure, amounting to 70,000 dollars, together with a +quantity of military stores. On the 7th, having received further +information that the Philippine Company had placed other treasure on +board the French brig, _Gazelle_, at Guambucho, we sailed for that +place, and, on the 10th, the seamen of the _O'Higgins_ examined her, and +brought off an additional sum of 60,000 dollars. + +The secret of our obtaining possession of these and other convoys of +Spanish money along the coast, was, that I paid the inhabitants highly +for information relative to their transmission, and was thus enabled to +seize the treasure even in the interior of the country. As the Chilian +Ministry subsequently refused to allow me "secret service money," these, +disbursements were actually made at my own expense. + +It was also my object to make friends of the Peruvian people, by +adopting towards them a conciliatory course, and by strict care that +none but Spanish property should be taken, whilst their own was in all +cases respected. Confidence was thus inspired, and the universal +dissatisfaction with Spanish colonial rule speedily became changed into +an earnest desire to be freed from it. Had it not been for this good +understanding with the inhabitants, I should scarcely have ventured to +detach marines and seamen for operations at a distance into the country, +as was subsequently the case; the people giving me the most reliable +information of every movement of the enemy. + +On the 13th, we arrived at Paita, where the Spaniards had established a +garrison. A party of marines and seamen was again landed, on which the +enemy fled from the fort, and a quantity of brass ordnance, spirits, and +military stores, was captured. + +Contrary to strict orders, some marines stole a number of valuable +church ornaments, but on the complaint of the authorities I caused them +to be restored, punishing the offenders, and at the same time presenting +the priests with a thousand dollars to repair the damage done in their +churches; this act, though far from conciliating the priests--who +dreaded Chilian success--adding greatly to our popularity amongst the +inhabitants, which was my object in bestowing the amount. Our thus +refraining from plunder was almost beyond the comprehension of a people +who had bitter experience of Spanish rapacity, whilst the undisciplined +Chilenos, who formed the greater portion of the squadron, as little +comprehended why their plundering propensities should be restrained. + +On the 5th of May, I proceeded with the flag-ship alone to reconnoitre +Callao, having learned that the _Chacabuco_ and _Puyrredon_ had been +chased off the port by the Spanish frigates. Finding that these were +again moored under shelter of the batteries, we returned to Supe, +convinced that our previous visit to Callao had proved sufficient to +deter them from putting to sea for the protection of their own coasts; +this, indeed, forming my chief reason for having persisted in attacks +which, with our small force, could answer no other purpose; but this +alone was an advantage gained, as it enabled us to communicate freely +with the inhabitants on the coast, and to ascertain their sentiments, +which--from our forbearance, no less than command of the sea--were +almost uniformly in favour of co-operation with Chili for their +emancipation. + +Both at Lima and on the coast, the best effect was produced by the +circulation of the following proclamation:-- + + "Compatriots! The repeated echoes of liberty in South America + have been heard with pleasure in every part of enlightened Europe, + more especially in Great Britain, where I, unable to resist the + desire of joining in such a cause, determined to take part in it. + The Republic of Chili has confided to me the command of her naval + forces. To these must the dominion of the Pacific be consigned. + By their co-operation must your chains be broken. Doubt not but + that the day is at hand on which, with the annihilation of despotism + and your now degraded condition, you will rise to the rank of a free + nation, to which your geographical position and the course of events + naturally call you." + + "But it is your duty to co-operate in preparing for this success, + and to remove obstacles, under the assurance that you will receive + the most efficacious assistance from the government of Chili, and + your true friend, COCHRANE." + +This proclamation was accompanied by another from the Chilian +government, declaratory of the sincerity of its intentions, so that +these combined caused us to be everywhere received as liberators. + +On the 8th, we returned to Supe, and having learned that a Spanish force +was in the vicinity, a detachment of marines and seamen was, after dark, +pushed through a heavy surf, and landed, in the hope of taking them by +surprise. But the enemy was on the alert, and on the following morning +our little party fell into an ambuscade, which would have proved +serious, had not Major Miller, who commanded the marines, promptly +formed his men, who, attacking in turn, soon put the enemy to flight at +the point of the bayonet, capturing their colours, and the greater +portion of their arms. On the 13th, a detachment of Spanish troops +arrived from Lima under Major Camba, who, notwithstanding his +superiority of numbers, did not venture to attack our small party, which +withdrew to the ships with a number of cattle taken from the Spaniards; +Camba writing to the Viceroy so effective a description of his having +"driven the enemy into the sea," that he was immediately promoted. + +Not to enter into further details of our visits to other parts of the +coast, where similar captures of provisions and military stores, &c. +were effected--it being my practice to compel the Spaniards to supply +all the wants of the squadron, nothing being ever taken from the natives +without payment,--I resolved--as our means were clearly incommensurate +with our main object--to return to Valparaiso, for the purpose of +organizing a more effective force, and on the 16th of June reached that +port, where we found Admiral Blanco with the _San Martin_ and +_Chacabuco_, he having been obliged to raise the blockade of Callao for +want of provisions; a step with which the Government was highly +displeased, though with more reason to blame its own negligence or want +of foresight in not providing them. Admiral Blanco was nevertheless put +under arrest, but a court of inquiry being held, he was honourably +acquitted. + +The objects of the first expedition had been fully accomplished, viz. to +reconnoitre, with a view to future operations, when the squadron should +be rendered efficient; but more especially to ascertain the +inclinations of the Peruvians with regard to their desire for +emancipation--a point of the first importance to Chili, as being obliged +to be constantly on the alert for her own newly-acquired liberties, so +long as the Spaniards were in undisturbed possession of Peru. To the +accomplishment of these objects had been superadded the restriction of +the Spanish naval force to the shelter of the forts, the defeat of their +military forces wherever encountered, and the capture of no +inconsiderable amount of treasure. + +It had, however, become evident to me that the passive system of defence +which the Spaniards adopted in Callao, would render it a difficult +matter to get at them without more effective means than the guns of the +ships, which were greatly inferior in number to those of the enemy's +fortress and shipping combined, whilst their experience in the use of +artillery was greater than that of our crews. The Supreme Director +having paid a visit to the squadron--on the 21st of June I addressed to +him a letter, stating my apprehension that the finances of the +Government might be limited, and that I would gladly give up to the +exigencies of the Republic the whole of my share of prize-money taken +during our recent cruize, provided it were applied to the manufacture of +rockets. This offer was declined, with a compliment from the Supreme +Director, on the advantage already gained, by compelling the Spaniards +ignominiously to shut "themselves up in their port, in spite of their +numerical superiority." + +Complimentary addresses from the Chilian people were also presented to +me in profusion, and a public panegyric was pronounced at the National +Institute of the capital, upon the service rendered; but as this was +only a recapitulation of what has been already narrated--conveyed in +flowery rhetorical phrases--in the use of which the Occidentals are +almost as expert, and often as exaggerated, as are the Orientals--I +shall refrain from giving it. Suffice it to say, that the people were +not a little delighted with the plain facts, that whereas only a few +months before theirs had been the blockaded port, they were now able to +beard the enemy in his stronghold, till then believed--both by +Spaniards and Chilians--to be inviolable; and that, with only four ships +on our part, the Spanish Viceroy had been shut up in his capital, and +his convoys, both by sea and land, intercepted, whilst his ships of war +did not venture to emerge from their shelter under the batteries of +Callao. + +The manufacture of rockets was now carried on in earnest, under the +superintendence of Mr. Goldsack, an eminent engineer, who had been +engaged in England for the purpose. From a mistaken notion of parsimony, +the labour of constructing and filling them was allotted to a number of +Spanish prisoners, with what result will appear in the sequel. + +In these and other preparations two months were consumed, in the course +of which another vessel--an American built corvette--was added to the +squadron, and named by the Supreme Director the _Independencia_. + +During my absence Lady Cochrane chiefly resided at Valparaiso, where +she diligently employed herself in promoting objects essential to the +welfare of the squadron; after a time removing to a delightful country +house at Quillota, where her life was endangered by a ruffian in the +interest of the Spanish faction. + +This man, having gained admission to her private apartment, threatened +her with instant death if she would not divulge the secret orders which +had been given to me. On her declaring firmly that she would not divulge +anything, a struggle took place for a paper which she picked off a +table; and before her attendants could come to her assistance she +received a severe cut from a stiletto. The assassin was seized, +condemned, and ordered for execution, without the last offices of the +Catholic religion. + +In the dead of the night preceding the day fixed for his execution, Lady +Cochrane was awoke by loud lamentations beneath her window. On sending +to ascertain the cause, the wretched wife of the criminal was found +imploring her Ladyship's intercession that her husband should not be +deprived of the benefits of confession and absolution. Forgiving the +atrocity of the act, Lady Cochrane, on the following morning used all +her influence with the authorities, not for this alone, but to save the +man's life, and at length wrung from them a reluctant consent to commute +his punishment to banishment for life. + + + + +CHAPTER II. + +SECOND EXPEDITION TO PERU--DISAPPOINTMENT AT NOT BEING PROVIDED WITH +TROOPS--FAILURE OF ROCKETS--DEPARTURE FOR ARICA--CAPTURE OF +PISCO--CAPTURE OF SPANISH SHIPS AT PUNA--DETERMINE TO MAKE AN ATTEMPT ON +VALDIVIA--ARRIVAL OFF THAT PORT, AND CAPTURE OF SPANISH BRIG OF WAR +POTRILLO--TROOPS OBTAINED FROM CONCEPTION--FLAG-SHIP NEARLY +WRECKED--ATTACK ON FORTS, AND CONQUEST OF VALDIVIA. + + +On the 12th of September, 1819, I again sailed for the Peruvian coast, +with Admiral Blanco as second in command. The squadron consisted of the +_O'Higgins, San Martin, Lautaro, Independencia_, and _Puyrredon_, the +_Galvarino_ and _Araucano_ not being in readiness. Two vessels +accompanied the squadron, to be afterwards fitted up as fire-ships. + +The Government was exceedingly anxious that some decisive blow should be +at once struck. With the exception of the rockets, the squadron was in +little better condition than before, a loan having failed, whilst 4,000 +dollars only were subscribed by the merchants. The crews for the most +part consisted of _cholos_, or native peasants, whom it was difficult to +shape into good seamen, though they fought gallantly when well led. The +officers were nearly all English or North American, this being a +redeeming feature, but very few of them possessed the tact to bring up +the men to anything like a seaman-like standard; a by no means easy +task however, as a considerable portion of those embarked did duty both +as marines and seamen. + +I begged of the Government to supply me with 1,000 troops, asserting +that even with that number of men it would be possible to take the +castles of Callao, and destroy the whole of the Spanish shipping in the +harbour. I was assured that this force had been provided, and was in +readiness to embark at Coquimbo, where, on my arrival on the 16th, in +place of 1,000 troops I found only 90!--and these in so ragged a +condition, that a subscription of 400 dollars was raised by the +inhabitants, and given to Major Miller to buy clothing for them. + +I was so much annoyed at this, as to be on the point of returning to +Valparaiso to throw up my commission; but, reflecting that the squadron +was in possession of rockets, and that the Government might even yet +forward a military force, I made up my mind to proceed, and on the 29th +the squadron again came to an anchor in Callao roads. + +The two following days were occupied in making rocket rafts, and in +getting ready life-preservers for the men, in case of their falling from +the rafts. On the 1st of October the _Galvarino, Puyrredon_, and +_Araucano_, stood into the bay to reconnoitre, and sustained a heavy +fire from the shore, upon which I ordered the _Independencia_ to their +aid; but that vessel was brought to an anchor when at the distance of +several miles from them. On the same day Lieutenant-Colonel Charles, a +most able and gallant officer, reconnoitred in a boat, and made trial +of some rockets, upon which he reported unfavourably. + +In this affair the mast of the _Araucano_ was struck by a round shot, +and severely damaged--the circumstance being merely mentioned to shew +the state in which the squadron was equipped; the only means of +repairing the damage being by fishing the mast with an anchor-stock +taken from the _Lautaro_, whilst an axe had to be borrowed for the +purpose from the flag-ship! + +On the 2nd, the _Araucano_ again went in, accompanied by a squadron of +boats under the command of Captain Guise, and fired several rockets, but +with no perceptible effect--the Spaniards having unrigged their ships; +the brig sustained considerable damage from the firing of the forts and +shipping. + +After dark, an attack by rockets and shells was arranged, the +_Galvarino_ taking in tow a mortar raft, under the command of Major +Miller, and placing it, under a heavy fire, within half a mile of the +enemy's batteries. The _Puyrredon_ followed with another raft, carrying +the shells and magazine; the _Araucano_ took charge of a rocket-raft, +under Captain Hind, whilst the _Independencia_ towed in a second +rocket-raft, under Lieut-Colonel Charles, the rest of the squadron +remaining at anchor. + +Great expectations were formed, as well by myself as the whole squadron, +as to the effect to be produced by these destructive missiles, but they +were doomed to disappointment, the rockets turning out utterly useless. +Some, in consequence of the badness of the solder used, bursting from +the expansive force of the charge before they left the raft, and setting +fire to others--Captain Hind's raft being blown up from this cause, thus +rendering it useless, besides severely burning him and thirteen men: +others took a wrong direction in consequence of the sticks not having +been formed of proper wood, whilst the greater portion would not ignite +at all from a cause which was only discovered when too late. It has been +stated in the last chapter that the filling of the tubes was, from +motives of parsimony, entrusted to Spanish prisoners, who, as was found +on examination, had embraced every opportunity of inserting handfulls of +sand, sawdust, and even manure, at intervals in the tubes, thus impeding +the progress of combustion, whilst in the majority of instances they had +so thoroughly mixed the neutralizing matter with the ingredients +supplied, that the charge would not ignite at all, the result being +complete failure in the object of the expedition. It was impossible to +blame the Spanish prisoners in the Chilian arsenal for their loyalty, +but to me their ingenuity was a bitter ground for disappointment, as +with useless rockets we were no better off than in the first expedition; +nor indeed so well off, for in the interval the Spaniards had so +strengthened their booms at the anchorage, as to render it impossible +for the ships to get at them--whilst, by constant practice, their fire +had acquired a precision which our crews could not equal. + +The only damage effected was by Major Miller's mortar, the shells +sinking a gun-boat, and doing some execution in the forts and amongst +the shipping. As daylight appeared, I ordered the whole of the rafts to +be towed off, there being no further use in their remaining exposed to +the heavy fire of the batteries. As it was, our loss was trifling, only +about twenty being killed and wounded; but amongst these I had to regret +the death of a promising young officer, Lieut. Bealey, who was cut in +two by a round shot. + +The failure of the rockets was very unfairly attributed by the Chilian +Government to Mr. Goldsack, whereas the fault lay in itself for having +neither supplied him with proper workmen nor materials. From the +scarcity and high, price of spelter, he had also been compelled to make +use of an inferior solder for the tubes, and thus the saving of a few +hundred dollars frustrated the success of a great object. The +consequence to poor Goldsack was utter ruin, though of his capability +there could be no question, he having for many years been one of the +principal assistants of Sir W. Congreve at Woolwich. + +By the 5th, one of the explosion vessels was completed, and I resolved +to try her effect on the booms and shipping, for which purpose she was +placed in charge of Lieut. Morgell, who carried her in gallant style +towards the enemy's shipping, but the wind falling calm, she became a +target for their really excellent practice, and was in a short time +riddled through and through. As the Spaniards began to fire red-hot +shot, Lieut. Morgell was compelled to abandon her, first setting fire +to the train, then turning her adrift, thus causing her to explode, +though at a distance which did no damage to the enemy. + +Whilst this was going on, a strange sail was reported off the bay, and +the _Araucano_ went in chase, Captain Crosbie returning the next morning +with the intelligence that she was a frigate. Upon this, the squadron +got under weigh, in pursuit, when she made all sail, and as I did not +deem it expedient to quit the bay of Callao, the chase was given up, and +we returned in the evening to our former anchorage. It was afterwards +learned that she was the _Prueba_, of 50 guns, just arrived from Cadiz; +whence she had convoyed another ship, with a cargo valued at half a +million of dollars; this ship contriving to slip into Callao during the +short absence of the squadron in pursuit of the frigate, so that we lost +both prizes. + +It was useless to remain any longer at Callao, as my instructions +peremptorily commanded me not to approach with the ships within range of +the enemy's batteries, nor to make any attempt on their squadron, except +with the rockets and fire-ships. I was moreover ordered to return within +a given time to Valparaiso, these restrictions being insisted on by the +Minister of Marine, ostensibly from what he considered my temerity in +having attacked the forts and shipping at Callao on the first +expedition--but really, from his own narrow-minded jealousy, that I, a +foreigner, should effect anything which might give me undue prominence +in the estimation of the Chilian people. + +I had, however, other reasons for quitting Callao. The newly-arrived +Spanish frigate _Prueba_, was at large, and as I had reason to believe, +was sheltering at Guayaquil, from which port I made up my mind to +dislodge her. The Government had not sent any of the promised supplies +for the squadron, which was running short of provisions, so that it was +necessary to resort to my former practice of compelling the Spaniards to +furnish them; whilst as no troops had been supplied, it was clear that +there had never been an intention of sending any; the assurance of the +Minister of Marine that they were waiting for me at Coquimbo being only +a _ruse_ on his part to get me to sea without a military force. + +We now received intelligence that the _Prueba_ had been accompanied from +Spain by two line of battle ships, and that these were daily expected at +Arica, whither I proceeded in quest of them, but was disappointed in not +finding them. It was subsequently learned, that although they had sailed +from Cadiz, in company with the _Prueba_, they never reached the +Pacific, one of them, the _Europe_, being pronounced unseaworthy on +crossing the line; and the other, the _Elmo_, foundering on the passage +round Cape Horn! + +On the 5th of November, three hundred and fifty troops--now brought by +the experience and zeal of Lieut.-Col. Charles into a tolerably +soldier-like condition--were distributed on board the _Lautaro, +Galvarino_, and the remaining fire-ship, and were despatched to Pisco, +under the command of Captain Guise, for supplies to be taken from the +Spaniards, the troops being under the orders of Lieut.-Col. Charles, and +the marines under the direction of Major Miller. + +As it was not improbable that the expected Spanish ships would make for +Callao, whilst it was more than probable that the _Prueha_ would again +attempt to run in, I therefore proceeded towards that port, and on the +8th anchored at San Lorenzo, the United States frigate _Macedonia_ being +also at anchor there. The presence of the latter put the Spaniards on +their mettle, for shortly after our arrival, they made a show of sending +twenty-seven gun-boats to attack us, not however, venturing to get their +frigates under weigh. Preparations being made on our part to cut off the +gun-boats, they quickly retreated, to the no small amusement of the +North Americans, for whose edification the spectacle had been exhibited. + +I was not mistaken in the expectation that the _Prueba_ might again +attempt to take shelter under the forts of Callao. On her appearance, we +immediately gave chase, but she once more escaped in the night. On my +return, I fell in with, and captured her boat, which had been sent +ashore with despatches to the Viceroy, and from the information gained +from the crew, I now felt certain that she would take refuge in +Guayaquil, whither I determined to follow her. + +Before doing so in the narrative, the success of the expedition +despatched to Pisco must be mentioned. It was the intention of the +officers commanding to land in the night, and thus take the garrison by +surprise; but this plan was frustrated by the wind dying away, so that +the landing could not be effected till broad daylight, when the +garrison, supported by field artillery and cavalry, were prepared to +receive them. Nothing daunted, the patriot troops landed without firing +a shot, through the fire of the guns, whilst the Spanish infantry from +house tops, and the church tower, thinned their ranks at every step. At +length it came to the bayonet, for which the Spaniards did not wait, but +rushed into the square of the town, after having mortally wounded the +brave Col. Charles. Major Miller instantly followed, when their last +volley in the square, before flying in all directions, brought down him +also, with three bullets in his body, so that his life was despaired of. +The ships remained for four days, during which they obtained all they +wanted; but 200,000 gallons of spirits, placed on the beach for +shipment, was destroyed by order of Captain Guise, in consequence of his +not being able to control the men, who, from the facility of obtaining +liquor, were becoming unmanageable. + +On the 16th, the _Galvarino_ and _Lautaro_ rejoined me at Santa, which +place had previously been taken possession of by the marines left on +board the flag-ship. On the 21st, I despatched the _San Martin, +Independencia,_ and _Araucano_ to Valparaiso, together with a transport +filled with sick--an epidemic of a destructive nature having broken out +on board the squadron. This disease, which carried off many men, had +been introduced on board by the Minister of Marine's army of ninety men, +shipped at Coquimbo. + +I now proceeded in search of the _Prueba_, with the flag-ship, +_Lautaro, Galvarino_, and _Puyrredon_. On the 27th, we entered the river +Guayaquil, and leaving the _Lautaro_ and the brigs outside, the +flag-ship crowded all sail during the night--though without a +pilot--arriving next morning at the island of Puna, under which two +large vessels were anchored, and instantly attacked, when, after a brisk +fire of twenty minutes, they struck, proving to be the _Aguila_, of 20 +guns, and _Vigonia_, of 16 guns, both laden with timber, destined for +Lima. The village of Puna was also taken possession of. On rejoining the +other vessels with the prizes, they were found ready to sail, imagining +from the firing that I had fallen in with the _Prueba_, and might +possibly get the worst of the contest. + +The _Prueba_ was at Guayaquil as had been anticipated, but having been +lightened of her guns and stores she had been towed up the river, where, +from the shallowness of the water, it was impossible to get at her; +whilst, as she lay under the protection of the batteries, I did not deem +it practicable to cut her out with the boats. + +A circumstance here occurred which would not be worth mentioning, did it +not bear upon future matters. Captains Guise and Spry--imagining that I +should now return to Valparaiso, and that the comparative failure of the +expedition would be attributed to me, instead of to the worthless +rockets, and to my instructions not to attempt anything beyond their +use--endeavoured to get up a mutiny, by circulating a report that I did +not intend to permit the ships left outside to share in the prizes, and +had indeed left them behind for this purpose; having also permitted my +officers to plunder the prizes _ad libitum_, before leaving the +river--further declaring, that I intended to claim a double share, from +having acted in the capacity of admiral and captain. + +As there was not the slightest doubt of their having sedulously +circulated these reports, with the object of entering the port of +Valparaiso with the squadron in a discontented condition, I determined +to take serious notice of their conduct. On the necessary steps being +taken, they both pledged their honour that they had not made or even +heard of such a report! + +But I had no intention to return to Valparaiso, and still less to make +officers so inimical to me acquainted with my future plans. + +On the 13th of December, Major Miller was so far recovered as to be +removed on board the flag-ship, after which I despatched the _Lautaro_ +to Valparaiso with the two prizes, first transferring to her armament +the beautiful brass guns taken in the _Vigonia_; leaving the _Galvarino_ +and _Puyrredon_ to watch the movements of the Spanish frigate. + +As the reader may suppose, I was greatly annoyed at having been foiled +at Callao, from causes altogether beyond my control, for the bad +rockets, and worse faith of the Minister of Marine in not supplying me +with the promised troops, were no faults of mine. My instructions, as +has been said, were carefully drawn up to prevent my doing anything +rash--as the first trip to Callao had been represented by certain +officers under my command, who had no great relish for fighting. At the +same time the Chilian people expected impossibilities; and I had, for +some time, been revolving in my mind a plan to achieve one which should +gratify them, and allay my own wounded feelings. I had now only one +ship, so that there were no other inclinations to consult; and felt +quite sure of Major Miller's concurrence where there was any fighting to +be done, though a ball in the arm, another through the chest, passing +out at his back, and a left hand shattered for life, were not very +promising fighting incentives as far as physical force was concerned, +yet the moral courage of my gallant guest was untouched, and his +capacity to carry out my plans was greater than before, as being more +matured by sharp experience. + +My design was, with the flag-ship alone, to capture by a _coup de main_ +the numerous forts and garrison of Valdivia, a fortress previously +deemed impregnable, and thus to counteract the disappointment which +would ensue in Chili from our want of success before Callao. The +enterprise was a desperate one; nevertheless, I was not about to do +anything desperate, having resolved that, unless fully satisfied as to +its practicability, I would not attempt it. Rashness, though often +imputed to me, forms no part of my composition. There is a rashness +without calculation of consequences; but with that calculation, +well-founded, it is no longer rashness. And thus, now that I was +unfettered by people who did not second my operations as they ought to +have done, I made up my mind to take Valdivia, if the attempt came +within the scope of my calculations. + +The first step clearly was to reconnoitre the place, where the flag-ship +arrived on the 18th of January, 1820, under Spanish colours, and made a +signal for a pilot, who--as the Spaniards mistook the _O'Higgins_ for +the long-expected _Prueba_--promptly came off, together with a +complimentary retinue of an officer and four soldiers, all of whom were +made prisoners as soon as they came on board. The pilot was ordered to +take us into the channels leading to the forts, whilst the officer and +his men, knowing there was little chance of finding their way on shore +again, thought it most conducive to their interests to supply all the +information demanded, the result being increased confidence on my part +as to the possibility of a successful attack. Amongst other information +obtained was the expected arrival of the Spanish brig of war _Potrillo_, +with money on board for the payment of the garrison. + +As we were busily employing ourselves in inspecting the channels, the +officer commanding the garrison began to suspect that our object might +not altogether be pacific, this suspicion being confirmed by the +detention of his officer. Suddenly a heavy fire was opened upon us from +the various forts, to which we did not reply, but, our reconnoissance +being now completed, withdrew beyond its reach. Having occupied two days +in reconnoitring--on the third the _Potrillo_ hove in sight; and being +also deceived by our Spanish colours was captured without a +shot--20,000 dollars and some important despatches being found on board. + +As nothing could be done without troops, with which the Chilian +ministers had been careful not to supply me, I determined to sail to +Conception, where Governor Freire had a considerable force to keep in +check the savage tribes of Indians whom the Spaniards employed, under +the monster Benavides and his brother, to murder the defenceless +patriots. On the 22nd of January we anchored in Talcahuano bay, where we +found the Buenos Ayrean brig _Intrepido_ and the Chilian schooner +_Montezuma_. + +Governor Freire received us with great hospitality; and after +explanation of my plans, placed two hundred and fifty men at my +disposal, under the command of a gallant Frenchman, Major Beauchef; +notwithstanding that Freire was on the eve of attacking Benavides, and +by thus weakening his division might incur the displeasure of the +Government. No time was lost in embarking the men in the three vessels, +the _Montezuma_ being taken into the service, and the Buenos Ayrean brig +volunteering to accompany us. + +It was highly praiseworthy on the part of General Freire to place these +troops under my orders, inasmuch as they were destined for a service in +the praise of which, even if successful, he could not participate; +whilst, if unsuccessful, he would certainly have incurred great blame. +He knew, moreover, that the Ministry had refrained from supplying me +with regular troops; yet he not only generously contributed them, but +pledged himself not to communicate my plans to the Government; our +destination being even kept secret from the officers, who were told not +to encumber themselves with baggage, as we were only going to Tucapel, +in order to harass the enemy at Arauco, thus making it appear that we +were about to aid General Freire against Benavides, instead of his +aiding us to capture Valdivia. + +But our difficulties, though we had obtained the troops, were not at an +end. The flag-ship had only two naval officers on board, one of these +being under arrest for disobedience of orders, whilst the other was +incapable of performing the duty of lieutenant; so that I had to act as +admiral, captain, and lieutenant, taking my turn in the watch--or rather +being constantly on the watch--as the only available officer was so +incompetent. + +We sailed from Talcahuano on the 25th of January, when I communicated my +intentions to the military officers, who displayed great eagerness in +the cause--alone questioning their success from motives of prudence. On +explaining to them that if unexpected projects are energetically put in +execution they almost invariably succeed, in spite of odds, they +willingly entered into my plans; and Major Miller's health being now +sufficiently re-established, his value as a commander was as great as +ever. + +On the night of the 29th, we were off the island of Quiriquina, in a +dead calm. From excessive fatigue in the execution of subordinate +duties, I had laid down to rest, leaving the ship in charge of the +lieutenant, who took advantage of my absence to retire also, +surrendering the watch to the care of a midshipman, who fell asleep. +Knowing our dangerous position, I had left strict orders to be called +the moment a breeze sprang up, but these orders were neglected, and a +sudden wind taking the ship unawares, the midshipman, in attempting to +bring her round, ran her upon the sharp edge of a rock, where she lay +beating, suspended, as it were, upon her keel, and had the swell +increased, she must inevitably have gone to pieces. + +We were forty miles from the mainland, the brig and schooner being both +out of sight. The first impulse both of officers and crew was to abandon +the ship, but as we had six hundred men on board, whilst not more than a +hundred and fifty could have entered the boats, this would have been but +a scramble for life. Pointing out to the men that those who escaped +could only reach the coast of Arauco, where they would meet nothing but +torture and inevitable death at the hands of the Indians, I with some +difficulty got them to adopt the alternative of attempting to save the +ship. + +The first sounding gave five feet water in the hold, and the pumps were +entirely out of order. Our carpenter, who was only one by name, was +incompetent to repair them; but having myself some skill in carpentry I +took off my coat, and by midnight got them into working order, the water +meanwhile gaining on us, though the whole crew were engaged in bailing +it out with buckets. + +To our great delight the leak did not increase, upon which I got out +the stream anchor, and commenced heaving off the ship, the officers +clamouring first to ascertain the extent of the leak. This I expressly +forbade, as calculated to damp the energy of the men, whilst as we now +gained on the leak, there was no doubt the ship would swim as far as +Valdivia, which was the chief point to be regarded, the capture of the +fortress being my object, after which the ship might be repaired at +leisure. As there was no lack of physical force on board, she was at +length floated; but the powder magazine having been under water, the +ammunition of every kind--except a little upon deck and in the cartouch +boxes of the troops--was rendered unserviceable; though about this I +cared little, as it involved the necessity of using the bayonet in our +anticipated attack, and to facing this weapon the Spaniards had, in +every case, evinced a rooted aversion. + +Before making the land to the southward of Punta Galera, the troops in +the _O'Higgins_ as well as the marines, were, in a high sea, removed +into the _Intrepido_ and _Montezuma_, to which I shifted my flag, +ordering the _O'Higgins_ to stand off and on out of sight of land, to +avoid creating suspicion. We then made for the harbour, intending to +land the same evening and take the Spaniards by surprise, but, as it +fell calm, this plan was frustrated. + +The fortifications of Valdivia are placed on both sides of a channel +three quarters of a mile in width, and command the entrance, anchorage, +and river leading to the town, crossing their fire in all directions so +effectually, that with proper caution on the part of the garrison no +ship could enter without suffering severely, while she would be equally +exposed at anchor. The principal forts on the western shore are placed +in the following order:--El Ingles, San Carlos, Amargos, Chorocomayo +Alto, and Corral Castle. Those on the eastern side are Niebla, directly +opposite Amargos, and Piojo; whilst on the island of Manzanera is a +strong fort mounted with guns of large calibre, commanding the whole +range of the entrance channel. These forts, with a few others, amounted +in the whole to fifteen, and in the hands of a skilful garrison would +render the place almost impregnable, the shores on which they stand +being almost inaccesible by reason of the surf, with the exception of a +small landing place at the Aguada del Ingles. + +It was to this landing-place that we first directed our attention, +anchoring the brig and schooner off the guns of Fort Ingles, on the +afternoon of Feb. 3rd, amidst a swell which rendered immediate +disembarkation impracticable. The troops were carefully kept below; and +to avert the suspicion of the Spaniards, we had trumped up a story of +our having just arrived from Cadiz, and being in want of a pilot: upon +which they told us to send a boat for one. To this we replied, that our +boats had been washed away in the passage round Cape Horn. Not being +quite satisfied, they began to assemble troops at the landing-place, +firing alarm guns, and rapidly bringing up the garrisons of the western +forts to Fort Ingles, but not molesting us. + +Unfortunately for the credit of the story about the loss of the boats, +which were at the time carefully concealed under the lee of the vessels, +one drifted astern, so that our object became apparent, and the guns of +Fort Ingles, under which we lay, forthwith opened upon us, the first +shots passing through the sides of the _Intrepido_, and killing two men, +so that it became necessary to land in spite of the swell. We had only +two launches and a gig, into which I entered to direct the operation, +Major Miller, with forty-four marines, pushing off in the first launch, +under the fire of the party at the landing place, by which the coxswain +being wounded, the Major had to take the helm, and whilst doing this, +received a ball through his hat, grazing the crown of his head. Ordering +a few only of his party to fire, the whole leaped ashore at the landing +place, driving the Spaniards, before them at the point of the bayonet. +The second launch now pushed off from the Intrepido, and, in this way, +in less than an hour, three hundred men had made good their footing on +shore. + +The most difficult task--the capture of the forts--was to come; the only +way in which the first, Fort Ingles, could be approached being by a +precipitous path, along which the men could only pass in single file; +the fort itself being inaccessible except by a ladder, which the enemy, +after being routed by Major Miller, had drawn up. + +As soon as it was dark, a picked party, under the guidance of one of +the Spanish prisoners, silently advanced to the attack, expecting to +fall in with a body of the enemy outside the fort, but all having +re-entered, our men were unopposed. + +This party having taken up its position, the main body moved forward, +cheering and firing in the air, to intimate to the Spaniards that their +chief reliance was on the bayonet. The enemy, meanwhile, kept up an +incessant fire of artillery and musketry in the direction of the shouts, +but without effect, as no aim could be taken in the dark. Whilst the +patriots were thus noisily advancing, a gallant young officer, Ensign +Vidal--who had previously distinguished himself at Santa--got under the +inland flank of the fort, and with a few men, contrived unperceived to +tear up some pallisades, by which a bridge was made across the ditch, +whereby he and his small party entered, and formed noiselessly under +cover of some branches of trees which overhung it, the garrison +directing their whole attention to the shouting patriots in an opposite +direction. + +A volley from Vidal's party convinced the Spaniards that they had been +taken in flank. Without waiting to ascertain the number of those who had +outflanked them, they instantly took to flight, filling with a like +panic a column of three hundred men, drawn up behind the fort. The +Chilians, who were now well up, bayoneted them by dozens, in their +efforts to gain the other forts, which were opened to receive them; the +patriots thus entering at the same time, and driving them from fort to +fort into the Castle of Corral, together with two hundred more, who had +abandoned some guns advantageously placed on a height at Fort +Chorocomayo. The Corral was stormed with equal rapidity, a number of the +enemy escaping in boats to Valdivia, others plunging into the forest; +whilst upwards of a hundred, besides officers, fell into our hands, the +like number being found bayoneted on the following morning. Our loss was +seven men killed, and nineteen wounded. + +The Spaniards had, no doubt, regarded their position as impregnable, +which, considering its difficulty of access and almost natural +impenetrability, it ought to have been, if properly defended. They had +only found out their error when too late, thus justifying my former +remark to the military officers, that an attack where least expected is +almost invariably crowned with success. Much less had the Spaniards +calculated on a night attack, the most favourable of all to the +attacking party, as necessitating unity of action--and the least +favourable of all to the party attacked, as inspiring doubt and panic, +almost certain to end in irresolution and defeat. The garrison consisted +of the Cantabria regiment of the line, numbering about eight hundred, +with whom was associated a militia of upwards of a thousand. + +On the 5th, the _Intrepido_ and _Montezuma_, which had been left at the +Aguada Inglesa, entered the harbour, being fired at in their passage by +Fort Niebla on the eastern shore. On their coming to an anchor at the +Corral, two hundred men were again embarked to attack Forts Niebla, +Carbonero, and Piojo. The _O'Higgins_ now appearing in sight off the +mouth of the harbour, the Spaniards abandoned the forts on the eastern +side, no doubt judging that as the western forts had been captured +without the aid of the frigate, they had--now that she had arrived--no +chance of successfully defending them; the patriot troops were therefore +disembarked at Fort Niebla till the tide served to take them to the town +of Valdivia. + +In crossing the harbour, the _Intrepido_, from want of precaution in +taking soundings, grounded on a bank in the channel, where, bilged by +the surf, she finally became a wreck. Nor was the _O'Higgins_ in a much +better condition, as, from the injury sustained at Quiriquina, it became +necessary to put her ashore on a mud bank, as the sole means of saving +her from going down in deep water, so that the only vessel left was the +little schooner _Montezuma_. + +On the 6th, the troops were again embarked to pursue the flying garrison +up the river, when we received a flag of truce informing us that the +enemy had abandoned the town, after plundering the private houses and +magazines; and, together with the Governor, Colonel Montoya, had fled in +the direction of Chiloe. From the disorders which were committed by the +Spaniards, previous to their retreat, the town was in great +consternation, many of the inhabitants having also fled; a proclamation +issued by me, to the effect that no one should be molested in person or +property, had, however, the effect of inducing them to return; and an +additional order immediately to choose for themselves a Governor, at +once restored peace and tranquillity--the disposition of the people +being for the most part good, whilst any leaning which might have +existed in favour of Spanish rule was dissipated by the excesses which, +previous to their flight, the royalist troops had committed. + +The fortifications were so numerous, that at first it was my intention +to destroy them and embark the artillery, as the Spaniards who had +escaped to Chiloe--where another Spanish regiment was stationed--might +return after my departure and recover them, the force which could be +spared to garrison them being insignificant when distributed amongst +fifteen forts. On further reflection, I could not make up my mind to +destroy fortresses, the erection of which had cost upwards of a million +of dollars, and which Chili would find it difficult to replace; and +therefore determined on leaving them intact, with their artillery and +ammunition, intending, before my return to Valparaiso, to render the +rout of the Spaniards who had escaped, yet more complete. + +The booty which fell into our hands, exclusive of the value of the forts +and public buildings, was considerable, Valdivia being the chief +military depot in the southern part of the continent. Amongst the +military stores, were upwards of 1,000 cwt. of gunpowder, 10,000 cannon +shot, of which 2,500 were brass, 170,000 musket cartridges, a large +quantity of small arms, 128 guns, of which 53 were brass, and the +remainder iron; the ship _Dolores_, afterwards sold at Valparaiso for +20,000 dollars, with public stores, also sold for the like value; and +plate, of which General Sanchez had previously stripped the churches of +Conception, valued at 16,000 dollars. + +From correspondence found in the archives of Valdivia, it was clear that +Quintanilla, the Governor of Chiloe, had serious apprehensions of a +revolt at San Carlos, so that, in place of returning to Valparaiso, I +resolved to see what could be effected there. The loss of the +_Intrepido_ was a serious drawback to our means of transporting troops, +and the flag-ship would no longer float; as, however, we had possession +of the _Dolores_, it was resolved to crowd into her and the _Montezuma_ +all the troops that could be spared, leaving Major Beauchef the whole of +those brought from Conception. + +Meanwhile, I despatched a _piragua_ to Valparaiso with the intelligence +of our success; the unexpected news, as was afterwards learned, creating +such an amount of popular enthusiasm as had never before been witnessed +in Chili. The most amusing part of the affair was, that by the time my +despatches announcing our victory reached Vaparaiso, the other ships of +the squadron had also arrived, when Captain Guise and his officers had +attributed our rocket failure at Callao to my want of skill in their +use; the inference desired, being my want of capability to command a +squadron. Not a word of blame was then attributed to poor Goldsack, who +had superintended their manufacture, as indeed none was deserved, though +the blame afterwards attributed to him ended as before stated in his +ruin. + +To this alleged want of professional skill on my part, Zenteno had +drawn up an elaborate accusation against me of disobedience to orders, +in not having returned, according to my instructions; the whole _clique_ +felicitating themselves on my dismissal with disgrace. Even the people +did not know what judgment to form, as all materials for forming an +opinion were kept from them, whilst every pretence tending to my +discredit was carefully made known. On news of the victory, all this was +immediately hushed up--the ministers, to retrieve their own credit, +joined in the popular enthusiasm, which it would have been unavailing to +thwart--and poor Goldsack was overwhelmed with reproach for the failure +of his rockets, though the whole blame rested with the Government in +having employed Spanish prisoners as his workmen. + + + + +CHAPTER III. + +DEPARTURE FOR CHILOE--PREPARATIONS OF THE ENEMY--CAPTURE OF FORT +CORONA--FAILURE AT FORT AGUY, AND SUBSEQUENT RETREAT--RETURN TO +VALDIVIA--CAPTURE OF OSORIO--RETURN TO VALPARAISO--ENTHUSIASTIC +RECEPTION--CHAGRIN OF THE MINISTRY--IMPORTANCE OF CONQUEST OF VALDIVIA +IN A POLITICAL POINT OF VIEW--PROMOTION OF OFFICERS UNDER +ARREST--EMPLOYMENT OF INDIANS BY THE SPANIARDS--CAREER OF +BENAVIDES--MUTINOUS SPIRIT OF THE SEAMEN IN CONSEQUENCE OF THEIR +CAPTURES BEING APPROPRIATED BY GOVERNMENT--RESIGNATION OF MY +COMMISSION--REFUSAL THEREOF--RENEWED OFFER OF AN ESTATE--THIS AGAIN +DECLINED--SEAMEN OBTAIN THEIR WAGES--PRIVATE PURCHASE OF AN +ESTATE--GOVERNMENT GIVES NOTICE OF TAKING IT--APPOINTMENT OF FLAG +CAPTAIN AGAINST MY WISHES--ANNOYANCE GIVEN TO ME BY MINISTER OF +MARINE--RENEWED RESIGNATION OF THE COMMAND--OFFICERS OF THE SQUADRON +RESIGN IN A BODY--GOVERNMENT BEGS OF ME TO RETAIN THE COMMAND--MY +CONSENT--GENERAL SAN MARTIN--THE SENATE--ZENTENO--CORRUPTION OF PARTIES +IN THE ADMINISTRATION. + + +Having provided for the safety of the city and province of Valdivia, by +establishing a provisional government, and left Major Beauchef with his +own troops to maintain order--on the 16th of February, I sailed with the +_Montezuma_ schooner, and our prize the _Dolores_, for the island of +Chiloe, taking with me two hundred men, under the command of Major +Miller, my object being to wrest Chiloe from Spain, as I had done +Valdivia. Unfortunately, the services of the flag-ship, the _O'Higgins_, +were not available, there being no way of rendering her seaworthy, +without tedious repairs, for which there was no time, as our success +depended on attacking Chiloe before the Governor had leisure to prepare +for defence. Neither of our vessels being armed for fighting, I +depended altogether upon Major Miller and our handful of soldiers to +oppose a thousand regular troops, besides a numerous militia; but having +been informed that the garrison was in a mutinous state, I calculated +that by judicious management, they might be induced to join the patriot +cause. + +Unluckily, our design had got wind, and the Spanish Governor, +Quintanilla, a judicious officer, had managed to conciliate them. On +coming to an anchor on the 17th, at Huechucucay, we found a body of +infantry and cavalry, with a field-piece, ready to dispute our landing; +but drawing off their attention by a feigned attack upon a distant spot, +and thus dividing them into two parties, Major Miller got on shore, and +soon routed them, capturing their field-piece. + +A night attack being decided upon, the troops, a hundred and seventy in +number, moved on under the direction of a guide, who, wilfully or +treacherously, misled them, the men thus wandering about in the dark +throughout the whole night. At dawn, they found their way to Fort +Corona, which, with a detached battery, was taken without loss. Halting +for a short time to refresh the men, Major Miller bravely, but too +precipitately, moved on Fort Aguy, in broad daylight; this fort being +the stronghold of the enemy, mounting twelve guns, with others flanking +the only accessible path by which entrance could be gained, and being +garrisoned by three companies of regulars, two companies of militia, and +a full proportion of artillerymen. The fort stood on a hill, washed on +one side by the sea, and having on the other an impenetrable forest, the +only access being by a narrow path, whilst the means of retreat for the +garrison was by the same path, so that the attack became for the latter +a matter of life and death, since, in case of defeat, there was no mode +of escape, as at Valdivia. + +In spite of these odds, and the spectacle of two fanatical friars on the +ramparts, with lance in one hand, and crucifix in the other, urging on +the garrison to resist to the death the handful of aggressors--the +indomitable courage of Miller did not allow him to remain in the forts +he had already taken till nightfall, when he would have been +comparatively safe by attacking in the dark. Choosing out of his small +band a forlorn hope of sixty men, he perilled his own safety, upon which +so much depended, by leading them in person; every gun and musket of the +enemy being concentrated on a particular angle of the path which he must +needs pass. As the detachment reached the spot, a shower of grape and +musketry mowed down the whole, twenty out of the sixty being killed +outright, whilst nearly all the rest were mortally wounded. Seeing their +gallant Commander fall, the marines, who were waiting to follow, dashed +through the fire, and brought him off, with a grape-shot through his +thigh, and the bones of his right foot crushed by a round shot. Another +dash by the force which remained brought off the whole of the wounded, +though adding fearfully to their numbers. This having been accomplished, +Captain Erescano, who succeeded to the command, ordered a retreat; the +Spaniards, animated by success, and urged on by the friars, following +just within musket-shot, and making three separate attacks, which were +on each occasion repelled, though from the killed and wounded, the +pursuers were now fully six times their number. Nevertheless one-half of +the diminished band kept the enemy at bay, whilst the other half spiked +the guns, broke up the gun-carriages, and destroyed the military stores +in the forts captured in the morning, when they resumed their march to +the beach, followed by the Spaniards as before. + +The marines who, with affectionate fidelity, had borne off Major Miller, +had been careful to protect him from fire, though two out of the three +who carried him were wounded in the act; and when, on arriving at the +beach, they were invited by him to enter the boat, one of them, a +gallant fellow named Roxas, of whom I had spoken highly in my despatches +from Valdivia, on account of his distinguished bravery, refused, saying, +"No, Sir, I was the first to land, and I mean to be the last to go on +board." He kept his word; for on his Commander being placed in safety, +he hastened back to the little band, now nearly cut up, and took his +share in the retreat, being the last to get into the boats. Such were +the Chilenos, of whom the mean jealousy of the Minister of Marine, +Zenteno, refused to allow me a thousand for operations at Callao--which +could have been conducted with ease, as Valdivia had been captured with +less than a third of that number. + +Our force being now seriously diminished, and feeling convinced that +the fanatics of Chiloe were devoted to the cause of Spain, there was +nothing left but to return to Valdivia, where, finding that the +Spaniards who had been dispersed in the neighbourhood were committing +excesses, I despatched Major Beauchef with 100 men to Osorio to secure +that town, the relief being accepted with great joy even by the Indians, +of whom, wrote Major Beauchef to me, "I have embraced more than a +thousand Caciques and their followers. They have all offered their +services to fight in the patriotic cause; but as circumstances do not +require this, I have invited them to return to their own lands, and have +received their promises to be ready if the country should call for their +services." The Spaniards being driven from Osorio, the flag of Chili +was, on the 26th of February, hoisted on the castle by Major Beauchef, +who returned to Valdivia. + +There being nothing further to require my presence, I placed the +_O'Higgins_ under the orders of my secretary, Mr. Bennet, to superintend +her repairs, and embarked in the _Montezuma_, for Valparaiso, taking +with me five Spanish officers who had been made prisoners, amongst whom +was Colonel Fausto De Hoyos, the Commandant of the Cantabria regiment. + +On my departure, the Spaniards, elated by their success at Chiloe, +combined with those who had been driven from Valdivia, in an attempt to +recover their lost possessions, but Major Beauchef, having timely +intelligence of their intention, set out to meet them. A number of +volunteers having joined the patriot force, Major Beauchef on the 6th of +March encountered the enemy on the river Toro, and instantly attacked +them, when, in about an hour, the Spanish officers mounted their horses +and fled in a body, leaving the men to their fate. Nearly three hundred +of these immediately surrendered, and Major Beauchef--having captured +the whole of the arms and baggage--returned in triumph to Valdivia. + +On the 27th of February, I arrived at Valparaiso, in the _Montezuma_, +amidst the most lively demonstrations of enthusiasm on the part of the +populace, and warm expressions of gratitude from the Supreme Director. +But my reception by his ministers was wholly different. Zenteno, through +whose orders I had broken, declared, that the conquest of Valdivia "was +the act of a madman! that I deserved to have lost my life in the +attempt; and even now ought to lose my head for daring to attack such a +place without instructions, and for exposing the patriot troops to such +hazard;" afterwards setting on foot a series of intrigues, having for +their object the depreciation of the service which had been rendered, so +that I found myself exposed to the greatest possible vexation and +annoyance, with not the slightest indication of national acknowledgment +or reward to myself, officers, or men. + +The chagrin of Zenteno and the bad passions of his adherents were +further enhanced by the congratulatory addresses which poured in on both +the Supreme Director and myself from all parts, the people declaring, +contrary to the assertions of Zenteno, that I had acted, not from any +feeling of personal vanity, but from a conviction of the national +utility of the act; and that by its accomplishment the valour of the +Chilenos had been so displayed as to shew that they had the utmost +confidence in their officers, and hence possessed the moral as well as +physical courage necessary for further achievements. + +Notwithstanding the envious dissatisfaction of Zenteno, the government +was compelled, in deference to the popular voice, to award medals to the +captors, the decree for this stating that "the capture of Valdivia was +the happy result of the devising of an admirably arranged plan, and of +the most daring and valorous execution." The decree further conferred on +me an estate of 4,000 quadras from the confiscated lands of Conception, +which I refused, as no vote of thanks was given by the legislature; this +vote I finally obtained as an indemnification to myself for having +exceeded my orders; such being necessary after Zenteno's expressions of +ill-will towards me on account of breaking through instructions. + +Situated as Chili then was, it is impossible to over-rate the importance +of this acquisition--the capture of a noble harbour protected by fifteen +forts, and the magazines with their vast amount of military stores, +being even secondary to the political advantages gained by the Republic. + +The annexation of this province, at one blow conferred on Chili +complete independence, averting the contemplated necessity for fitting +out a powerful military expedition for the attainment of that object, +vitally essential to her very existence as an independent state; +because, so long as Valdivia remained in the hands of the Spaniards, +Chili was, in her moments of unguardedness or disunion, in constant +danger of losing the liberties she had, as yet, but partially acquired. + +The resources of the province of Valdivia, together with those of +Conception, had contributed the means whereby the Spaniards maintained +their hold upon the Chilian territory. Not only were they deprived of +these resources--now added to those of Chili--but a great saving was +effected by exonerating the Republic from the necessity of maintaining a +military force in the southern provinces, as a check upon both Spaniards +and Indians, who, at the moment of our conquest of Valdivia, were being +let loose in all directions against the Chilian patriots. + +Setting aside, therefore, the removal of danger, and the complete +establishment of independence, the money value alone of the conquest +was, to a Government of very limited means, of the first importance, as +doing away with the necessity of military expenditure, estimated by +competent judges at a million of dollars, merely to attempt the +accomplishment of an object, which, without any additional cost, I had +effected with a single ship, so unseaworthy that she had to be left +behind. + +But the advantage of the conquest did not end here. Had it not been for +this capture, the Spanish power in Chili, aided by the Indians, would +have found it easy to maintain itself in such a country for a protracted +period, despite any military force Chili was in a condition to bring +against it; so that no effective co-operation with the people of Peru +could have been undertaken--as common prudence would have deterred them +from entering into distant revolutionary projects, so long as the +Spaniards were in possession of any part of the Chilian territory; +whilst the necessity of defending herself through a protracted civil +war, would have prevented Chili from aiding in the liberation of Peru, +which would thus have remained a permanent base of operations for the +Spaniards to annoy, if not again to recover, the Chilian provinces. + +A further advantage was the successful negociation of a loan of one +million sterling in England, which was accomplished solely on account of +what had been achieved, every attempt at this having failed so long as +the Spaniards were in possession of the most important harbour and +fortress in the country, from which, as a basis, they might organize +future attempts to recover the revolted provinces. + +Notwithstanding these advantages, not a penny in the shape of reward, +either for this or any previous service, was paid to myself, the +officers, or seamen, nevertheless the Government appropriated the money +arising from the sale of the _Dolores_, and the stores with which she +was loaded; neither was there any account taken of the value of the guns +and the enormous amount of ammunition left in the forts at Valdivia. +The men who performed this achievement were literally in rags, and +destitute of everything, no attempt being made by the department of +Marine to lessen their sufferings--for to this extent was their +condition reduced. + +In place of reward, every encouragement was offered to the officers to +disobey my orders. Two of these I had marked for punishment, for +deliberate murder. Ensign Vidal having captured two Spanish officers in +Fort Ingles, they surrendered their swords, receiving the gallant +youth's pledge of safety; but Captain Erescano coming up, immediately +butchered them. Another case was even worse: Ensign Latapia, who had +been left in command of the castle of Corral, after my departure to +Chiloe, ordered two of his prisoners to be shot; and four officers would +have met the same fate, had not my secretary, Mr. Bennet, taken them on +board the _O'Higgins_. For this I placed Latapia under arrest, making +the necessary declarations for a court-martial, and conveyed him as a +prisoner to Valparaiso, where, in place of being punished, both he and +Erescano were promoted, and taken into the liberating army of General +San Martin. + +I have spoken of the aid afforded to the Spaniards by the Indians. On +the 10th of March General Freire, afterwards Supreme Director, wrote me +a letter congratulatory of my success against Valdivia, which he +concluded by informing me that its capture had already caused the +Indians of Angol, and their Cacique, Benavente, to declare in favour of +Chili, and that he did not doubt but that this would shortly be followed +by a similar declaration on the part of the Indians throughout the +province; General Freire not being aware that I had already produced +this effect by distributing amongst them an immense quantity of trumpery +stores and gewgaws, accumulated by the Spaniards in the magazines at +Valdivia, for the purpose of rewarding murderous inroads into the +Chilian territory. + +It will be interesting briefly to note the employment of Indians by the +Spaniards. Their agent, or leader, in this horrible warfare, was a +wretch named Benavides, who may fairly lay claim to the distinction of +being the most perfect monster who ever disgraced humanity. He had +originally been a common soldier in the Buenos Ayrean army, and, +together with his brother, had _carte blanche_ from the Spaniards to +commit the most fearful atrocities on the Chilian patriots, who could +not defend themselves against the stealthy cowardice of Indian warfare. +His invariable practice was, whenever a village or estate could be +surprised, to sew up the leading inhabitants as tightly as possible in +raw ox-hides stripped from their own cattle, when, being laid in the +burning sun, the contraction of the hides as they dried caused a slow +and lingering death of perfect agony, which it was the amusement of +himself and the savages whom he led to enjoy whilst smoking their +cigars. When any persons of influence fell into his hands, he cut out +their tongues, and otherwise horribly mutilated them--a bishop and +several other gentlemen surviving as witnesses of his atrocities. + +Valdivia was this man's _point d'appui_, whence he drew his supplies, +and when we took the place a small vessel fell into our hands, laden +with arms and ammunition for his disposal amongst the Indians. She was +destined for Arauco, and had on board two Spanish officers and four +non-commissioned officers, sent for the purpose of rendering the Indians +still more formidable by indoctrinating them into European modes of +warfare. + +The wretch Benavides was afterwards bought over by General San Martin, +and sent to Conception for the orders of General Freire, who told him to +his face that he would have nothing to do with such a monster; whereupon +Benavides left Conception, and commenced a desolating warfare upon the +inhabitants of the coast, even refining upon his former barbarities. The +country getting too hot for him, he again offered his services to the +Spaniards, and was on his way to Peru in a small vessel, when, being +compelled to go ashore for water, in the vicinity of Valparaiso, one of +his men betrayed him, and he was sent to Santiago, where he was hung. + +The seamen were becoming mutinous, in consequence of neither receiving +pay nor prize-money, every promise given being broken, as well to them +as to myself. As they looked to me for the vindication of their rights, +and, indeed, had only been kept from open outbreak by my assurance that +they should be paid, I addressed a letter of expostulation to the +Supreme Director, recounting their services and the ill-merited +harshness to which they were exposed at the hands of his Ministers, +notwithstanding that since their return they had aided the Government in +the construction of wharves and other conveniences necessary for the +embarkation of troops and stores to Peru--a military expedition to that +country being now decided on. + +The fact was, that the proceeds of the captures were appropriated by the +Government, which, to avoid repayment, declared that the conquest of +Valdivia was a _restoration!_ though the place had never been in +possession of Chili. On my refusing to allow the stores I had brought +from thence to be disembarked, unless as a compensation to the seamen, +it was alleged as a reason for the course pursued that even if Valdivia +had not belonged to the Republic, Chili did not make war on every +section of America. It was therefore put to my liberality and honourable +character whether I would not give up to the Government all that the +squadron had acquired? + +These views were written by Monteagudo, afterwards the willing +instrument of General San Martin in Peru. I asked him, "Whether he +considered that which had been advanced as just, or according to law?" +The reply was, "_Certainly not, but I was ordered to write so!_" Finding +that I would surrender nothing, it was next debated in the Council +whether I ought not to be brought to a court martial for having delayed +and diverted the naval forces of Chili to the reduction of Valdivia, +without the orders of Government! + +No doubt this course would have been decided on but from the unsettled +condition of the Republic and fear of the populace, who denounced the +views of the Ministry as heartily as they advocated my proceedings. + +As nothing in the shape of justice could be obtained for the squadron, +on the 14th of May, I begged His Excellency the Supreme Director to +accept the resignation of my Commission, as, by retaining it, I should +only be instrumental in promoting the ruin which must follow the conduct +of his advisers; at the same time telling him I had not accepted it to +have my motives misconstrued, and my services degraded as they had been +on account of objects which I was unable to divine, unless, indeed, a +narrow-minded jealousy, such as that which designated the capture of +Valdivia, its "_restoration_," though it had never before passed from +under the dominion of the Spaniards. + +This course had not been anticipated, though it was not adopted in any +spirit of intimidation, but from repugnance to the heartless ingratitude +with which important national services had been met. The Ministers were, +however, thus brought for a time to their senses, the justice of my +complaints being acknowledged, and every assurance given that for the +future the Government would observe good faith towards the squadron. An +estate, as has been said, had been offered to me as a reward for my +services, which was declined for reasons already adduced. The offer was +now renewed, but again declined, as nothing but promises were as yet +forthcoming to the service, and the only hold upon the seamen was my +personal influence with them, in consequence of my unyielding advocacy +of their rights--a hold which I was not likely to forego for a grant to +myself. In place, therefore, of accepting the estate, I returned the +document conveying the grant, with a request that it might be sold, and +the proceeds applied to the payment of the squadron; but the requisition +was not complied with. + +Seeing that I was determined not to be trifled with, and shamed by my +offer of applying the estate to the payment of the men, General San +Martin, who was appointed to command the military portion of the +expedition to Peru, came to Valparaiso in June, and on the 13th of July, +the squadron was paid wages in part only, but as I insisted on the whole +being liquidated, this was done on the 16th; but without any portion of +their prize-money. My share alone of the value of captures made at and +previous to the capture of Valdivia was 67,000 dollars, and for this I +received the assurance of the Supreme Director that it should be paid to +me at the earliest possible moment; upon which I accepted the estate +which continued to be pressed upon me, the grant expressing the purpose +for which it was given, adding as a reason that "my name should never +cease from the land." This estate, situated at Rio Clara, was, after my +departure from Chili, forcibly resumed by the succeeding Government; +and the bailiff, whom I had placed upon it for the purpose of seeing how +it could be improved by culture and the introduction of valuable +European seeds, was forcibly expelled from its supervision. + +On my first refusal to accept the estate--for the reason before +assigned--in order to convince the Chilians how great was my desire to +be enrolled amongst the number of their citizens, I purchased a hacienda +at Herradura, about eight miles from Valparaiso. The effect produced by +this upon the Ministry was almost ludicrous. It was gravely argued +amongst them as to what I, a foreigner, could intend by purchasing an +estate in Chili? The conclusion to which they came being, as I was +credibly informed, that as the whole population was with me, I must +intend, when opportunity served, to set myself up as the ruler of the +Republic, relying upon the people for support! Such was statesmanship at +that day in Chili. + +It so happened, that soon after purchasing this property I pointed out +to the Government how much better the Bay of Herradura was calculated +for a naval arsenal, than the ill-protected Bay of Valparaiso; offering +at the same time to make them a gratuitous present of all the land +required for the establishment of a naval arsenal and marine depot. This +offer was, no doubt, construed into an act, on my part, to gain +additional popularity--though this, perhaps, would have been no easy +matter; and a notice was served upon me not to make any improvements, as +the Government intended to appropriate the estate--but would not +reimburse any outlay, though they would repay me the purchase money, and +also for any improvements that had already have been effected! + +I instantly solicited an explanation of the Supreme Director, and +received an apology, attributing the whole affair to the officiousness +of the Attorney-General, who had founded his proceeding on an old +Spanish law; and there, for a time, the matter dropped, but for a time +only--viz. so long as the necessities of the state required my services. + +A new source of annoyance now arose, in all kinds of attempts to lessen +my authority in the navy, but as I was always on the alert to maintain +my position, these resulted in nothing but defeat to their concoctors. +At length an overt act was committed in the appointment of Captain Spry +as my flag captain on board the _O'Higgins_, which had been repaired at +Valdivia, and was now come down to Valparaiso. An order to this effect +was sent to me, which I promptly refused to obey, adding that Captain +Spry should never tread my quarter-deck as flag captain, and that if my +privilege as an admiral were not admitted, the Government might consider +my command as at an end, for so long as I continued in command of the +squadron, I would not permit an executor of my orders to be forced upon +me. The point was immediately conceded, and Captain Crosbie was +appointed flag captain. + +The nomination of Spry was, no doubt, meant to control my efforts in the +future expedition to Peru, the credit of which, if any, was to be +reserved for the army. As far as I knew anything of Captain Spry, I had +no personal objections to him, but, restricted as I had been by the +Minister of Marine Zenteno, I had great doubts as to the motives for +appointments of his making, being convinced that his principal aim was +to prevent me from doing anything beyond keeping the Spaniards in check, +an operation to which I was by no means inclined to accede, as had been +evinced by the recent conquest of Valdivia, in excess of his +instructions. + +Encouraged by the annoyance given to me by the Minister of Marine and +his party, one or two of my captains thought themselves at liberty to +manifest a disregard to my authority, which, as their admiral, I did not +choose to tolerate. The most influential of these was Captain Guise, +who, having been guilty of several acts of direct disobedience and +neglect of duty, was, by my orders, put in arrest, pending a demand made +by me that the Government should institute a court martial for the +investigation of his conduct. This act greatly irritated Zenteno, who +desired to support him, and refused consent to the inquiry; thus +establishing a precedent for the captain of any ship to consider himself +independent of the admiral. + +Such an act of folly in violation of the discipline of the navy, no less +than of personal insult to myself, determined me to have nothing more to +do with the Chilian administration, and on July 16th, I once more +transmitted to the Government my resignation, at the same time demanding +my passport to quit the country, notifying to the officers of the +squadron that on the receipt of the same I should cease to command. A +meeting was immediately held amongst them, and on the same day, I +received--not a valedictory address, as might have been expected--but +two letters, one signed by five captains, and the other by twenty-three +commissioned officers, containing resolutions of abandoning the service +also, at the same time handing in their commissions. To this proof of +attachment, I replied, by requesting that they would not sacrifice their +own positions on my account, and recommended them not to make their +resolutions public till they had further considered the matter, as it +might be seriously detrimental to the interests of the country. + +The following letter was addressed to me on this occasion by the +officers of the squadron:-- + + "On board the _Independencia_, July 18, 1820." + + My Lord, + + The general discontent and anxiety which your Lordship's + resignation has occasioned amongst the officers and others of + the squadron, afford a strong proof how much the ungrateful conduct + of the Government is felt by those serving under your command. + + "The officers whose names are subscribed to the enclosed resolutions, + disdaining longer to serve under a Government which can + so soon have forgotten the important services rendered to the State, + beg leave to put in your hands their commissions, and to request + you will be kind enough to forward them to the Minister of Marine. + At the same time that we are thus forced to withdraw ourselves from + the service, our warmest wishes will be offered up for the prosperity + and liberty of the country." + + "Signed by 23 Commissioned Officers." + +The following resolutions accompanied this letter:-- + +"Resolved--1. That the honour, safety, and interest of the Chilian +navy entirely rest on the abilities and experience of the present +Commander-in-Chief." + +"2. That, as the feelings of unbounded confidence and respect which we +entertain for him cannot be transferred to another, we have come to the +resolution of resigning our commissions, and of transmitting them to +Government, through the hands of our admiral." + +"3. That our commissions shall be accompanied by a letter expressive of +our sentiments, signed by all whose commissions are enclosed." + +"Signed by 23 Officers." + +Pending the acceptance of my resignation by the Government, the +equipment of the squadron was carried on with the greatest alacrity, so +that there might be no ground for complaint that the termination of my +command had caused any remissness in our duties. I, however, withheld +the commissions which had been enclosed to me by the officers of the +squadron, lest the measure should excite popular dissatisfaction, and +thus cause a danger for which the Government was unprepared. + +The only captains who did not sign the resolutions were Guise and Spry, +the former being in arrest, and the latter being offended with me on +account of my refusal to accept him as flag captain. There is no doubt +but that he immediately communicated to Zenteno the resolutions of the +officers, for on the 20th I received from him the following letter:-- + + "Valparaiso, July 20th, 1820." + + "My Lord," + + "At a moment when the services of the naval forces of + the State are of the highest importance, and the personal services + of your Lordship indispensable, the Supremacy, with the most + profound sentiments of regret, has received your resignation, which, + should it be admitted, would involve the future operations of the + arms of liberty in the New World in certain ruin; and ultimately + replace in Chili, your adopted home, that tyranny which, your + Lordship abhors, and to the annihilation of which your heroism has + so greatly contributed." + + "His Excellency the Supreme Director commands me to + inform your Lordship that should you persist in resigning the command + of the squadron which has been honoured by bearing your + flag--the cause of terror and dismay to our enemies, and of glory to + all true Americans; or should the Government unwisely admit it, + this would indeed be a day of universal mourning in the New + World. The Government, therefore, in the name of the nation + returns you your commission, soliciting your re-acceptance of it, for + the furtherance of that sacred cause to which your whole soul is + devoted." + + "The Supremacy is convinced of the necessity which obliges + your Lordship to adopt the measures which placed Captain Guise, of + the _Lantaro_, in arrest, and of the justice of the charges exhibited + against this officer; but being desirous of preventing any delay in + the important services in which the ships of war are about to + proceed, it is the request of His Excellency the Supreme Director + that his trial be postponed to the first opportunity which does not + interfere with the service of the squadron, so important at the + present epoch." + + "(Signed) JOSE IGNACIO ZENTENO." + +In addition to this communication from the Minister of Marine, I +received private letters from the Supreme Director and General San +Martin, begging me to continue in command of the naval forces, and +assuring me that there should be no further cause for complaint. + +On receipt of these letters I withdrew my resignation, and returned to +the officers of the squadron their commissions, at the same time +setting Captain Guise at liberty, and reinstating him in the command of +his ship. I would not have done this but from a feeling of attachment to +the Supreme Director, General O'Higgins, whose amiable disposition--too +easy to contend with the machinations of those around him,--- was a +sufficient assurance that he was neither an actor in, nor even privy to +the system of annoyance pursued towards me by a clique of whom Zenteno +was the agent. Like many other good commanders, O'Higgins did not +display that tact in the cabinet which had so signally served his +country in the field, in which,--though General San Martin, by his +unquestionable powers of turning the achievements of others to his own +account, contrived to gain the credit--the praise was really due to +General O'Higgins. The same easy disposition, after the elevation of the +latter to the Supreme Directorate, induced him to consent to the +establishment of a senatorial court of consultation, conceding to it +privileges altogether incompatible with his own supremacy; and it was +with this body that all the vexations directed against me originated--as +has been asserted by writers on Chili, at the instigation of General San +Martin; but having no documentary evidence to prove this, I shall not +take upon myself to assert the fact, notwithstanding that the subsequent +conduct of the General gave more than probability to the generally +received opinion. + +There was, however, no doubt but that General San Martin had been privy +to much of the annoyance given to the squadron and myself, as, upon my +accusing him of this, he replied that he only "wanted to see how far the +Supreme Director would allow a party spirit to oppose the welfare of the +expedition;" adding, "Never mind, my lord, I am general of the army, and +you shall be admiral of the squadron." _"Bien, milord, yo soy General +del exercito, y V. sara Almirante de la esquadra."_ His allusion to the +complicity of the Supreme Director I knew to be false, as His Excellency +was anxious to do all in his power both for the squadron and his +country; had not the Senate, on which he had conferred such +extraordinary powers, thwarted all his endeavours. + +General San Martin was, however, much surprised when I shewed him the +letters and returned commissions of the officers, he having no +conception of their determination not to serve under any command but my +own; this step on their part being fraught with the greatest danger to +the equipment of the contemplated expedition. + +The Senate just noticed was an anomaly in state government. It consisted +of five members, whose functions were to remain only during the first +struggles of the country for independence; but this body had now assumed +a permanent right to dictatorial control, whilst there was no appeal +from their arbitrary conduct, except to themselves. They arrogated the +title of "Most Excellent," whilst the Supreme Director was simply "His +Excellency;" his position, though nominally head of the executive, +being really that of mouth-piece to the Senate, which, assuming all +power, deprived the Executive Government of its legitimate influence, so +that no armament could be equipped, no public work undertaken, no troops +raised, and no taxes levied, except by the consent of this irresponsible +body. For such a clique, the plain, simple good sense, and thorough good +feeling of the Supreme Director was no match; as, being himself above +meanness, he was led to rely on the honesty of others from the +uprightness of his own motives. Though in every way disposed to believe, +with Burke, that "what is morally wrong can never be politically right," +he was led to believe that a crooked policy was a necessary evil of +Government; and as such a policy was adverse to his own nature, he was +the more easily induced to surrender its administration to others who +were free from his conscientious principles. + +Of these the most unscrupulous was Zenteno, who, previous to the +revolution, had been an attorney at Conception, and was a _protege_ of +General San Martin--carrying with him into State Administration the +practical cunning of his profession, with more than its usual proportion +of chicanery. As he was my bitter opponent, obstructing my plans for the +interests of Chili in every possible way, it might ill become me to +speak of him as I then felt, and to this day feel. I will therefore +adduce the opinion of Mrs. Graham, the first historian of the Republic, +as to the estimation in which he was generally held:--"Zenteno has read +more than usual among his countrymen, and thinks that little much. Like +San Martin, he dignifies scepticism in religion, laxity of morals, and +coldness of heart, if not cruelty, with the name of philosophy; and +while he could shew creditable sensibility for the fate of a worm, would +think the death or torture of a political opponent matter for +congratulation." I was his political opponent, as wishing to uphold the +authority of the Supreme Director, and hence, no doubt, his enmity to +me; his influence even extending so far as to prevent the Supreme +Director from visiting me whilst in Santiago, on the ground that such a +course on his part would be undignified! + +At this distance of time--now that Chili is in possession of a +Government acting on more enlightened principles--there is no necessity +for withholding these remarks, without which the subsequent acts of the +Chilian Government towards me might be liable to misconstruction as to +my representations of them. So long as Chili was in a transition state +from a corrupt and selfish Government to one acting in accordance with +the true interests of the country, I forbore to make known these and +other circumstances, which, having now become matters of history, need +not any longer be withheld. + +Writing in this spirit, I may mention a reason, notorious enough at the +time, why the squadron was not paid even its wages. The Government _had_ +provided the means, but those to whom the distribution was entrusted +retained the money during their pleasure, employing it for their own +advantage in trading speculations or in usury, only applying it to a +legitimate purpose when further delay became dangerous to themselves. +One great cause of the hatred displayed towards me by these people, was +my incessant demands that the claims of the squadron should be satisfied +as regarded wages. As to prize-money, not a dollar was ever conceded by +the Government either to myself, officers, or men, so long as I remained +in Chili; but I had the satisfaction to see that the constant watch +which I kept on those financial disorders, was the means of ameliorating +the system, though with the additional dislike to myself of those whose +short-sighted policy I was thwarting, and whose avaricious speculations +were thus curtailed. + +In spite of his enmity, the Minister of Marine had been officially +compelled to write me the following letter:-- + + "My Lord," + + "If victories over an enemy are to be estimated + according to the resistance offered, or the national advantages + obtained, the conquest of Valdivia is, in both senses, inestimable; + encountering, as you did, the natural and artificial strength of that + impregnable fortress which, till now, had obstinately defended itself + by means of those combined advantages. The memory of that + glorious day will occupy the first pages of Chilian history, and the + name of Your Excellency will be transmitted from generation to + generation by the gratitude of our descendants." + + "His Excellency the Supreme Director, highly gratified by that + noble conquest, orders me to inform you (as I have now the + satisfaction of doing), that he experiences, in his own name, and in + that of the nation, the most heartfelt gratification at that signal + achievement. The meritorious officers, Beauchef, Miller, Erescano, + Carter, and Vidal, and all the other officers and soldiers who, in + imitation of your Excellency, encountered such vast dangers, will be + brought to the notice of Government, in order to receive a decorative + medal, in gratitude for their gallantry, and in proof that Chili rewards + the heroes who advocate her cause." + + Our national flag has been displayed amidst the most festive public + demonstrations, above those of Valdivia and Cantabria, in proof of the + subjection of our enemies. + + "I beg, with the greatest gratification, the honour to announce to you + your letter of the 3rd instant, transmitting those of Major Beauchef and + Major Miller." + + "God preserve your Excellency many years." + + (Signed) JOSE IGNACIO ZENTENO. + "The Vice-Admiral commanding the Chilian + Squadron." + +It is difficult to see how a man who could have written the above +letter, even officially, could have become my worst enemy; the reasons +for which will, however, develop themselves as we proceed. + +As the estate which was conferred upon me at Rio Clara was afterwards +taken from me, without reason assigned, I will here give the letter +conveying it, as this will again have to be alluded to. The +attorney-like cunning of Zenteno prevented its conveyance by any more +formal document than the decree conferring it. + + "My Lord," + + "A Decree of this date has been issued by His + Excellency the Supreme Director, of which the annexed is a + copy:--" + + "Desirous to expedite, without loss of time, the gift of 4000 + _quadras_ of land, which, by decree of the Senate, was assigned to the + Commander-in-Chief of the Squadron, Vice-Admiral Lord Cochrane, + as a demonstration of public appreciation for his distinguished + services in the '_Restoration,_' of the important fortress of Valdivia; + the said 4000 _quadras_ are assigned on the lands of Rio Clara, in + the province of Conception, being part of the confiscated estate of + Pablo Furtado, a fugitive Spaniard." + + "'The present deed shall serve as a sufficient title to the property in + favour of the Vice-Admiral, being communicated to the Minister of + Finance, in order to the accustomed formalities, to receive possession + and enjoy the benefits.'" + + "I have the honour to communicate the above, by Supreme orders, for your + information." + + "God preserve your Excellency many years." + + "(Signed) JOSE IGNACIO ZENTENO. + Administration of Marine, + Valparaiso, August SO, 1820. + Published by order of His Excellency." + + * * * * * + + + + +CHAPTER IV. + +OBSTACLES TO EQUIPPING THE SQUADRON--SAILING OF THE LIBERATING +EXPEDITION--DEBARCATION AT PISCO--LONG INACTION OF THE ARMY--GENERAL SAN +MARTIN REMOVES TO ANCON--CAPTURE OF THE ESMERALDA--EXCHANGE OF +PRISONERS--ACKNOWLEDGMENT OF THE SERVICE BY GENERAL SAN MARTIN--LADY +COCHRANE'S VISIT TO MENDOZA. + + +The difficulties which attended the equipment of the squadron and troops +destined for the liberation of Peru were very great, the Government +being without credit, whilst its treasury had been completely exhausted +by efforts to organise an army--a loan being impossible, and indeed +refused. By my influence with the British merchants, I managed to obtain +considerable quantities of naval and military stores, and in addition, a +contribution to a subscription which was set on foot, in place of a +forced loan, upon which the Government hesitated to venture. + +The greatest difficulty was, however, with regard to the foreign seamen, +who, disgusted with the want of faith towards them, refused to re-enter +the service. The Government, upon this, requested me to resort to +impressment, which I declined, telling them, moreover, that the captain +of the British frigate then in port would not permit his countrymen to +be impressed. The alternative proposed was to use my influence with the +men, by issuing such a proclamation, dictated by myself, as would render +them dependent for their pay and prize-money upon General San Martin, +and on the success of the expedition; it being evident that they would +not place further confidence in the promises of the Government. + +A joint proclamation was therefore issued by Gen. San Martin and myself, +my signature being added as a guarantee, whilst his bore the authority +of Commander-in-Chief. The following extract will shew the nature of +this proclamation:-- + + "On my entry into Lima, I will punctually pay to all foreign + seamen who shall voluntarily enlist into the Chilian service, the whole + arrears of their pay, to which, I will also add to each individual, + according to his rank, one year's pay over and above his arrears, as + a premium or reward for his services, if he continue to fulfil his + duty to the day of the surrender of that city, and its occupation by + the liberating forces." + + (Signed) JOSE DE SAN MARTIN. + "COCHRANE." + +This proclamation had the desired effect, and the crews of the ships +were immediately completed. + +The Chilian force amounted to 4200 men, General San Martin, to the great +disappointment of General Freire, being nominated Captain-General--the +force under his command was designated the "liberating army" _(Exercito +Libertador)_. Whilst the expedition was in process of formation, the +Supreme Director had apprised the Peruvian people of its object, and +lest they should entertain any jealousy of its presence uninvited, had +declared his views in a general proclamation, from which the following +is an extract:-- + + "Peruvians--Do not think we shall pretend to treat you as a + conquered people? such a desire could have entered into the heads + of none but those who are inimical to our common happiness. We + only aspire to see you free and happy; _yourselves will frame your + own government_, choosing that form which is most consistent with + your customs, your situation, and your wishes. Consequently, _you + will constitute a nation as free and independent as ourselves_." + +This, and subsequent proclamations, will require to be borne in mind, as +the result by no means corresponded with the intentions of the Supreme +Director, whose honesty of purpose was afterwards set at nought by those +in whose estimation Peru was only a field for the furtherance of their +own ambition. The Chileno officers, both native and foreign, certainly +believed in the sincerity of their leaders, but were subsequently doomed +to be miserably disappointed as regarded the chief of them. + +On the 21st of August, 1820, the squadron sailed amidst the enthusiastic +plaudits of the people, who felt proud that in so short a time the power +of Spain had not only been humbled, but that they were enabled to +despatch an army to liberate her principal remaining State. + +On the 25th, the squadron hove to off Coquimbo, taking on board another +battalion of troops. On the 26th we again sailed, when General San +Martin made known to me his intention of proceeding with the main body +of the army to Truxillo, a place four degrees to leeward of Lima, where +the army could have gained no advantage, nor, indeed, have found +anything to do, except to remain there safe from any attack by the +Spaniards, who could not approach it by land, whilst the squadron could +protect it by sea. + +By representing to General San Martin that this course would cause great +dissatisfaction amongst the Chileno officers and men, who expected to be +landed and led at once against Lima, for the immediate conquest of which +they were amply sufficient, he consented to give up his plan of +proceeding to Truxillo, but firmly refused to disembark his men in the +vicinity of Lima; for what reason I could not then divine. My own plan +was to land the force at Chilca, the nearest point to Callao, and +forthwith to obtain possession of the capital; an object by no means +difficult of execution, and certain of success. + +Finding all argument unavailing, we sailed for Pisco, where the +expedition arrived on the 7th of September, and on the 8th, to my great +chagrin, the troops were disembarked, and for fifty days remained in +total inaction! with the exception of despatching Colonel Arenales into +the interior with a detachment, which, after defeating a body of +Spaniards, took up a position to the eastward of Lima. + +Even on arriving at Pisco, General San Martin declined to enter the +town, though the Spanish forces consisted of less than three hundred +men. Landing the troops under Major-General Las Heras, he went down the +coast in the schooner _Montezuma_ the inhabitants meanwhile retiring +into the interior, taking with them their cattle, slaves, and even the +furniture of their houses. This excess of caution excited great +discontent in the army and the squadron, as contrasting strangely with +the previous capture of the place, in the preceding year, by +Lieut.-Colonel Charles and Major Miller, with their handful of men. + +On the return of General San Martin, he professed to be greatly +chagrined at the departure of the inhabitants, and the consequent loss +of supplies. Instead of attributing this to his own tardy movements, he +declared his disbelief in the accounts he had received from Peru as to +the friendly disposition of the inhabitants, even throwing out doubts as +to the success of the expedition in consequence. It was of the first +importance to have taken the place immediately, and to have conciliated +the inhabitants, as the ships were scantily provisioned, and all but +destitute of other necessary supplies. A detailed account, however, of +the capture of the place was transmitted to Santiago, where it was duly +recorded in the official organ as the first feat of the great +expedition. + +During these fifty days the squadron was also necessarily kept in +inaction, having achieved nothing beyond the capture of a few +merchantmen along the coast, and a fruitless chase of two Spanish +frigates, the _Prueba_ and _Venganza_, which I did not follow up, as +involving risk to the transports during my absence. + +This delay was productive of the worst disasters which could have +befallen the expedition. The people were eager to receive us, and not +calculating on such tardiness on the part of General Martin--were +everywhere declaring in our favour; but being unsupported, were fined, +imprisoned, and subjected to corporal punishment by the Viceroy. +Rendered cautious by this, they naturally distrusted the force idling +away its time at Pisco, manifesting reluctance to bring forward the +requisite supplies, upon which they were treated, by order of General +San Martin, with military rigour; being thus harassed, the Peruvians +began to look upon the Chilenos as oppressors in common with the +Spaniards, to the no small danger of losing every desire for national +independence. + +Nevertheless, on reaching Pisco, Gen. San Martin had promulgated a +proclamation from the Supreme Director full of fervent appeals to God +and man as regarded the good intentions of the Chilian Government: the +following are extracts:-- + + "Peruvians, here are the engagements under which Chili--before + the Supreme Being--and calling all nations to witness as + avengers of any violation of the compact, engages to aid you--setting + death and toil at defiance. You shall be free and independent. + You shall choose your own government and laws, by the + spontaneous will of your representatives. No military or civil + influence, direct or indirect, shall your brethren use to influence + your social dispositions. You shall dismiss the armed force sent to + your assistance the moment you judge proper, without regard to + our opinion of your danger or security. Never shall any military + division occupy the soil of a free people, unless called for by your + lawful magistrate. Neither by ourselves, nor by our aid, shall + party opinions which may have preceded your liberty be punished. + Ready to overthrow any armed force which may resist your rights, + we beseech you to forget all grievances antecedent to the day of + your glory, so as to reserve the most severe justice to obstinacy + and oppression." + +Such, were the inducements held out to the Peruvian people, and such +was their first experience with regard to their liberators. + +Yet even amidst inaction the fruits of demonstration early became +manifest, a vessel arriving on the 4th of October, from Guayaquil, with +the intelligence that on receiving news of the sailing of the +expedition, that province had declared itself independent. Upon the +arrival of this welcome news, I again begged of General San Martin to +reimbark the troops and move on Lima, and at length succeeded in +inducing him to make a move. + +Previous to our departure, General San Martin issued the following +proclamation, here given to shew how promises solemnly entered into +could afterwards be broken. + + "Peruvians! I have paid the tribute which, as a public man, I + owe to the opinion of others, and have shewn what is my object and + mission towards you. I come to fulfil the expectations of all those + who wish to belong to the country which gave them birth, and who + desire to be governed by their own laws. On the day when Peru + shall freely pronounce as to the form of her institutions, be they + whatever they may, _my functions shall cease_, and I shall have the + glory of announcing to the Government of Chili, of which I am a + subject, that their heroic efforts have at last received the consolation + of giving liberty to Peru, and peace to the neighbouring states." + +The troops being reimbarked--on the 28th we sailed from Pisco, and on +the following day anchored before Callao. After having reconnoitred the +fortifications, I again urged on General San Martin an immediate +disembarcation of the force, but to this he once more strenuously +objected, to the great disappointment of the whole expedition; +insisting on going to Ancon, a place at some distance to the northward +of Callao. Having no control over the disposition of the troops, I was +obliged to submit; and on the 30th, detached the _San Martin, +Galvarino,_ and _Araucano_, to convoy the transports to Ancon, retaining +the _O'Higgins, Independencia_, and _Lautaro_, as if for the purpose of +blockade. + +The fact was, that--annoyed in common with the whole expedition--at this +irresolution on the part of General San Martin, I determined that the +means of Chili, furnished with great difficulty, should not be wholly +wasted, without some attempt at accomplishing the objects of the +expedition; and accordingly formed a plan of attack with the three ships +which I had kept back--though being apprehensive that my design would be +opposed by General San Martin, I had not even mentioned to him my +intentions. + +This design was to cut out the _Esmeralda_ frigate from under the +fortifications, and also to get possession of another ship, on board of +which we had learned that a million of dollars was embarked for flight, +if it became necessary; my opinion being that if such display of power +were manifested, the Spaniards would either surrender the capital or +abandon it. + +The enterprise was hazardous, for since my former visit the enemy's +position had been much strengthened, no less than 300 pieces of +artillery being mounted on shore, whilst the _Esmeralda_ was crowded +with the best sailors and marines that could be procured, these sleeping +every night at quarters. She was, moreover, defended by a strong boom +with chain moorings, and by armed blockships; the whole being surrounded +by twenty-seven gun-boats; so that no ship could possibly get at her. + +For three days we occupied ourselves in preparations, still keeping +secret the purpose for which they were intended. On the evening of 5th +of November, this was communicated to the ships by the following +proclamation:-- + + "Marines and Seamen," + + "This night we are going to give the enemy a mortal + blow. Tomorrow you will present yourselves proudly before + Callao, and all your comrades will envy your good fortune. One + hour of courage and resolution is all that is required of you to + triumph. Remember, that you have conquered in Valdivia, and be + not afraid of those who have hitherto fled from you." + + "The value of all the vessels captured in Callao will be yours, + and the same reward in money will be distributed amongst you as + has been offered by the Spaniards in Lima to those who should + capture any of the Chilian squadron. The moment of glory is + approaching, and I hope that the Chilenos will fight as they have + been accustomed to do, and that the English will act as they have + ever done at home and abroad." + + "COCHRANE." + +On issuing this proclamation, it was stated that I should lead the +attack in person, volunteers being requested to come forward, on which +the whole of the marines and seamen on board the three ships offered to +accompany me. As this could not be permitted, a hundred and sixty seamen +and eighty marines were selected, and after dark were placed in fourteen +boats alongside the flag-ship, each man armed with cutlass and pistol, +being, for distinction's sake, dressed in white, with a blue band on +the left arm. The Spaniards I expected would be off their guard, as, by +way of _ruse_, the other ships had been sent out of the bay under the +charge of Captain Foster, as though in pursuit of some vessels in the +offing--so that the Spaniards would consider themselves safe from attack +for that night. + +At ten o'clock all was in readiness, the boats being formed in two +divisions, the first commanded by my flag-captain Crosbie, and the +second by Captain Guise,--my boat leading. The strictest silence, and +the exclusive use of cutlasses were enjoined; so that, as the oars were +muffled, and the night dark, the enemy had not the least suspicion of +the impending attack. + +It was just upon midnight when we neared the small opening left in the +boom, our plan being well-nigh frustrated by the vigilance of a +guard-boat, upon which my launch had luckily stumbled. The challenge was +given, upon which, in an under-tone, I threatened the occupants of the +boat with instant death if they made the least alarm. No reply was made +to the threat, and in a few minutes our gallant fellows were alongside +the frigate in line, boarding at several points simultaneously. + +The Spaniards were completely taken by surprise--the whole, with the +exception of the sentries, being asleep at their quarters--and great was +the havoc made amongst them by the Chileno cutlasses whilst they were +recovering themselves. Retreating to the forecastle, they there made a +gallant stand, and it was not until the third charge that the position +was carried. The fight was for a short time renewed on the +quarter-deck, where the Spanish marines fell to a man, the rest of the +enemy leaping overboard and into the hold to escape slaughter. + +On boarding the ship by the main chains, I was knocked back by the butt +end of the sentry's musket, and falling on a thole pin of the boat, it +entered my back near the spine, inflicting a severe injury, which caused +me many years of subsequent suffering. Immediately regaining my footing, +I reascended the side, and when on deck, was shot through the thigh, but +binding a handkerchief tightly round the wound, managed, though with +great difficulty, to direct the contest to its close. + +The whole affair, from beginning to end, occupied only a quarter of an +hour, our loss being eleven killed and thirty wounded, whilst that of +the Spaniards was a hundred and sixty, many of whom fell under the +cutlasses of the Chilenos before they could stand to their arms. Greater +bravery I never saw displayed than that of our gallant fellows. Before +boarding, the duties of all had been appointed, and a party was told off +to take possession of the tops. We had not been on deck a minute, when I +hailed the foretop, and was instantly answered by our own men, an +equally prompt answer being returned from the frigate's maintop. No +British man-of-war's crew could have excelled this minute attention to +orders. + +The uproar speedily alarmed the garrison, who, hastening to their guns, +opened fire on their own frigate, thus paying us the compliment of +having taken it; though, even in this case, their own men must still +have been on board, so that firing on them was a wanton proceeding, as +several Spaniards were killed or wounded by the shot of the fortress, +and amongst the wounded was Captain Coig, the commander of the +_Esmeralda_--who, after he was made prisoner, received a severe +contusion by a shot from his own party. + +The fire from the fortress was, however, neutralised by a successful +expedient. There were two foreign ships of war present during the +contest--the United States frigate _Macedonian_, and the British frigate +_Hyperion_; and these, as previously agreed on with the Spanish +authorities in case of a night attack--hoisted peculiar lights as +signals, to prevent being fired upon. This contingency being provided +for by us--as soon as the fortress commenced its fire on the +_Esmeralda_, we also ran up similar lights, so that the garrison became +puzzled which vessel to fire at; the intended mischief thus involving +the _Hyperion_ and _Macedonian_, which were several times struck, the +_Esmeralda_ being comparatively untouched. Upon this the neutral +frigates cut their cables and moved away; whilst Captain Guise, contrary +to my orders, cut the _Esmeralda_ cables also, so that there was nothing +to be done but to loose her top-sails and follow; the fortress then +ceasing its fire. + +My orders were not to cut the cables of the, _Esmeralda_; but after +taking her to capture the _Maypu_, a brig of war previously taken from +Chili--and then to attack and cut adrift every ship near, there being +plenty of time before us; no doubt existing but that when the +_Esmeralda_ was taken, the Spaniards would desert the other ships as +fast as their boats would permit them, so that the whole might either +have been captured or burned. To this end all my previous plans had been +arranged; but on being placed _hors de combat_ by my wounds, Captain +Guise, on whom the command of the prize devolved, chose to interpose his +own judgment, and content himself with the _Esmeralda_ alone, cutting +her cables without my orders; the reason assigned being, that the +English had broken into her spirit-room and were getting drunk, whilst +the Chilenos were disorganized by plundering. It was a great mistake, +for if we could capture the _Esmeralda_, with her picked and +well-appointed crew, there would have been little or no difficulty in +cutting the other ships adrift in succession. It would only have been +the rout of Valdivia over again, chasing the enemy, without loss, from +ship after ship, instead of from fort to fort. + +The following extract, from the order issued preparatory to the attack, +will clearly shew the plan frustrated by cutting the _Esmeralda_ +adrift:-- + + "On securing the frigate, the Chilian seamen and marines are + not to give the Chilian cheer, but to deceive the enemy, and give + time for completing the work: they are to cheer '_Viva el Rey_.'" + + "The two brigs of war are to be fired on by the musketry _from + the Esmeralda_, and are to be taken possession of by Lieutenants + Esmonde and Morgell, in the boats they command; which, being + done, they are to cut adrift, run out, and anchor in the offing as + quickly as possible. The boats of the _Independencia_ are to turn + adrift all the outward Spanish merchant ships; and the boats of the + _O'Higgins_ and _Lautaro_, under Lieutenants Bell and Robertson, are to + set fire to one or more of the headmost hulks; but these are not to be + cut adrift, so as to fall down upon the rest." + + (Signed) "COCHRANE." + +By the cutting of the _Esmeralda's_ cables, not one of these objects was +effected. The captured frigate was ready for sea, with three months' +provisions on board, and with stores sufficient for two years. She was, +no doubt, if opportunity offered, intended to convoy the treasure-ship, +which, by the precipitancy of Captain Guise, we had missed; indeed the +Spanish Admiral being on board at the time, with his flag flying, was a +pretty clear proof that she was on the point of departure; instead of +which, the Admiral, his officers, and 200 seamen were made prisoners, +the remainder of the crew, originally 370 in number, being killed, +wounded, or drowned. + +An incident occurred during the contest which, at this distance of time, +I shall not refrain from mentioning. His Britannic Majesty's ship +_Hyperion_ was so close to the _Esmeralda_, as to be a witness of the +whole proceeding. A midshipman was standing at the gangway looking on, +amongst others, when his truly English nature, unable to restrain itself +as our gallant fellows cleared the forecastle of the enemy, gave vent to +its expression by clapping his hands in approbation. It was afterwards +reported that he was immediately ordered below by his commander, Captain +Searle, who threatened to put him under arrest. Such was the feeling of +an English commander towards me. I should not have condescended to +notice this occurrence but for the bravado shown by the same officer on +a previous occasion, by casting loose his guns, with their tompions out, +when my flag-ship entered the roads; thereby either intimating that he +considered me a pirate, or that he would so treat me, if he had an +opportunity. + +When approaching the _Esmeralda_, the British frigate also hailed each +boat separately, with the evident intention of alarming the enemy; which +would no doubt have been the case, had not the Spaniards been thrown off +their guard by the before-mentioned ruse of sending the ships out of the +bay. + +Far different was the conduct of the commander of the United States +frigate _Macedonian_--whose sentinels did not hail the boats--the +officers in an under-tone wishing us success; and still more honourable +was the subsequent testimony of that talented officer, Captain Basil +Hall, who commanded His Britannic Majesty's ship _Conway_, then in the +Pacific. This testimony, though in some degree a recapitulation of the +events already related, but slightly inaccurate as regards the number of +men employed, I feel proud to adduce:-- + + "While the liberating army, under General San Martin, was + removing to Ancon, Lord Cochrane, with part of his squadron, + anchored in the outer roads of Callao. The inner harbour was + guarded by an extensive system of batteries, admirably constructed, + and bearing the general name of the 'Castles of Callao.' The + merchant ships, as well as the men of war, consisting of the + _Esmeralda_, a large 40-gun frigate, and two sloops of war, were + moored under the guns of the castle, within a semicircle of fourteen + gun-boats, and a boom made of spars chained together." + + "Lord Cochrane, having previously reconnoitred these formidable defences + in person, undertook, on the 5th of November, 1820, the desperate + enterprise of cutting out the Spanish frigate, although she was known to + be fully prepared for an attack. His Lordship proceeded in fourteen + boats, containing 240 men--all volunteers from the different ships of + the squadron--in two divisions, one under the orders of Captain Crosby, + and the other under Captain Guise, both officers commanding the Chileno + squadron." + + "At midnight, the boats having forced their way across the boom, Lord + Cochrane, who was leading, rowed alongside the first gun-boat, and + taking the officer by surprise, proposed to him, with a pistol at his + head, the alternative of silence or death. No reply being made, the + boats pushed on unobserved, and Lord Cochrane, mounting the + _Esmeralda's_ side, was the first to give the alarm. The sentinel on the + gangway levelled his piece and fired, but was instantly cut down by the + coxwain, and his Lordship, though wounded in the thigh, at the same + moment stepped on the deck, the frigate being boarded with no less + gallantry on the opposite side by Captain Guise, who met Lord Cochrane + midway on the quarter-deck, as also Captain Crosby, and the afterpart of + the ship was soon carried, sword in hand. The Spaniards rallied on the + forecastle, where they made a desperate resistance, till overpowered by + a fresh party of seamen and marines, headed by Lord Cochrane. A gallant + stand was again made on the main deck, but before one o'clock the ship + was captured, her cables cut, and she was steered triumphantly out of + the harbour." + + "This loss was a death-blow to the Spanish naval force in that quarter + of the world; for, although there were still two Spanish frigates and + some smaller vessels in the Pacific, they never afterwards ventured to + shew themselves, but left Lord Cochrane undisputed master of the coast." + +On the morning of the 6th a horrible massacre was committed on shore. +The market-boat of the United States frigate was, as usual, sent for +provisions, when the mob took it into their heads that the _Esmeralda_ +could not have been cut out without the assistance of the _Macedonian_, +and, falling upon the boat's crew, murdered the whole of them. + +The wounded amongst the _Esmeralda's_ crew were sent on shore under a +flag of truce, a letter from me to the Viceroy proposing an exchange of +prisoners being at the same time transmitted. The proposal was this time +civilly acceded to, and the whole were sent on shore; the Chilian +prisoners, who had long languished in the dungeons of the fortress, +being returned, and ordered to join the army of General San Martin. + +On transmitting the intelligence of our success to General San Martin, I +received from him the following acknowledgment of the achievement:-- + + + _10th November, 1820._ + "My Lord," + + + "The importance of the service you have rendered to the + country by the capture of the frigate _Esmeralda_, and the brilliant + manner in which you conducted the gallant officers and seamen + under your orders to accomplish that noble enterprise, on the night + of the memorable 5th of November, have augmented the gratitude + due to your former services by the Government, as well as that of + all interested in the public cause, and in your fame." + + "All those who participated in the risks and glory of the deed, + also deserve well of their countrymen, and I have the satisfaction to + be the medium of transmitting the sentiments of admiration which + such transcendent success has excited in the chiefs of the army + under my command. Permit me to express them to you, in order + that they may be communicated to the meritorious officers, seamen, + and marines of the squadron, to whom will be religiously fulfilled + _the promises you made_." + + "It is grievous that, connected with the memory of so glorious + a deed, regret for those who shed their blood in its achievement + should enter; but let us hope that such thoughts will be dissipated, + by your adding further deeds of glory to the country, and to your + name." + + "God preserve you many years." + + "JOSE DE SAN MARTIN." + + +San Martin's expression of religiously fulfilling the "promises I +made," is in allusion to the promise, signed by himself, which had been +exacted previous to the departure of the squadron from Valparaiso, that +the men should have a year's pay given to them. With the preceding +letter General San Martin voluntarily sent another promise to the +captors, of 50,000 dollars, to be paid on gaining possession of Lima. +Neither the one promise nor the other were ever fulfilled, nor did they +ever obtain any prize-money. + +To the Administration in Chili General San Martin wrote as follows:-- + + + "Head Quarters, Supe, Dec. 1, 1820. + Senor Minister," + + + "I have the honour of forwarding to you the despatches + of the Right Hon. Lord Cochrane, Vice-Admiral of the squadron, + relative to the heroic capture of the frigate _Esmeralda_, by boarding + her under the batteries of Callao." + + "It is impossible for me to eulogise in proper language the daring + enterprise of the 5th of November, by which Lord Cochrane + has decided the superiority of our naval forces--augmented the + splendour and power of Chili--and secured the success of this + campaign." + + "I doubt not that His Excellency the Supreme Director will + render the justice due to the worthy chief, his officers, and other + individuals who have had a share in that successful action." + + "I beg you will honour me by congratulating His Excellency on + this important success, and principally on account of the influence + it will have on the great object which occupies his attention." + + "JOSE DE SAN MARTIN." + + "To Don Jose Ignacio Zenteno, + Minister of Marine." + +Soon after my departure for Peru, Lady Cochrane undertook a journey +across the _Cordillera_, to Mendoza, the passes being, at that season, +often blocked up with snow. Having been entrusted with some despatches +of importance, she pushed on rapidly, and on the 12th of October arrived +at the celebrated _Ponte del Inca_, 15,000 feet above the level of the +sea. Here the snow had increased to such an extent as to render farther +progress impossible, and her ladyship was obliged to remain at a +_Casucha_, or strong house, built above the snow for the safety of +travellers; the intense cold arising from the rarity of the atmosphere, +and the absence of all comfort--there being no better couch than a dried +bullock's hide--producing a degree of suffering which few ladies would +be willing to encounter. + +Whilst proceeding on her mule up a precipitous path in the vicinity, a +Royalist, who had intruded himself on the party, rode up in an opposite +direction and disputed the path with her, at a place where the slightest +false step would have precipitated her into the abyss below. One of her +attendants, a tried and devoted soldier, named Pedro Flores, seeing the +movement, and guessing the man's intention, galloped up to him at a +critical moment, striking him a violent blow across the face, and thus +arresting his murderous design. The ruffian finding himself vigorously +attacked, made off, without resenting the blow, and so, no doubt, +another premeditated attempt on Lady Cochrane's life was averted. + + + + +CHAPTER V. + +SAN MARTIN'S VIOLATION OF TRUTH--REMOVAL OF BLOCKADE--SPANISH +DEPRESSION--TROOPS DYING OF FEVER--SAN MARTIN'S DESIGNS ON +GUAYAQUIL--MUTINOUS CONDUCT OF OFFICERS--REFUSAL TO OBEY +ORDERS--DEPOSITION OF VICEROY--SAN MARTIN GIVES ME TROOPS--JEALOUSY OF +SAN MARTIN--ATTACK ON ARICA--CAPTURE OF TACNA--CAPTURE OF +MOQUEGA--REFUSAL OF MORE MEN--AN ARMISTICE RATIFIED--DISTRESS OF +LIMA--DISSATISFACTION OF THE ARMY--LADY COCHRANE--GOES INTO THE +INTERIOR--DANGEROUS POSITION--LADY COCHRANE IN ACTION--DEVOTION OF +SEAMEN. + + +On the 8th of November I went to Ancon with our prize, this being hailed +with great enthusiasm by the army, which--now that the Spanish naval +force had received, what even the Spaniards themselves considered its +death blow--made certain that it would be at once led against Lima, +before the authorities recovered from their consternation. To their +mortification--no less than my own--General San Martin, in defiance of +all argument to the contrary, ordered the troops on board the +transports, having decided on _retreating to Huacho!_ whither the +_O'Higgins_ and _Esmeralda_, abandoning the blockade, had to convoy +them. In place of prompt action--or rather demonstration, for the +occupation of the city would have amounted to little more--he issued a +proclamation, promising, as before, the most perfect freedom to the +Peruvian people if they would join him:-- + + "Spaniards, your destiny is in your own hands. I come not to declare + war against the fortunes and persons of individuals. The enemy of the + liberty and independence of America alone is the object of the vengeance + of the arms of the PATRIA. I promise you in the most positive manner, + that your property and persons shall be inviolable, and that you shall + be treated as respectable citizens, if you co-operate in the great + cause," &c. &c. + +By the 12th the army was again disembarked, amidst evident +manifestations of dissatisfaction on the part of the officers, who were +naturally jealous of the achievements of the squadron, from being +themselves restrained from enterprise of any kind. To allay this feeling +General San Martin had recourse to an almost incredible violation of +truth, intended to impress upon the Chilian people, that the army, and +not the squadron, had captured the _Esmeralda!_--indeed stating as much +in words, and declaring that the whole affair was the result of his own +plans, to which I had agreed! though the truth is, that doubting his +confidants, I had concealed from him my intentions of making the attack. +The following is an extract from the bulletin issued to the army:-- + + "Before the General-in-Chief left the Vice-Admiral of the + Squadron, _they agreed on the execution of a memorable project, + sufficient to astound intrepidity itself!_ and to make the history of + the liberating expedition of Peru eternal!" + + "Those valiant soldiers who for a length of time have suffered + with the most heroic constancy the severest oppression, and the + most inhuman treatment in the dungeons of Casas-matas, have just + arrived at our head-quarters. Flattering promises of liberty, and + the threats of death, were not sufficient to destroy their loyalty to + their country; they have waited with firmness the day on which + their companions in arms should rescue them from their misery, and + revenge the insults which, humanity has received in their persons. + This glory was reserved _to the liberating army, whose efforts have + snatched from the hands of tyranny these respectable victims._ Let + this be published for the satisfaction of these individuals, _and that + of the army, to whose arms they owe their liberty_." + +It thus went forth to the people of Chili, that the army captured the +frigate, and subsequently released the prisoners, though not a man in +the whole force had the most distant idea that an attack was even +contemplated, much less could it have co-operated, seeing that it was +far away in cantonments! This bulletin excited the astonishment of the +troops; but as it contributed to their _amour propre_, by representing +to the Chilian people that the achievement which had been effected was +due to them, they accepted it; whilst I thought it beneath me to refute +a falsehood palpable to the whole expedition. It had, however, as +General San Martin no doubt calculated, the effect of allaying, for the +moment, a dissatisfaction which foreboded serious consequences. + +On the 15th we again sailed from Huacho, to renew the blockade at +Callao, beyond which nothing could be done; though even this was of +importance, as cutting off supplies from the capital, the inhabitants of +which, in consequence of the privations they were subjected to, caused +great uneasiness to the Viceregal Government. + +Several attempts were now made to entice the remaining Spanish naval +force from their shelter under the batteries, by placing the _Esmeralda_ +apparently within reach, and the flag-ship herself in situations of some +danger. One day I carried her through an intricate strait called the +Boqueron, in which nothing beyond a fifty-ton schooner was ever seen. +The Spaniards, expecting every moment to see the ship strike, manned +their gun-boats, ready to attack as soon as she was aground, of which +there was little danger, for we had found, and buoyed off with small +bits of wood invisible to the enemy, a channel through which a vessel +could pass without much difficulty. + +On the 2nd of December the _Esmeralda_, being in a more than usually +tempting position, the Spanish gun-boats ventured out in the hope of +recapturing her, and for an hour maintained a smart fire; but on seeing +the _O'Higgins_ manoeuvring to cut them off, they precipitately +retreated. + +The preceeding successes caused great depression amongst the Spanish +troops, and on the following day the battalion of Numantia, numbering +650 disciplined men, deserted in a body, and joined the Chilian forces +at Chancay. On the 8th, forty Spanish officers followed their example; +and every day afterwards, officers, privates, and civilians of +respectability, joined the patriot army, which thus became considerably +reinforced; the defection of so large a portion of his troops being a +severe loss to the Viceroy. + +On the 6th, Colonel Arenales, who, after his previous success, had +marched into the interior, defeated a division of the royalist army at +Pasco. On his proceeding to Huamanga, the authorities fled, and the +inhabitants declared themselves independent. Tarma was next abandoned, +and followed the same example, as did Huanuco, Cuenca, and Loxa; +whilst, on the news of the capture of the _Esmeralda_ arriving at +Truxillo, that important province also revolted, under the direction of +the Spanish governor, the Marquis of Torre Tagle. + +Notwithstanding this succession of favourable events, General San Martin +still declined to march on Lima, remaining inactive at Haura, though the +unhealthy situation of the place was such, that nearly one-third of his +troops died of intermittent fever, during the many months they remained +there. In place of securing the capital, where the army would have now +been welcomed, he proposed to send half the army to Guayaquil, in order +to annex that province, this being the first manifestation on the part +of General San Martin to found a dominion of his own--for to nothing +less did he afterwards aspire, though the declared object of the +expedition was to enable the South Pacific provinces to emancipate +themselves from Spain, leaving them free to choose their own +governments, as had been repeatedly and solemnly declared, both by the +Chilian Government and himself. + +Finding that I would not consent to avert the naval force from the +purposes to which it was destined, the project was abandoned; but the +troops which had advanced to Chancay were ordered to fall back on Haura, +this step being actually a further retreat as regarded the position of +the Spanish forces, which thus managed to check further desertion by +apprehending and shooting all who attempted it. + +Still General San Martin was determined, if possible, to accomplish his +views on Guayaquil. Two deputies, Tomas Guido and Colonel Luzuriago, +were despatched with complimentary messages to Torre Tagle and others, +warning them against the designs of Bolivar, whose success in the north +led San Martin to fear that he might have designs on Peru. The deputies +were strictly enjoined to represent that if such were Bolivar's +intention, Guayaquil would only be regarded as a conquered province; +whilst, if the people of that place would adhere to him, he would, on +the fall of Lima, make it the _principal port of a great empire_, and +that the establishment of the docks and arsenals which _his navy_ would +require, would enrich the city beyond measure. They were at the same +time exhorted to form a militia, in order to keep out Bolivar. + +By way of conciliating me, General San Martin proposed in a flattering +way to call the captured frigate the "_Cochrane_," as two vessels before +had been named the "_San Martin_," and "_O'Higgins_;" but to this I +demurred, as acquiescence in such a proceeding might in the estimation +of others have identified me with any course the general might be +inclined to pursue, and I had already formed my conjectures as to what +were evidently his future purposes. Finding me firm in declining the +proffered honour, he told me to give her what name I thought proper; but +this was also refused, when he said, "Let her be called the +'_Valdivia_,' in memory of your conquest of that place;" her name was +accordingly changed from the _Esmeralda_ to the _Valdivia_. + +The command of the frigate had been given to Captain Guise; and after +her change of name, his officers wrote to him a letter deprecating the +name, and alleging, that as they had nothing to do with the conquest of +Valdivia, it ought to be withdrawn, and one more consonant with their +feelings substituted. This letter was followed by marked personal +disrespect towards myself, from the officers who had signed it, who made +it no secret that the name of Guise was the one sought to be +substituted. + +As the conversations held by these officers with the rest of the +squadron were of such a derogatory nature as regarded my character and +authority, as might lead to serious disorganization, I brought the whole +of the officers who had signed the letter to a court-martial, two being +dismissed the service, the remainder being dismissed the ship, with a +recommendation to General San Martin for other appointments. + +During the arrest of these officers, I had determined upon an attack +upon the fortifications of Callao, intending to carry them by a coup de +main, similar to that which had succeeded at Valdivia, and having, on +the 18th, taken soundings in the _Potrillo_, was convinced of the +feasibility of the plan. + +On the 20th, this intention was notified by an order, stating that on +the following day I should make the attack with the boats of the +squadron and the _San_ _Martin_, the crew of which received the order +with loud cheers, volunteers for the boats eagerly pressing forward from +all quarters. + +In place of preparing to second the operations, Captain Guise sent me a +note refusing to serve with any other but the officers under +arrest--stating that unless they were restored, he must resign his +command. My reply was that I would neither restore them nor accept his +resignation, without some better reason for it than the one alleged. +Captain Guise answered, that my refusal to restore his officers was a +sufficient reason for his resignation, whereupon I ordered him to weigh +anchor on a service of importance; the order being disobeyed on the +ground that he could no longer act, having given over the command of the +ship to Lieutenant Shepherd. Feeling that something like a mutiny was +being excited, and knowing that Guise and his colleague, Spry, were at +the bottom of the matter, I ordered the latter to proceed with the +_Galvarino_ to Chorillos, when he also requested leave to resign, as +"his friend Captain Guise had been compelled so to do, and he had +entered the Chilian navy conditionally to serve only with Captain Guise, +under whose patronage he had left England." Such was the state of mutiny +on board the _Galvarino_, that I deputed my flag-captain, Crosbie, to +restore order, when Spry affected to consider himself superseded, and +claimed exemption from martial law. I therefore tried him by +court-martial, and dismissed him from the ship. + +The two officers now made their way to head-quarters, where General San +Martin immediately made Spry his naval _aide-de-camp_, thus promoting +him in the most public manner for disobedience to orders, and in +defiance of the sentence of the court-martial; this being pretty +conclusive proof that they had been acting under the instructions of +General San Martin himself, for what purpose will appear in the course +of the narrative. The course now pursued by General San Martin +sufficiently showed that the disturbance previously made at Valparaiso +emanated also from himself, and that in both cases the mutinous officers +felt quite secure in his protection; though I will do both the credit of +supposing them ignorant at the time of the treacherous purposes of which +they were afterwards the instruments. + +Knowing that I should take their punishment into my own hands if they +returned to the squadron, General San Martin kept both about his own +person at head-quarters, where they remained. + +So dissatisfied were the Spanish troops at Lima with the government of +their Viceroy, Pezuela, to whose want of military capacity they absurdly +attributed our successes, that they forcibly deposed him, after +compelling him to appoint General Lacerna as his successor. The deposed +Viceroy wishing to send his lady and family to Europe, applied to +General San Martin for a passport, to avoid capture by the Chilian +squadron. This was refused; but Lady Cochrane having arrived at Callao +in the British frigate _Andromache_, to take leave of me previous to +her departure for England, the Viceroy's lady, Donna Angela, begged of +her Ladyship to use her influence with the General to obtain leave for +her departure for Europe. Lady Cochrane immediately proceeded to Haura, +and effected the object; after which she remained for a month at +head-quarters, residing at the house of a Peruvian lady, Donna Josefa +Monteblanco. + +A passage was also, by Lady Cochrane's influence, procured for the lady +in the _Andromache_, on board which ship Captain Sherriff politely +invited me to meet her. At this interview the ex-Vicequeen expressed her +surprise at finding me "a gentleman and _rational being_ and not the +_ferocious brute_ she had been taught to consider me!" A declaration, +which, from the unsophisticated manner in which it was made, caused no +small merriment in the party assembled. + +As I was determined not to be idle, General San Martin was with some +difficulty prevailed upon to give me a division of 600 troops, under the +command of Lieutenant-Colonel Miller. On the 13th of March we sailed for +Pisco, of which, on its previous abandonment by the army, after a +useless sojourn of fifty days, the enemy had again taken possession. On +the 20th it was retaken, when it was found that the Spaniards had +severely punished the alleged defection of the inhabitants for +contributing to the supplies of the patriot force during its stay. Not +imagining that we should return, the Spanish proprietors of estates had +brought back their cattle, of which we managed to seize some 500 head, +besides 300 horses for the use of the Chilian forces, the squadron thus +supplying their wants instead of remaining in total inaction. + +Previous to going to Pisco, I had again urged on General San Martin to +advance on Lima, so convinced was I of the goodwill of the inhabitants. +On his refusal, I begged him to give me 2,000 men, with whom I offered +to take the capital, but this was also declined. I then offered to +undertake the capture of Lima with 1,000 men, but even this was refused, +and the detachment under Colonel Miller was only given to me to get rid +of my importunity. Of this detachment I however determined to make the +most before our return. + +The only way of accounting for this indisposition on the part of General +San Martin to place an adequate military force at my disposal, was the +reason current amongst the officers of the army, who were all eager to +place themselves under my orders; viz. the violent jealousy which caused +him to look upon me as a rival, though without reason, as I should +certainly not have attempted to interfere with him in the government of +Peru when its reduction was complete. Suspicious himself he could not +trust me, employing every effort to lessen my reputation amongst his +officers, and endeavouring to the utmost to prevent the squadron from +gathering fresh laurels; even sacrificing his own reputation to this +insane jealousy, by preventing anything being done in which I could take +part. + +On the 18th I shifted my flag into the _San Martin_, and leaving the +_O'Higgins_ and _Valdivia_ at Pisco to protect the troops, sailed for +Callao, where we arrived on the 2nd of April. On the 6th, we again +attacked the enemy's shipping under the batteries, and did them +considerable damage, but made no further attempt to gain possession of +them, as I had other aims in view. After this demonstration, the object +of which was to deter them from quitting their shelter, we returned to +Pisco. + +General San Martin having now given me discretionary power to do what I +pleased with the few troops placed at my disposal, I determined on +attacking Arica, the southernmost port of Peru. Reimbarking the troops, +and abandoning Pisco, we sailed on the 21st, and on the 1st of May +arrived off Arica, to the Governor of which I sent a summons to +surrender, promising to respect persons and personal property. As this +was not complied with, an immediate bombardment took place, but without +any great effect, as, from the difficulties of the port, it was +impracticable to get sufficiently near to the fortifications. + +After a careful survey, the _San Martin_ was on the 6th, hauled nearer +in shore, and some shells were thrown over the town by way of +intimidation. As this had not the desired effect, a portion of the +troops was landed at Sama, to the northward of the town, being followed +by Colonel Miller with the remainder, and Captain Wilkinson with the +marines of the _San Martin_; when the enemy fled, and the patriot flag +was hoisted on the batteries. We took here a considerable quantity of +stores, and four Spanish brigs, besides the guns of the fort and other +detached artillery. A quantity of European goods, belonging to the +Spaniards at Lima, was also seized and put on board the _San Martin_. + +On the 14th Colonel Miller, with the troops and marines, advanced to +Tacna, and by my directions took possession of the town, which was +effected without opposition, two companies of infantry deserting the +royalist cause and joining his force. These I ordered to form the +nucleus of a new regiment, to be called the "Tacna Independents." + +Learning that the Spanish General Ramirez had ordered three detachments +from Arequipa, Puno, and La Paz, to form a junction at Tacna, to execute +the usual Spanish order--to "drive the insurgents into the sea"--Miller +determined on attacking them separately. The Arequipa detachment, under +Colonel Hera, was fallen in with at Maribe, and immediately routed, the +result being that nearly the whole were killed or taken prisoners, +together with four hundred mules and their baggage. In this affair we +lost a valued officer, Mr. Welsh, an assistant surgeon, who had +volunteered to accompany the detachment. This gentleman was sincerely +mourned by all, and his early death was a great loss to the patriot +service. + +This action was fought none too soon, for before it was over the other +detachments from Puno and La Plaz appeared in sight, so that the +patriots had to face a fresh enemy. With his usual promptness Miller +despatched Captain Hind, with a rocket party, to oppose their passage of +a river; when, finding that the Arequipa detachment had been cut up, +the royalists remounted their mules and decamped, in the direction of +Moquega. + +On the 22nd Miller pursued the runaway royalists, and, on the 24th, +entered Moquega, by a forced march of nearly a hundred miles, where he +found the enemy, deserted by their colonel. Notwithstanding the fatigue +of the Chilenos, an instant attack was made, when the whole, with the +exception of about twenty killed, were made prisoners. The inhabitants +at once gave in their adherence to the cause of independence, their +Governor, Colonel Portocarrera, being the first to set the example. + +On the 25th Colonel Miller learned that a Spanish force was passing +Torata, about fifteen miles distant, when, coming up with them on the +following day, they were all taken prisoners or dispersed, as were also +those who had fled from Arica, numbering four hundred men; so that in +less than a fortnight after landing at Arica, the patriot forces had +killed and made prisoners upwards of one thousand of the royalist army, +by a series of difficult forced marches, and amidst hunger and +privations of every kind, which were cheerfully borne by the Chilenos, +who were no less inspired by a love of country than with attachment to +their commander. The result was the complete submission of the Spaniards +from the sea to the Cordilleras, Arica forming the key to the whole +country. + +Having ascertained that Colonel Miller was at Moquega, I took the _San +Martin_ to Ilo, from which anchorage the patriot force was supplied +with everything requisite. The sick were taken on board the brigs +captured at Arica, as were also the Spanish colonels, Sierra and Suares, +who had been taken prisoners, but whom I liberated on their _parole_, +not to serve again until regularly exchanged. + +It has been said that, before sailing to Arica, I had procured from +General San Martin discretionary powers to do as I pleased with the +troops placed at my disposal. My object was believed to be to create a +diversion in favour of the general, but this was the least part of my +intention; for, as the army had remained inactive from its first landing +in Peru--with the exception of the detachment under Colonel +Arenales,--no diversion would have been of much use. I wrote to the +Government at Santiago for 1,000 men, or, if these could not be sent, +for 500, and also for 1,000 stand of arms, of which there was abundance +in the arsenal to equip recruits, who would have been forthcoming; and +with these we could, with the greatest ease, have secured the whole of +the southern provinces of Peru, the people being warmly disposed in our +favour. I therefore told the Government that with such a force, we could +hold the whole of Lower Peru, and gain eventual possession of Upper +Peru. My request was refused, on the false ground that the Government +had no means to equip such an expedition, and thus the good will +manifested by the natives was thrown away. + +In spite of this neglect, I determined to persevere, relying upon +sacrifices made by the Peruvians themselves in our favour. General +Ramirez was actively engaged in drawing men from distant garrisons to +act against our small force, which was suffering severely from ague. +Nevertheless, every effort was made again to advance into the +interior--a number of recruits from the adjacent provinces having been +enrolled--and everything promised a general revolt in favour of +independence, when the Governor of Arequipa communicated to us +intelligence that an armistice had been agreed upon for twenty days, +between General San Martin and the Viceroy Lacerna. This happening just +at the moment when hostilities could have been carried on with the +greatest effect, and we were preparing to attack Arequipa itself--was +annoying in the extreme; the more so, as the application had come from +the Viceroy, who, being the first to receive intelligence of our +success, had, no doubt, deceived General San Martin into the +arrangement, in order to check our operations in the South. + +This armistice was ratified on the 23rd of May, and sent by express to +the Governor of Arequipa, the unusual haste proving the object of the +Viceroy in persuading General San Martin to its ratification. To have +regarded the armistice as a preliminary to the independence of Peru was +a great mistake on the part of General San Martin, as the Viceroy +Lacerna had no more power to acknowledge the absolute independence of +the Colonists, than had his predecessor; and therefore the object of the +armistice could have been none other than to put a stop to our progress, +thereby giving the Spanish generals time to collect their scattered +forces, without any corresponding advantage to the patriot cause. + +Being thus reluctantly reduced to inaction, I dropped down to Mollendo, +where we found a neutral vessel taking in corn for supplying the city of +Lima, which city, from the vigilance of the squadron, was reduced to +great straits, as shewn in an address from the _Cabildo_ to the +Viceroy:--"The richest and most opulent of our provinces has succumbed +to the unopposable force of the enemy, and the remaining provinces are +threatened with the same fate; whilst this suffering capital of Lima is +undergoing the horrible effects of a rigorous blockade, hunger, +robberies, and death. Our soldiers pay no respect to the last remains of +our property, even our oxen, indispensable for the cultivation of the +land, being slain. If this plague continues, what will be our lot--our +miserable condition?" From this extract it is plain that Lima was on the +point of being starved out by the squadron, whilst the inhabitants +foresaw that, although the army of General San Martin was inactive, our +little band in the south would speedily overrun the provinces, which +were willing to second our efforts in favour of independence. + +To return to the shipment of wheat for the relief of Lima. On +ascertaining the fact, I wrote to the Governor of Arequipa, expressing +my surprise that neutrals should be allowed to embark provisions during +an armistice; the reply being that the most positive orders should be +given to put a stop to it, upon which I retired from Mollendo, but +leaving an officer to keep watch, and finding that the embarkation was +persisted in, I returned and shipped all the wheat found on shore. The +consequence of this was that Colonel La Hera, with 1,000 royalists, took +possession of Moquega, on pretence that I had broken the armistice. + +My private advices from head quarters informed me that the +dissatisfaction of the Chilian army was daily increasing, on account of +their continued inaction, and from jealousy at our success; knowing +also, that the capital of Peru was, from the straits to which it was +reduced, as well as from inclination, eager to receive them. General San +Martin nevertheless declined to take advantage of the circumstances in +his favour, till dissension began to assume the character of +insubordination. A daily toast at the tables of the officers was, to +those who fight for the liberties of Peru, not those who write. "_A los +que pelean por la libertad del Peru, no los que escriven_." General San +Martin, aware of the state of feeling in the army, went on board the +schooner _Montezuma_, for the re-establishment of his health. + +I was further informed that the Viceroy was negociating with General San +Martin for the prolongation of the armistice to _sixteen months_, in +order to give time for communication with the Court of Madrid, to +ascertain whether the parent state would consent to the independence of +Peru! At the same time official information was forwarded to me that a +further prolongation of twelve days had been conceded. + +Feeling certain that there was something wrong at head-quarters, I +determined to proceed to Callao for the purpose of learning the true +state of affairs, leaving Colonel Miller to return to Arica, and in case +of emergency, victualling and equipping the prizes, so as to be in +readiness, if necessary, for the reception of his troops. + +During my absence Lady Cochrane sailed for England, partly for the sake +of her health, but more for the purpose of obtaining justice for me, for +in addition to the persecution which I had undergone, a "Foreign +Enlistment Bill" had been passed, the enactments of which were +especially aimed at my having engaged in a service which had for its +object the expulsion of Spain, then in alliance with England, from her +Colonies in the Pacific. + +As an incident relating to her Ladyship has been mentioned in the +"Memoirs of General Miller," I may be pardoned for giving it as narrated +in that work. + + "On the 25th, six hundred infantry and sixty Cavalry, all picked + men, were placed under the command of Lieutenant-Colonel Miller, + who received directions to embark on a secret service under the + orders of Lord Cochrane, and proceeded to Huacho. On the day + after his arrival there, and whilst he was inspecting the detachments + in the Plaza, Lady Cochrane galloped on to the parade to speak to + him. The sudden appearance of youth and beauty on a fiery + horse, managed with skill and elegance, absolutely electrified + the men, who had never before seen an English lady. '_Que + hermosa! Que graciosa! Que linda! Que airosa! Es un angel del + cielo_!' were exclamations which escaped from one end of the line + to the other. Colonel Miller, not displeased at this involuntary + homage to the beauty of his countrywoman, said to the men, 'This + is our _generala_;' on which her Ladyship, turning to the line, + bowed to the troops, who no longer confining their expressions of + admiration to suppressed interjections, loud _vivas_ burst from officers + and men, to which Lady Cochrane, smiling her acknowledgments, cantered + off the ground like a fairy." + +In the month of February, during my absence, Lady Cochrane, tired of the +crowded villages occupied by the liberating army, undertook a journey +into the interior, in the hope that change of air might prove +advantageous to our infant child, which was in a precarious state of +health. She performed the journey on horseback, under the intense heat +of a vertical sun, across a desert, impeded by the precipitous beds of +torrents which intersect the country in every direction. On her arrival +at Quilca, she was most hospitably received by the Marchioness de la +Pracer, who placed her palace and every luxury at Lady Cochrane's +disposal. + +In the midst of the festivities which followed, her child was taken +dangerously ill, whilst no medical assistance of any kind was at hand. +On this she determined to return to the coast, and seek the aid of an +English or Spanish physician, but as the Royalist army was advancing +towards the direction necessary to be taken, this was judged +impracticable till they had passed. + +Whilst her Ladyship was in this state of suspense, information was +received that the Royalists, having gained intelligence that she was at +Quilca, had determined to seize her and her infant that very evening, +and to detain them as hostages. This intelligence arrived just as a +large party was assembled in the ball-room, when, with a decision which +is one of her chief characteristics, Lady Cochrane ordered a +_palanquin_--presented to her by the Marquis of Torre Tagle--to be got +ready instantly, and placing the child and its nurse in it, she +despatched them under the protection of a guard. Leaving the ball-room +secretly, she changed her dress, immediately following on horseback with +relays of her best horses. + +Travelling all night and the following day without intermission, the +party came to one of those swollen torrents which can only be crossed by +a frail bridge made of cane-rope, a proceeding of extreme danger to +those who are not well accustomed to the motion produced by its +elasticity. Whilst the party was debating as to how to get the palanquin +over, the sound of a Royalist bugle was heard close at hand. Lady +Cochrane sprang to the palanquin, and taking out her suffering infant, +rushed on to the bridge, but when near the centre, the vibration became +so great that she was compelled to lie down, pressing the child to her +bosom--being thus suspended over the foaming torrent beneath, whilst in +its state of vibration no one could venture on the bridge. In this +perilous situation, Pedro, the faithful soldier of whom mention has been +previously made, seeing the imminent danger of her Ladyship, begged of +her to lie still, and as the vibration ceased, crept on his hands and +knees towards her Ladyship, taking from her the child, and imploring her +to remain motionless, when he would bring her over in the same way; but +no sooner had he taken the child, than she followed, and happily +succeeded in crossing, when the ropes being cut, the torrent was +interposed between her and her pursuers. + +All travellers agree in describing these torrent bridges as most +perilous. They are constructed of six elastic cane or hide ropes, four +of which, with some sticks laid across, form the floor, and two the +parapet. Only one person can pass at a time, and as the weight of the +passenger causes the bridge to belly downwards, he remains suspended as +it were in an elastic bag, from which it requires considerable skill to +extricate himself with safety. Mules and horses cannot go over at all, +but are hauled through the torrent with ropes. + +Having reached the coast in safety, Lady Cochrane came down to me at +Callao. Whilst she was on board, I received private information that a +ship of war laden with treasure was about to make her escape in the +night. There was no time to be lost, as the enemy's vessel was such an +excellent sailer that, if once under weigh, beyond the reach of shot, +there was no chance of capturing her. I therefore determined to attack +her, so that Lady Cochrane had only escaped one peril ashore to be +exposed to another afloat. Having beat to quarters, we opened fire upon +the treasure-ship and other hostile vessels in the anchorage, the +batteries and gun-boats returning our fire, Lady Cochrane remaining on +deck during the conflict. Seeing a gunner hesitate to fire his gun, +close to which she was standing, and imagining that his hesitation from +her proximity might, if observed, expose him to punishment, she seized +the man's arm, and directing the match fired the gun. The effort was, +however, too much for her, as she immediately fainted, and was carried +below. + +The treasure-vessel having been crippled, and the gun-boats beaten off, +we left off firing and returned to our former anchorage, Lady Cochrane +again coming on deck. As soon as the sails were furled, the men in the +tops, and the whole crew on deck, no doubt by preconcerted arrangement, +spontaneously burst forth with the inspiring strains of their national +anthem, some poet amongst them having extemporized an alteration of the +words into a prayer for the blessing of Divine providence on me and my +devoted wife; the effect of this unexpected mark of attachment from five +hundred manly voices being so overwhelming as to affect her Ladyship +more than had the din of cannon. + + + + +CHAPTER VI. + +RETURN TO CALLAO--LIMA ABANDONED--HESITATION OF GEN. SAN MARTIN TO +OCCUPY THE CITY--LOSS OF THE SAN MARTIN--EXCESSES OF THE +SPANIARDS--PROCLAMATION OF INDEPENDENCE--SAN MARTIN ASSUMES AUTOCRATIC +POWER UNDER THE TITLE OF PROTECTOR--MY REMONSTRANCE--HIS REPLY--MUTINOUS +STATE OF THE SQUADRON FROM NEGLECT. + + +We arrived at Callao on the 2nd of July, when learning that Lima was no +longer tenable from want of provisions, and that an intention existed on +the part of the Viceroy to abandon it, I forebore to make any hostile +demonstration which might interfere with such decision, and withdrew to +a distance from the port, awaiting the result, which could not be far +distant, as the people had become clamorous, and all hope of assistance +from Spain was abandoned. + +Having, however, learned, on the 5th of July, that an attempt was being +made by the Viceroy to obtain a still further prolongation of the +armistice, I again entered the bay with the _San Martin_--my former +flag-ship, the _O'Higgins_, being absent on the coast. + +On the 6th the Viceroy abandoned the city, retaining, however, the +fortresses at Callao, the garrison of which was reinforced from the +troops which had evacuated Lima; a large quantity of warlike stores +being also deposited in the forts, thus securing greater efficiency +than before. + +To the astonishment of the Peruvians and Chilenos, no movement was made +by the liberating army to take possession of the Capital; and as the +Spanish troops were withdrawn, whilst no government existed, serious +disorders were anticipated, so that the _Cabildo_ applied to Capt. Basil +Hall, then in command of the British ship of war _Conway_, for his +assistance to maintain tranquillity and protect public and private +property. Captain Hall immediately despatched a party of marines, who +contributed to maintain order. + +General San Martin having been apprised by the Viceroy of his intention +to abandon the capital, had entered the harbour in the schooner +_Sacramento_, but nevertheless gave no orders for its occupation. On the +7th a detachment of cavalry, _without orders_, entered Lima, and those +on the 8th were followed by another detachment of infantry. + +On working up to the port on the 8th, I was surprised to find General +San Martin still afloat in his schooner, though the liberating army was +now entering the city in a body, and the occupation was complete; +General San Martin remained on board till the evening of the 10th, when +he privately landed. + +As the forts at Callao were still in the possession of the enemy, I made +preparations to attack them, and to destroy the shipping still sheltered +under them. Aware of my intentions, the garrison, on the 11th, sank the +_San Sebastian_, the only frigate left in the harbour, in order to +prevent her falling into our hands On the following day, the +_O'Higgins, Lautaro, Puyrredon_, and _Potrillo_ arrived, so that the +squadron was again complete. + +It was mentioned in the last chapter that I had seized a considerable +quantity of wheat at Mollendo, on account of a breach of the armistice. +This was still on board, and the city being in a state of famine, +General San Martin directed that the wheat, of which there were upwards +of two thousand _fanegas_, should be landed at the Chorillos free of +duty. As the _San Martin_ was deeply laden, I objected to this from the +dangerous nature of the anchorage, but more especially, that the only +anchor on board was made from the remains of two broken anchors lashed +together; this objection was nevertheless overruled, and, as I had +anticipated, she went ashore at Chorillos, where, from the heavy swell +which set in, she became a total wreck. + +On the 17th I received an invitation from the _Cabildo_ to visit the +city, and on landing, found that preparations had been made to give the +visit the character of a public entry, carriages being provided, with +deputations from the various corporations. Finding this to be the case, +I declined entering Lima in a manner so ostentatious, as General San +Martin had entered the city privately by night. I was, however, +compelled to hold a _levee_ at the palace, where the compliments of the +established authorities and principal inhabitants were tendered to me. +General San Martin declined to attend this complimentary manifestation, +remaining at La Legua, about halfway between Lima and Callao, where he +had established his head quarters; probably considering such honours out +of place towards one whom as Captain-General he might regard as a +subordinate, and the more so, as no such compliment had been offered to +himself. + +On the following day, General San Martin directed a civic guard to be +organized in place of the Spanish guard which had evacuated the city, +the Marquis of Torre Tagle being appointed its commandant. At the same +time the General retained the whole of the liberating army, though had +even a portion of these followed the retreating Spaniards, the greater +part would have joined the patriot standard--it being afterwards +ascertained that Colonel Rodil who commanded them, had shot great +numbers in the attempt to desert; even the patriot guerilla parties, +unaided, had defeated those who were kept together; so that had a +division of the liberating army been sent to co-operate with the +guerillas, the entire Spanish force might have been annihilated, in +place of forming the _nucleus_--as they afterwards did--of a force +which, after my departure from Chili, threatened not only the +independence of Peru, but even that of the Chilian Republic itself. + +Being thus unopposed, and the towns which had given in their adhesion to +the cause of independence being left defenceless--the retreating +Spaniards committed great excesses amongst the inhabitants of the +interior, who found themselves exposed to more than the rigours of +martial law, without the least attempt for their protection; though a +promise of this had formed one of the principal inducements for +throwing off their allegiance to the Viceroy, at whose mercy--or rather +want of it--they now found themselves exposed. + +In place of protecting the Peruvians in the interior, a number of highly +inflated proclamations were issued, in which it was left to be inferred +that the city had been taken by hard fighting, though not a blow had +been struck, except by the detachment of Colonel Arenales and the +squadron, whose vigilance of blockade and previous actions had so +dispirited the enemy and reduced them to such straits, that abandonment +of the capital was inevitable. Nor was the large force present even +required to maintain Lima, the inhabitants having for a long period been +subjected to miseries which they had no disposition to re-encounter. + +But General San Martin had other views in retaining the army than +protecting those who had confided in his promises; the military force +being required for very different purposes to that which had been set +forth in his proclamations and in those entrusted to him by the Chilian +government. + +On the 24th I ordered Captain Crosbie to proceed to Callao in the boats, +and cut out as many of the enemy's vessels as he could bring away. The +service was gallantly performed, for on the following day he brought out +two large merchantmen, the _San Fernando_ and _Milagro_, and the sloop +of war _Resolucion_, together with several launches; burning moreover +two vessels within musket shot of the batteries. + +On the 27th, the _Cabildo_ sent me an invitation to be present at the +public proclamation of the independence of Peru. As their letter fully +recognises the obligations of the Limenos to the services of the +squadron,--I shall transcribe it:-- + + "Lima is about to solemnize the most august act which has been + performed for three centuries, or since her foundation; this is the + proclamation of her independence, and absolute exclusion from + the Spanish government, as well as from that of any other foreign + potentate, and this _Cabildo_--wishing the ceremony to be conducted + with all possible decorum and solemnity, _considers it necessary that + your Excellency, who has so gloriously co-operated in bringing about + this highly desired object_, will deign to assist at the act with your + illustrious officers, on Saturday, the 28th instant." + +Imagining that myself and officers had been mainly instrumental in +establishing the independence of Peru--for I had in vain urged the +Captain-General to action, as far as the army was concerned, the +invitation was accepted, but judge of my surprise at the ceremony, when +medals were distributed, ascribing to General San Martin and the army +the whole credit of having accomplished that which the squadron had +achieved! The inscription on the medals was as follows.--"Lima secured +its independence on the 28th of July, 1821, under the protection of +_General San Martin and the liberating army_." The declaration of +independence was however complete, according to the promises and +intentions of the Chilian government. On hoisting the national flag, +General San Martin pronounced the following words:--"Peru is from this +moment free and independent, by the general vote of the people, and by +the justice of her cause, which God defend." + +The inhabitants of Lima were in a state of great delight at this +termination of centuries of Spanish misrule, and that their independence +of action was fully recognized as had been stipulated by Chili. As a +mark of gratitude, a deputation from the _Cabildo_, on the next day +waited on General San Martin, offering him, in the name of the +inhabitants of the capital, the first presidency of their now +independent state. To the astonishment of the deputation they were +curtly told that their offer was altogether unnecessary, as he had +_already taken the command, and should keep it as long as he thought +proper, whilst he would allow no assemblies for the discussion of public +matters_. The first act of the freedom and independence so +ostentatiously proclaimed on the previous day, being the establishment +of a despotic government, in which the people had neither voice nor +share; and this by the General of a Republic which existed only by the +will of the people! + +In this extraordinary assumption of power I had not been at all +consulted, probably because it was known that I would not countenance +anything but carrying out intact the intentions of the Supreme Director +of Chili as declared in his proclamations. It now became evident to me +that the army had been kept inert for the purpose of preserving it +entire to further the ambitious views of the General, and that with the +whole force now at Lima the inhabitants were completely at the mercy of +their pretended liberator, but in reality their conqueror. + +As the existence of this self-constituted authority was no less at +variance with the institutions of the Chilian Republic than with its +solemn promises to the Limenos, I again shifted my flag on board the +_O'Higgins_, determined to adhere solely to the interests of Chili; but +not interfering in any way with General San Martin's proceedings till +they interfered with me in my capacity as Commander in Chief of the +Chilian navy. + +On the 3rd of August, General San Martin issued a proclamation to the +same effect as his declaration to the now extinct _Cabildo_; setting +forth that although it was abundantly notorious that he aspired only to +retirement and tranquillity, nevertheless a moral responsibility +required him to unite all government in his own person, and he therefore +declared himself "Protector of Peru," with Don Juan Garcia del Rio, Don +Bernardo Monteagudo, and Don Hipolito Unanue, as his three ministers of +state. + +Being at the time on board the flag-ship, I knew nothing of this +proclamation; but as the squadron had not been paid their twelve months' +wages, nor the 50,000 dollars promised by General San Martin, I went on +shore on the 4th of August, to make the demand on behalf of the +squadron, the seamen having served their time. Being ignorant of the +self-imposed title which General San Martin had assumed, I frankly +asked him to devise some means for defraying these payments. + +I forbear personally to relate what passed at this interview; but as my +secretary was present, and on his return to England published an account +thereof, which is in every respect substantially true, I will give it in +his words:-- + + + "On the following morning, August 4th, Lord Cochrane, uninformed + of the change which had taken place in the title of San + Martin, visited the palace, and began to beg of the General in + Chief to propose some means for the payment of the foreign seamen, + who had served their time and fulfilled their contract. To this, + San Martin answered, that 'he would never pay the Chilian + squadron unless it was sold to Peru, and then the payment should + be considered part of the purchase money!' To this Lord Cochrane + replied, that 'by such a transaction the squadron of Chili + would be transferred to Peru by merely paying what was due to the + officers and crews for services done to that state.' San Martin knit + his brows, and turning to his two ministers, Garcia and Monteagudo, + ordered them to retire, to which his Lordship objected, stating that + 'as he was not master of the Spanish language, he wished them to + remain as interpreters, fearful that some expression, not rightly + understood, might be considered offensive.' San Martin now turned + round to the Admiral, and said--'Are you aware, my Lord, that I + am Protector of Peru?'--'No,'--said his Lordship, 'I ordered my + secretaries to inform you of it,' returned San Martin. 'That is + now unnecessary, for you have personally informed me,' said his + Lordship; 'I hope that the friendship which has existed between + San Martin and myself will continue to exist between the Protector + of Peru and myself.' San Martin then--rubbing his hands--said, + 'I have only to say, that I am Protector of Peru!'" + + "The manner in which this last sentence was expressed, roused + the Admiral, who, advancing, said--'Then it becomes me, as + senior officer of Chili, and consequently the representative of the + nation, to request the fulfilment of all the promises made to Chili + and the squadron; but first--and principally--the squadron.' San Martin + returned--'Chili! Chili! I will never pay a single _real_ to Chili! As + to the squadron, you may take it where you please, and go where you + choose; a couple of schooners are quite enough for me;' '_Chili! Chili, + yo nunca pagare 'un real a Chili! y en quanto a la esquadra, puede V + llevarla donde quiere, e irse quando guste, con un par de golestas me + basta a mi_.'" + + "On hearing this, Garcia left the room, and Monteagudo walked to the + balcony. San Martin paced the room for a short time and turning to his + Lordship, said,--'Forget, my Lord, what is past.' The admiral + replied--'I will, when I can,' and immediately left the palace." + + His Lordship was now undeceived by the man himself; the repeated reports + he had heard of his past conduct crowded on his imagination, and knowing + what might be attempted, from what had been already done, his Lordship + agreed with me, that his life was not safe ashore. He therefore + immediately took horse--rode to Boca Negra, and went on board his + frigate[1]. + +[Footnote 1: "_Twenty Years Residence in South America_," +by W.B. STEVENSON, Secretary to Lord Cochrane, Vice-Admiral of Chili, +&c. &c. 1825.] + +One thing has been omitted in the preceding narrative. General San +Martin, following me to the staircase, had the temerity to propose to me +to follow his example--viz. to break faith with Chilian Government to +which we had both sworn--to abandon the squadron to his interests--and +to accept the higher grade of "First Admiral of Peru." I need scarcely +say that a proposition so dishonourable was declined; when in a tone of +irritation he declared that "he would neither give the seamen their +arrears of pay, nor the gratuity he had promised." + +On arriving at the flag-ship, I found the following official +communication, requesting me to fire a salute in honour of San Martin's +self-elevation to the protectorship:-- + + Lima, 4th Aug. 1821. + MY LORD, + + His Excellency the Protector of Peru commands + me to transmit to you the annexed organic decree, announcing his + exaltation to the Supreme Authority; in order that the squadron + may be informed of this momentous event, and that the new + Government may be acknowledged by the naval department under + your command, belonging to the Republic of Chili. + + I hope, that duly estimating this high act, you will cause it to be + celebrated with all the dignity which is compatible with the martial + usage of the naval service. + + (Signed) MONTEAGUDO. + Attested by the _Rubrica_ of the Protector. + +Though this was a request to acknowledge General San Martin as invested +with the attributes of a Sovereign Prince, I complied with it in the +hope that quiet remonstrance might recal him to a sense of duty to the +Chilian Government, no less than to his own true interests. On the 7th +of August, I addressed to him the following letter:-- + + + Callao Roads, 7th Aug. 1821. + MY DEAR GENERAL, + + I address you for the last time under your late designation, + being aware that the liberty I may take as a friend might + not be deemed decorous to you under the title of "Protector," for I + shall not with a gentleman of your understanding take into account, + as a motive for abstaining to speak truth, any chance of your + resentment. Nay, were I certain that such would be the effect of this + letter, I would nevertheless perform such an act of friendship, in + repayment of the support you gave me at a time when the basest + plots and plans were laid for my dismissal from the Chilian Service, + for no other reason than that certain influential persons of shallow + understanding and petty expedients hate those who despise mean + acts accomplished by low cunning. + + Permit me, my dear General, to give you the experience of + eleven years during which I sat in the first senate in the world, + and to say what I anticipate on the one hand, and what I fear + on the other, nay, what I foresee; for that which is to come, in + regard to the acts of Governments and Nations, may as certainly + be predicted from history, as the revolutions of the solar system. + You have it in your power to be the Napoleon of South America, + as you have it in your power to be one of the greatest men now + acting on the theatre of the world; but you have also the power + to choose your course, and if the first steps are false, the eminence + on which you stand will, as though from the brink of a precipice, + make your fall the more heavy and the more certain. + + The rocks on which the South American Government have + split have hitherto been bad faith, and consequent temporary + expedients. No man has yet arisen, save yourself, capable of + soaring aloft, and with eagle eye embracing the expanse of the + political horizon. But if in your flight, like Icarus, you trust to + waxen wings, your descent may crush the rising liberties of Peru, + and involve all South America in anarchy, civil war, and political + despotism. + + The real strength of Government is public opinion. What + would the world say, were the Protector of Peru, as his first act, to + cancel the bonds of San Martin, even though gratitude may be a + private and not a public virtue? What would they say, were the + Protector to refuse to pay the expense of that expedition which + placed him in his present elevated situation? What would they + say, were it promulgated to the world that he intended not even to + remunerate those employed in the navy which contributed to his + success. + + What good can be arrived at by a crooked path that cannot be + attained by a straight and open way? Who has advised a tortuous + policy and the concealment of the real sentiments and intentions of + Government? Has an intriguing spirit dictated the refusal of pay + to the Chilian navy, whilst the army is doubly paid? Is it proposed + thus to alienate the minds of the men from their present service, and + by such policy to obtain them for the service of Peru? If so, the + effect will, I predict, be the contrary, for they have looked, and do + look, to Peru for their remuneration, and, if disappointed, they will + feel accordingly. + + See to what a state the Senate had brought the beautiful and + fertile province of Chili. Nay, had not their notorious want of + faith deprived them, notwithstanding their mines, their confiscated + and public lands, of the means possessed even by the Spanish + Government, and of the credit necessary to procure a dollar in any + foreign country, or even in their own? I say, therefore, my dear + General, that whoever has advised you to commence your Protectorship + with devices unworthy of San Martin, is either a thoughtless + or a wicked man, whom you should for ever banish from your + counsels. + + My dear General, look to the flattering addresses presented by + the servile of all countries to the most base in power. Think not + that it is to the person of San Martin that the public are attached. + Believe not, that without a straight and dignified course you can + obtain the admiration or love of mankind. So far yet you have + succeeded, and, thank God, it is in your power to succeed yet + farther. Flatterers are more dangerous than the most venomous + serpents, and next to them are men of knowledge, if they have not + the integrity or courage to oppose bad measures, when formally + discussed, or even when casually spoken of. + + What political necessity existed for any temporary concealment + of the sentiments of Government in regard to the fate of the + Spaniards in Peru? Were not the army and the people ready to + support your measures, and did not the latter call aloud for their + expulsion? Believe me, my dear General, that after your + declaration, even the seizing on Spanish property belonging to + those who remain, is an act which ought not to be resorted to without + crime on their part subsequently committed. + + In the feelings of my breast no man can deceive me. Of the sentiments + of others, I judge by my own, and I tell you what they are + as an honest man and a friend. + + I could say much to you, my dear General, on other subjects of + little inferior importance, but as the foregoing are the only acts + immediately contemplated of which I have acquired a knowledge, + and which are, in their consequences, ruinous, I shall, at present, + only add, that had kings and princes but one man in their + dominions who would, on all occasions, utter the naked truth, + multifarious errors would be avoided, and the mischief to mankind + would be infinitely less. + + You will plainly perceive that I have no personal interests in + these, or any other points, at variance with yours; but, on the + contrary, if I were base and interested, I have now taken a decisive + and irrevocable step to ruin my prospects; having no other security + for such not being the consequence of my candour save my good + opinion of your judgment and your heart. + + Believe me, under all circumstances, your attached friend, + + COCHRANE. + +To this letter, on the 9th of August, General San Martin replied as +follows:-- + + Lima, 9th August, 1821. + + My Lord, + + + The best proof of friendship that can be given by + you is the sincere announcement of your opinions as to the course + I should follow in my new political character. + + Assuredly you have not erred, when, under the title of Protector, + you do not anticipate any change in my personal character. Happily, + the alteration is only in a name, which, in my opinion, was + required for the benefit of the country; and if, in the character in + which you have known me, you have met with _civility_ and frankness, + it would be an injustice to deny me confidence, having always + listened to you as an enlightened person, experienced in the world; + especially as you do me justice in enabling me to make observations + on the spirit of your last communication. + + I am aware that good faith in one who presides over a nation, is + the vital spirit of its prosperity; and as, in this respect, a singular + current of success has called me temporarily to the supreme magistracy + of this country, I should renounce the advantages acquired + and betray my principles, if vanity or servile acquiescence in bad + advice were to induce me to deviate from the social interests of + Peru, and so expose it to the evils which in such case you dread. + + I know, my Lord, that one cannot fly with waxen wings. I perceive + the course I ought to pursue, and that, however great the + advantages already gained, there are rocks which, _without the aid of + prudence and good faith_, must be encountered. + + By good fortune, I have not forgotten the maxim of religiously + adhering to the word of a gentleman, which, as General, has been + the pivot on which my anticipations have rested. + + It now behoves me to explain my engagements towards the + Chilian squadron, to which, it is very gratifying to declare that + Peru, in part, owes its liberty; an acknowledgment which would + have been made on the medals coined, if, in the hurry of business, + _I had been able to give my attention to the subject of the inscription + that was presented to me as a model!_ You yourself have heard me + eulogise its merits and services. + + I have offered to the crews of the squadron of Chili twelve + months' pay, as an acknowledgment of its services, and am employed + in providing the means, and also in endeavouring to collect the + reward of 50,000 dollars which _you_ offered to the seamen who should + capture the _Esmeralda_, and I am not only disposed to pay these sums, + but to recompense valour displayed in the cause of the country. + + But you know, my Lord, that the wages of the crews do not + come under these circumstances, and that I--_never having engaged + to pay the amount--am not obliged to do so!_ That debt is due from + Chili, whose government engaged the seamen. Although it may + be just, in the state of its finances, to indemnify Chili in some + degree for the expeditionary expenses, that will be, for me, an + agreeable consideration; but in no degree will I acknowledge a right + to claim arrears of pay! + + If I could forget the services of the squadron, and the sacrifices + of Chili, I should manifest ingratitude, which, neither as a public + or private virtue will I ever forego; but it is as imprudent to lavish + rewards, as to withhold them from the meritorious. I am engaged + in finding means to realize measures as regards the squadron, which + I intend to propose to the Supreme Government of Chili, and thus + conciliate all interests. + + Your affectionate friend, + JOSE DE SAN MARTIN. + To Lord Cochrane, Vice-Admiral of Chili. + +In this letter, San Martin attributes his usurpation to a "singular +current of success;" omitting to state that he neither achieved one +blow, nor devised one plan which led to it, whilst he had all along +offered it every obstruction in his power. He declares that the +arrogation of the fall of the Spaniards, attributed by the inscription +on the medal to the army and himself, was a mistake, brought about by +"his not being able, in the hurry of business, to give attention to the +model presented to him;" whereas the inscription was his own writing, +after days of deliberation and consultation with others, who advised him +not to mention the squadron in the inscription. + +In this letter he repudiates all connection with Chili, though he had +sworn fidelity to the republic as its Captain General. He denies ever +having engaged to pay the squadron their wages, though on no other +condition had it put to sea from Valparaiso, and his own handwriting to +this specific promise was accepted as the inducement. Though himself an +officer of Chili, he treats Chili as a state with which he had nothing +to do, whose debts he declares that he will not pay, as he had +previously told me on the 4th of August; finally, he says that he will +propose to Chili to pay its own seamen! As to his promises to give the +men a twelvemonths' pay in acknowledgment of their services, this was +neither intended nor given; whilst, as to the 50,000 dollars promised to +the captors of the _Esmeralda_, which he is "endeavouring to collect," +he had long before "collected" many times the amount from the old +Spaniards--who had offered a similar reward for the capture of any +vessels of the Chilian squadron--and kept it. Fortunately, his own +letters prove these matters, which otherwise I should have hesitated to +mention, unsupported by testimony so irrefutable. + +General San Martin afterwards denied to the Chilian Government that he +refused, on the 4th of August, to pay the squadron. Here is the same +assertion, in his own handwriting, on the 9th! During the whole of this +time the squadron was in a state of literal destitution; even the +provisions necessary for its subsistence being withheld from it, though +the Protector had abundant means of supplying them; but his object was +to starve both officers and men into desertion--so as to accelerate the +dismemberment of the squadron which I would not give up to his ambitious +views. + +The sound advice contained in my letter General San Martin never +forgave--and he afterwards fell exactly as I had predicted--there was no +merit in the prophecy, for similar causes lead to like effects. Adhering +to my own duty, I felt that I was free from his command, and determined +to follow no other course than to carry out, as far as lay in my power, +the pledge of the Chilian Government to the Peruvian people. + +Concealing for the present his resentment, and reflecting that the forts +of Callao were still in the hands of the Spaniards, the Protector +endeavoured to explain away the disagreeable nature of our interview on +the 4th of August, by asserting, "that he only said, or meant to say, +that it might be interesting to Chili to _sell some of her vessels of +war to Peru_, because the latter wanted them for the protection of her +coasts;" adding, that "the Government of Chili would at all times devote +their squadron to the furtherance of the cause of Peru." He repeated, +that the arrears of pay to the squadron should be liquidated, as well as +the rewards which had been promised. + +As none of these were forthcoming, the squadron began to shew symptoms +of mutiny at the conduct of the Protector. On the 11th of August I wrote +to him, apprising him of the increasing discontent of the seamen, again +requesting payment. On this a decree was issued, ordering one-fifth of +the customs receipts to be set aside for the joint pay of the army and +navy, but as the fortress and port of Callao were in the hands of the +Spaniards, these receipts were most insignificant, and the measure was +rightly regarded by the squadron as a subterfuge. + +To this communication the Protector replied, on the 13th of August--at +the same time hinting that I might _reconsider_ my refusal to accept the +command of the contemplated Peruvian navy. + +The subjoined is his letter:-- + + Lima, 13th of August, 1821. MY LORD, + + In my official letter addressed to you on the disagreeable business of + paying the squadron, which causes us so much uneasiness, I have told you + that it is impossible to do as we wish. I have nothing to add, unless my + previous declaration, that I shall never view with indifference any + thing that interests you. I told you in Valparaiso, that "your lot + should be equal to mine" and I believe myself to have proved that my + intentions have not varied--nor can vary, because every day renders my + actions more important. + + No, my Lord, I do not view with indifference anything which concerns + you, and I shall be deeply grieved, if you do not wait till I can + onvince you of the truth. If, however, in despite of all this, you + determine on the course, which, at our interview a few days ago, you + proposed to take, it will be for me a difficulty from which I cannot + extricate myself, but I hope that--_conforming yourself to my + wishes_--you will conclude the work begun, on which our common lot + depends. + + Adieu, my Lord, I repeat that I am, with sincere esteem, your eternal + friend, + + JOSE DE SAN MARTIN. + +The assertion, that he could not satisfy the seamen, was a subterfuge; +he had abundance of money, derived from the wholesale spoliation of the +Spaniards, to which indefensible course I had alluded in my letter of +August 7th. He also hoped that "_conforming to his wishes_," I would +accept the appointment of "First Admiral;" the consequence of +which--together with the decree transferring the Chilian +officers--without their consent--to the service of Peru, would have been +to turn over to his Government the Chilian squadron. + + + + +CHAPTER VII. + +TAMPERING WITH CHILIAN OFFICERS--THE ARCHBISHOP OF LIMA--HIS +EXPULSION--NEGOCIATION FOR SURRENDER OF THE FORTS--THIS +COUNTERACTED--SAN MARTIN'S BOMBASTIC PROCLAMATIONS--HIS REFUSAL TO +ENCOUNTER THE ENEMY--THE SPANIARDS RELIEVE CALLAO--DELUSIVE +PROCLAMATION--THE UNBLUSHING FALSEHOOD--SPANIARDS CARRY OFF THE +TREASURE--DISCONTENT OF THE SQUADRON. + + +Finding that I was indisposed to acknowledge his self-assumed authority, +and still less to contribute to measures which would, in effect, have +deprived Chili of the Navy, which by her patriotic sacrifices had been +created, the Protector issued a proclamation, again _promising_ the +payment of arrears to the seamen, and a pension for life to the +officers, _acknowledging them as officers of Peru_! No inference can be +drawn from this other than a direct intimation to the officers to desert +from the Chilian service. + +The following are extracts from the proclamation, which was published in +a Gazette Extraordinary of August 17th, 1821:-- + + "The Army and Squadron of Chili united, have, at last, completed + the oath which they took, to liberate Peru, and have raised it to + the rank which justice and the interests of the world demand. + Their constancy and heroism will hand them down to posterity + with gratitude. I should be deficient in my political duty, did + I not manifest the appreciation due to their transcendent deeds, + promoting the interests of both hemispheres." + + "1. The State of Peru acknowledges as a national debt the + arrears of the Army and Squadron, as well as the promises made by + me to both." + + "2. All the property of the State, and also twenty per cent, on + the revenue, are pledged to the extinction of these debts." + + "3. All the officers of the Army and Squadron who sailed with + the liberating expedition, and now remain in them, _are acknowledged + as officers of Peru_." + + "4. Those comprehended in the preceding articles, and those + employed in the said cause, shall receive, during the period of their + lives, a pension of half their full pay, awarded on leaving Valparaiso, + which pension shall be paid even in the case of their settling in a + foreign country." + + "5. All shall receive a medal," &c, &c. + +Not a penny of the arrears and the other emoluments promised, was, +however, paid to the squadron; nor was any intended to be paid, the +object being to get the officers quietly to transfer themselves from the +Chilian squadron to the service of the Protector, on the strength of the +promises made: and, in this, he was ably seconded by his instruments, +Guise and Spry, who, in defiance of their desertion, and the sentence of +court-martial on the latter, had been retained near his person for the +accomplishment of this object. + +One of the most fearless opponents of the Protector was the Archbishop +of Lima, an excellent man, much beloved by the people--who made no +secret of his indignation at the usurpation which had taken place, +despite all the promises of Chili, declared "before God and man"--as +well as those of the Protector himself, to "leave the Peruvians free as +regarded their own choice of Government." As the honest prelate +denounced, in no measured terms, the despotism which had been +established in the place of the liberty guaranteed, it was determined +to get rid of him. + +The first step was an order to the Archbishop, dated August 22, 1821, to +close all the houses of spiritual exercises. This was politely refused; +but, at the same time, the prelate stated, that if any confessor +disturbed public order, he would take the requisite measures for his +punishment. On the 27th, the Archbishop was told in reply, that "the +Protector's orders were irrevocable, and he must at once decide on the +line of conduct he intended to adopt." + +On the 1st of September, the prelate, in an admirable letter, told the +Protector, that "the principal obligation of a bishop was to defend the +deposit of doctrine and faith which had been confided to him, and, if +threatened by any great potentate, to remonstrate with respect and +submission, to the end that he might not be a participator in crime by a +cowardly condescension. God had constituted bishops as the pastors and +guards of the flock, and he tells us, that we are not to be cowards in +the presence of the greatest potentates on earth, but, if necessary, we +must shed our blood, and lay down our lives, in so just a cause; +anathematizing us, on the contrary, as dumb dogs who do not bark when +the spiritual health of the flock is in danger." + +The end of this was, that the Protector urged on the Archbishop to +resign, promising him a vessel to convey him to Panama; relying on which +promise, he sent in his resignation, and was ordered to quit Lima in +twenty-four hours! As the promise of a conveyance to Panama was broken, +the Archbishop embarked in a merchant vessel for Rio de Janeiro, +addressing to me the following letter previous to his departure. + + Chancay, Nov. 2, 1821. + + My dear Lord, + + + The time is arrived for my return to Spain, the Protector + having granted me the necessary passport. The polite + attention which I owe to your Excellency, and the peculiar + qualifications which adorn and distinguish you, oblige me to + manifest to you my sincere regard and esteem. + + In Spain, if God grant that I arrive in safety, I request that you + will deign to command me. On leaving this country, _I am convinced + that its independence is for ever sealed_. This I will represent to the + Spanish Government, and to the Papal See, and will do all in my + power to preserve the tranquillity, and to further the views, of the + inhabitants of America, who are dear to me. + + Deign, my Lord, to receive these sentiments as emanating from + the sincerity of my heart, and command + + Your obliged servant and Chaplain, + BARTOLOME MARIA DE LAS HERAS. + + +This forcible expulsion of the Archbishop was an act of political folly, +as being tantamount to a declaration that he was too good a man to +countenance the designs of those who had usurped an unjust dominion over +his flock. Had the promises of Chili been carried out in their +integrity, both the Archbishop and his clergy would have used all their +influence to promote the cause of liberty--not more from interest than +inclination. The expression of the Archbishop, that "the independence of +Peru was _for ever_ sealed," was, however, erroneous. Tyranny is not +composed of enduring materials. + +The Bishop of Guamanga, who resided at Lima, was also ordered to leave +Peru within eight days, without reason assigned, and thus the +opposition of the Church was got rid of, though not without deep feeling +on the part of the Limenos, who were, however, powerless to help their +clergy or themselves. + +The affairs of the squadron becoming every day worse, and a mutinous +spirit being excited from actual destitution, I endeavoured to obtain +possession of the castles of Callao by negociation, offering to the +Spanish Commandant permission to depart with two-thirds of the property +contained in the fort, on condition of the remainder, together with the +forts, being given up to the Chilian squadron. My object was to supply +the crews with the absolute necessaries, of which they stood in need +from the evasive conduct of the Protector, who continued to withhold, +not only pay, but provisions, though the squadron had formed the ladder +on which he had ascended to his present elevated position. There were +large sums and a vast amount of plate in the possession of the Spanish +garrison,--the wealthy citizens of Lima--fearing their liberators--having +deposited both in the forts for security. A third of this would have +relieved us from our embarrassments. The vessels were, in fact, in want +of stores of every kind, their crews being without animal food, clothing, +or spirits, indeed their only means of subsistence was upon money +obtained from the Spanish fugitives, whom I permitted to ransom themselves +by surrendering a third only of the property with which they were escaping. + +As soon as my offer to the Spanish Commandant, La Mar, became known to +the Protector--in order to counteract it, and ensure the success of his +design to starve out the Chilian squadron, and so procure its transfer +to himself--he offered La Mar unlimited and unconditional protection, +both as to persons and property, on purchase of letters of citizenship! +The Commandant, therefore, rejected my proposal, and the hope of +obtaining a sufficient sum for the payment of the seamen, and for +refitting the ships, was frustrated. + +General San Martin afterwards accused me to the Chilian Government of +aiming at the possession of the fortress of Callao, for the purpose of +setting at defiance the Government of Peru! This was ridiculous; though, +had it been my object, it would have been perfectly consistent with my +duty to Chili, from which State the Protector of Peru had cast off his +allegiance. My object was simply to obtain means to subsist the +squadron; though, had I obtained possession of the forts, I would most +certainly have dictated to General San Martin the fulfilment of his +promises; and should as certainly have insisted on his performing his +solemn engagement to the Peruvians, of giving them the free choice of +their own government. + +He also accused me of wishing to appropriate the sum proposed to be +surrendered by the Spanish Commandant to my own use, though the seamen +were in a state of mutiny from actual starvation! Instead of +contributing to this useful end, as before the Protector's interference +La Mar was not unwilling to do, the Spaniards were afterwards permitted +to retire unmolested with the whole of their treasure; and to this, the +most discreditable act which ever sullied the name of a military +commander, we now come. As the whole transaction has been well described +by another writer, who was present throughout, I prefer extracting his +words, in order to prevent any suspicion of mental bias which I may be +supposed to entertain on the subject:-- + + "The Spanish army at Janja, in the beginning of September, + spread alarm in Lima, from advices received of their movements. + It appeared that they were determined to attack the capital, and on + the 5th of September the following proclamation was issued at + head-quarters by the Protector:--" + + "Inhabitants of Lima," + + "It appears that the justice of heaven, tired of tolerating for so long + a time the oppressors of Peru, now guides them to destruction. Three + hundred of those troops who have desolated so many towns, burnt so many + temples, and destroyed so many thousands of victims, are at San Mateo, + and two hundred more at San Damian. If they advance on this capital, + it will be with the design of immolating you to their vengeance (San + Martin had 12,000 troops to oppose them), and to force you to purchase + at a high price your decision, and enthusiasm for independence. Vain + hope! The valiant who have liberated the illustrious Lima, those who + protect her in the most difficult moments, know how to preserve her + against the fury of the Spanish army. Yes, inhabitants of this capital, + my troops will not abandon you; _they and myself are going to triumph + over that army which--thirsty of our blood and property, is advancing; + or we will perish with honour, for we will never witness your + disgrace_. In return for this noble devotion, and that it may receive + the favourable success of which it is worthy, all we require of you is, + union, tranquillity, and efficacious co-operation. This alone is + necessary to ensure the felicity and splendour of Peru." + + "SAN MARTIN." + + + "On the morning of the 10th, Lord Cochrane received on board + the _O'Higgins_ an official communication, informing him that the + enemy was approaching the walls of Lima, and repeating the + request that his Lordship would send to the army every kind of + portable arms then on board the squadron, as well as the marines + and all volunteers; because the Protector was '_determined to bring + the enemy to an action, and either conquer or remain buried in the + ruins of what was Lima_.' This heroic note was, however, accompanied + by a private one from Monteagudo, containing a request that + the boats of the vessels of war might be kept in readiness, and a + look out placed on the beach of Boca Negra." + + "Lord Cochrane immediately pressed forward to San Martin's + camp, where, being recognised by several officers, a murmur of + congratulation was heard, and even Guise and Spry exclaimed, + 'We shall have some fighting now the Admiral is come.' General + Las Heras, acting as General-in-Chief, saluting the Admiral, begged + of him to endeavour to persuade the Protector to bring the enemy + to an action. His Lordship, on this, rode up to San Martin, and + taking him by the hand, in the most earnest manner entreated + him to attack the enemy without losing a single moment; his + entreaties were, however, in vain, the only answer received being--'My + resolutions are taken'--'_mis medidas estan tomadas_.'" + + "Notwithstanding this apathy, his Lordship remonstrated, stating + the situation in which he had, not five minutes before, observed the + enemy's infantry, and begged of the Protector to ascend an eminence + at the back of the house, and convince himself how easily a victory + might be obtained; but he only received the same cold reply--_mis + medidas estan tomadas_.'" + + "The clamour of the officers in the _patio_ of the house roused + San Martin, who called for his horse and mounted. In a moment + all was bustle, and the anticipated glow of victory shone in every + countenance. The order to arms was given, and instantly obeyed + by the whole army, amounting to about 12,000 men, including + guerillas, all anxious to begin the fight. The Protector beckoned + to the Admiral and General Las Heras, who immediately rode up to + him, hoping that he was either about to consult them respecting the + attack, or to inform them how it was to be conducted." + + "At this moment a peasant approached San Martin on horseback, + the General with most unparalleled composure lending an + attentive ear to his communications as to where the enemy was + the day before! The Admiral, exasperated at so unnecessary a + waste of time, bade the peasant 'begone,' adding--'The General's + time is too important to be employed in listening to your + fooleries.' At this interruption, San Martin frowned on the + Admiral, and turning his horse rode up to the door of the house, + where he alighted and went in." + + "Lord Cochrane then requested a private conference with San + Martin--which was the last time he ever spoke to him--and assured + him that it was not even then too late to attack the enemy, begging + and entreating that the opportunity might not be lost, and offering + himself to lead the cavalry. But to this he received the reply, 'I + alone am responsible for the liberties of Peru.'--_'Yo solo soy + responsable de la libertad del Peru_.' On this the Protector retired + to an inner apartment of the house to enjoy his customary _siesta_, + which was disturbed by General Las Heras, who came to receive orders, + and recalled to the attention of the Protector that the force was still + under arms, when San Martin ordered that the troops should receive + their rations!" + + "Thus Gen. Cantarac, with 3,200 men, passed to the southward + of Lima--within half-musket shot of the protecting army of Peru, + composed of 12,000--entered the castles of Callao with a convoy of + cattle and provisions, where he refreshed and rested his troops for + six days, and then retired on the 15th, taking with him the _whole + of the vast treasure deposited therein by the Limenos_, and leisurely + retreating on the north side of Lima." + + "After Cantarac had led his troops into the batteries of Callao, + the success was announced by the firing of guns and other demonstrations + which harrowed up the souls of the Chilian officers. The + patriot army thereupon passively occupied their old camp at the + Legua, between Callao and Lima." + + "It would be an act of injustice not to mention that the second in + command, General Las Heras, disgusted with the result, left the + service of the Protector, and requested his passport to Chili, which + was granted; his example being followed by several officers of the army, + who, deeply wounded by what had taken place, preferred obscurity, + and even poverty, to further serving under such circumstances. + The British ship of war, _Superb_, was in the bay, and several of + the officers, expecting to see the decisive blow struck in Peru, + repaired to San Martin's head-quarters, and were astounded at the + coolness of a general, who, commanding 12,000 men, could abandon + a favourable position in which he might at least have intercepted + the convoy of cattle, and so at once have compelled the surrender of + Callao, instead of permitting them to pass without a single shot + being fired."[2] + +[Footnote 2: "_Twenty years Residence in South America_," by W.B. +Stevenson. Vol. iii. London, 1825.] + +The preceding extract, published in London by one who was by my side +during the whole affair, is perfectly correct. The Limenos were deeply +humiliated by the occurrence, nor was their annoyance mitigated by the +publication of the following proclamation in the ministerial Gazette of +the 19th, in which General San Martin informed them that he had beaten +the enemy and pursued the fugitives! though, the said enemy had relieved +and reinforced the fortress, and then coolly walked off unmolested with +plate and money to the amount of many millions of dollars; in fact, the +whole wealth of Lima, which, as has been said, was deposited by the +inhabitants in the fortress for security. + + Limenos, + + It is now fifteen days since the liberating army left the + capital, resolved not to permit that even the shadow of the Spanish + flag should again darken the illustrious city of Lima. The enemy + haughtily descended the mountains, filled with the calculations they + had formed in their ignorant meditations. They fancied that to + appear before our camp was enough to conquer us; but they found + _valour armed with prudence_! They acknowledged their inferiority. + _They trembled at the idea of the hour of battle, and profited by the + hour of darkness_!! and they sought an asylum in Callao. My army + began its march, and at the end of eight days the enemy has had to + fly precipitately--convinced of their impotency to try the fortune of + war, or to remain in the position they held. + + The desertion which they experience ensures us that, before they + reach the mountains, there will only exist a handful of men, terrified + and confounded with the remembrance of the colossal power which + they had a year ago, and which has now disappeared like the fury of + the waves of the sea at the dawn of a serene morning. _The liberating + army pursues the fugitives. They shall he dissolved or beaten_. + At all events, the capital of Peru shall never be profaned with the + footsteps of the enemies of America--_this truth is peremptory_. The + Spanish empire is at an end for ever. Peruvians! your destiny is + irrevocable; consolidate it by the constant exercise of those virtues + which you have shown in the epoch of conflicts. _You are independent_, + and nothing can prevent your being happy, if you will it + to be so, + + SAN MARTIN. + +To these monstrous assertions I only know one parallel, viz:--Falstaff's +version of his victory over the robbers at Gadshill. The Protector +asserts that "the shadow of the Spanish flag should never again darken +Lima." It nevertheless passed completely round the city within +half-musket shot. "The enemy thought that to view our camp was to +conquer us." They were only 3,000 to 12,000. "They trembled at the hour +of battle, _and profited by the hour of darkness_!" The fact being that +with droves of cattle and abundance of other provisions, they +triumphantly marched into Callao _at mid-day_! viz, from eleven A.M. to +three P.M. "The liberating army pursues the fugitives." This is the only +fact contained in the proclamation. The enemy _was_ pursued by 1,100 +men, who followed them at a distance for ten miles, when Cantarac +suddenly facing about, let loose his cavalry at them, and nearly the +whole were cut up! The Spaniards in fact came to relieve Callao, and +fully effected their object. + +Were not the preceding proclamation indelibly imprinted in the columns +of the ministerial Gazette, it would be deemed a malicious fabrication. +Yet the poor, _independent_ Limenos dared not utter a voice against +falsehood so palpable. Disarmed and betrayed, they were completely at +the mercy of the Protector, who, if he can be said to have had a motive +in not encountering the small force of Cantarac, no doubt founded it in +keeping his own troops intact for the further oppression of the unhappy +Limenos--with what effect we shall presently see. + +This triumphant retreat of the Spanish force with its large amount of +treasure was a disaster which, after the Limenos had risen against the +tyranny of San Martin and forcibly expelled him from their city, +entailed the shedding of torrents of blood in Peru, for the Spaniards +were thus enabled to reorganize a force which would have subjected the +country to its ancient oppressors, had not the army of Colombia stepped +in to resist a common enemy. Even Chili trembled for her liberties, and, +after I had left the Pacific, begged me to return and check disasters +with which she was incompetent to grapple. + +Had not the Protector prevented the Spanish Commandant, La Mar, from +accepting my offer of permitting him to retire with two-thirds of the +enormous treasure deposited in the fort, Chili would, at the lowest +computation, have received ten millions of dollars, whilst the Spaniards +would have retired with twenty millions. Surely this would have been +better than to permit them--as General San Martin did--to retire +unmolested with the whole. + +Foiled in this attempt to relieve the necessities of the squadron, +whilst the Protector's Government pertinaciously refused to supply them, +it was impossible to keep the men from mutiny; even the officers--won +over by Guise and Spry, who paid midnightly visits to the ships for the +purpose--began to desert to the Protectoral Government. + +The following letter, addressed to Monteagudo, will shew the state of +the matter as regarded the squadron:-- + + Most Excellent Sir, + + I have written you an official letter to-day, by which + you will perceive that the consequences which I have long predicted + will have so far come to pass, as to render the removal of the + large ships of the squadron indispensable. If by a total neglect + of all I tell the Protectoral Government through you, things happen + prejudicial to the service, the Protector and yourself will at least do + me the justice to feel that I have done my duty; the base, + interested, and servile, for the promotion of their selfish views, may + clamour, but I regard them not. + + I would send you the _original_ reports of the provisions and state + of the ships issued by the captains, but I must hold these for my + public justification, should such be necessary. + + What is the meaning of all this, Monteagudo? Are these people + so base as to be determined to force the squadron to mutiny? And + are there others so blind as not to foresee the consequences? Ask + Sir Thomas Hardy, and the British captains, or any other officers, + what will be the result of such monstrous measures. + + Believe me, with a heavy heart, + + Yours, &c. + + COCHRANE. + + + + +CHAPTER VIII. + +PROLONGED DESTITUTION OF SQUADRON--THE MEN MUTINY IN A BODY--THE +SEAMEN'S LETTERS--SAN MARTIN SENDS AWAY THE PUBLIC TREASURE--MY SEIZURE +OF IT--PRIVATE PROPERTY RESTORED--SAN MARTIN'S ACCUSATIONS AGAINST +ME--THE SQUADRON PAID WAGES--ATTEMPT ON THE OFFICERS' FIDELITY--I AM +ASKED TO DESERT FROM CHILI--ORDERED TO QUIT ON REFUSAL--MONTEAGUDO'S +LETTER--MY REPLY--JUSTIFICATION OF SEIZING THE TREASURE--NO OTHER COURSE +POSSIBLE. + + +Previous to this time I had on board the flag-ship the unexpended +portion of the money captured at Arica, but as the Chilian Government, +trusting to Peru to supply the wants of the squadron, neither sent funds +or provisions, I was compelled to spend for our subsistence the +uncondemned portion of the prize money belonging to the seamen--a +necessity which, no less than their want of pay or reward, irritated +them beyond measure, as, in effect, compelling them to fight the battles +of the Republic not only without pay but at their own expense. In +addition to this, I was in possession of the uncondemned portion of +other sums taken on the coast, and these also I was obliged to expend, +at the same time transmitting accounts thereof to the Minister of Marine +at Valparaiso, the appropriation being fully approved by the Chilian +Government. The destitute condition of the squadron, and the consequent +dissatisfaction of the crews, will be best shewn by a few extracts from +the letters of the officers and the men themselves. + +On the 2nd of September, Captain Delano, the Commander of the +_Lantaro_, wrote to me as follows:-- + + "The officers as well as the men are dissatisfied, having been a + long time on the cruise, and at present without any kind of meat + or spirits, and without pay, so that they are not able to provide for + themselves any longer, though, _until starved_, they have borne it + without a murmur." + + "The ship's company have now absolutely refused duty on + account of short allowance. The last _charqui_ (dried beef) they got + was rotten and full of vermin. They are wholly destitute of clothing, + and persist in their resolution not to do duty till beef and spirits + are supplied, alleging that they have served their time, with nothing + but promises so frequently broken that they will no longer be + put off." + + "In your Lordship's absence I took the liberty to write to the + Government and make their complaints known, but the Minister of + Marine did not even give me an answer." + + "The greater portion have now left the ship and are all gone + ashore, so that under existing circumstances, and with the + dissatisfaction of the officers and the remainder of the ship's + company I do not hold myself responsible for any accident that may + happen to the ship until these difficulties are removed, as the + cables are bad and not to be trusted to, and we have no anchor + sufficient to hold her." + + "PAUL DELANO, _Captain_." + +On Captain Delano sending his first lieutenant on shore to persuade the +men to return to the ship, he was arrested by order of the Government +and put in prison, the Protector's object being to get all the men to +desert, thus furthering his views towards the appropriation of the +squadron. + +The _Galvarino_ was even in a worse condition, so that I deemed it +expedient to address a letter to the ship's company asking them to +continue at their duty till I could devise means for their relief; with +what result the following letter from Captain Esmond, commanding the +_Galvarino_ will shew. + + _Galvarino_, Sept. 8th, 1821. + + MY LORD, + + Pursuant to your Excellency's order, I have read your + letter of the 6th instant to the ship's company, respecting your + communication with His Excellency the Protector, concerning + arrears of pay, prize-money, &c. + + I am sorry to inform your Excellency that they still persist in + their demands, _and are determined not to proceed to sea_. + + I. ESMOND, _Captain_. + +On the 19th, the foreign seamen of the flag-ship itself mutinied in a +body, on which my flag-captain, Crosbie, wrote me the following +letter:-- + + MY LORD, + + It is with the utmost regret I have to inform your Lordship + that being ready for sea early this morning, the foreigners + refused heaving up the anchor in consequence of arrears of pay and + prize-money, and to my great surprise many of the natives also + came aft. + + I endeavoured by persuasive means to induce them to return + quietly and willingly to their duty, which had no effect. Knowing + well, had I commenced hostile measures to enforce those orders the + consequence might be serious, I refrained therefrom, being aware of + your Lordship's wish to conduct everything as peaceably as possible. + + The names of the foreigners who refuse going to sea I have the + honour to enclose to your Lordship, and also to enclose several + letters sent me officially from Captain Cobbett, of the _Valdivia_. + + I.S. CROSBIE, _Captain_. + +Not to multiply these letters from other Commanders, I will adduce two +written by the whole of the English and North-American seamen +themselves. + + Captin Crosby, + + Sir, It his the request of us all in the Ship's Company to + inform you that we would wish to acquaint his Lordship that we was + promised by General San Martin to receive a bounty of 50,000 + dollars and the Total Amount of the Spanish Frigate _Ismeralda_, it + his the Sole thought of us all that if San Martin had any Honure + he would not breck his promises wish out to have been fulfilled + Long a go. + + Ship's Company of _O'Higgins_. + + + Capt. Corbet + + It is the request of us all On Bord the Chili States + ship _Valdivia_ To aquaint you that we are disatisfied on account of + our pay and prize money, and likewise the promises made to us on + leaving Valpariso, it is likewise our Determination not to weigh the + anchor of the _Valdivia_ untill we get the whole of our wages and + prize money, likewise a number of us is a Bove twelvemonths aBove + our time that we Shipt for And we should likewise wish our Discharge + and let them that wish to Reenter Again May do as they think + proppre as we consider this a patriot port. + + The Ship's Company at large of the _Valdivia_. + + + Capt Crosby, Esq + + We would wish to acquaint you of wot his bean read to + us on board of the different C. States ship under his Lordship's + Command Concerning the Capture of the _Ismeralda_. + + Sir it was thus + the importance of the Service performed by your Lordship to the + States by the Capture of the Spanish Frigat _Ismeralda_, and the + brillant manner in which this noble enterprize was conducted + under your Command on the memorable night of the fifth + of November, has aurgumented the claims which your previous + services gave to the Consideration of the government and those + that is Interested in thar cause as well as my present esteem. + + All those who partook in the risk and glory of this Interprise + deserves also the estermation of thar Companions in the Army, and + I enjoy the pleasure of being the Organ of thar Sentiments of + Admiration Wich so important an action as praduced in the officers + and army, Permit me tharfore to express such thar sentiments to + your Lordship that may be communicated to the Officers and + Seamen and troops of the Sqwardon. + + Regarding the premium for the Frigat It is to be regretted that + the memorey of so herioic an Interprise should be mixed with the + painful ideer that blood as been shed in Accomplishment, and + we hope that your Lordship and the Gallant Officers and Seamen + may be enabbled to give new days of Glorry to the cause of + indispendence. + + Ship's Company, _O'Higgins_. + + N.B.--Warre One Single Sentiment his not been fulfilled. + +This letter, though somewhat incomprehensible, was intended as a +farewell complimentary address to myself, previous to the desertion of +the flag-ship; and, had this taken place, there was no doubt that the +ships' companies of the whole squadron would have followed the example, +so that the Protector would have gained his ends, in spite of my +endeavours to keep the men faithful to the flag under which they were +engaged to serve. + +Fortunately for Chili and myself, an occurrence took place which averted +the evil, and was brought about by the very means which the Protector +had devised to promote his individual views. + +The occurrence alluded to, was the embarkation of large sums of money by +the Protector in his yacht _Sacramento_, which had cast out her ballast +to stow the silver, and in a merchant vessel in the harbour, to the +exclusion of the _Lantaro_ frigate, then at the anchorage. This money +was sent to Ancon, on the pretence of placing it in safety from any +attack by the Spanish forces, but possibly to secure it for the further +purposes of the Protector. The squadron having thus ocular demonstration +that its arrears could be paid, but were not, both officers and men +refused longer to continue in a service which had brought them nothing +but prolonged suffering. + +My own views coincided with theirs, and I determined that the squadron +should be no longer starved nor defrauded. I therefore sailed to Ancon, +and personally seized the treasure, before witnesses; respecting all +that professed to belong to private individuals, and also the whole of +that contained in the Protector's schooner, _Sacramento_, considering it +his private property, though it could not have been other than plunder +wrested from the Limenos. Independently of this yacht-load of silver, +there were also on board, seven _surrones_ (sacks) of uncoined gold, +brought down on his account by the Legate Parroisien; so that, after all +the moveable wealth of Lima was supposed to have been previously +deposited for safety in the castles of Callao, but carried off by +Cantarac, the condition of the unhappy Limenos may be imagined, from the +additional sums of which they were subsequently deprived. + +I immediately made proclamation, that all private individuals, having +the customary documents, might receive their property upon application, +and considerable sums were thus given up to Dr. Unanue, Don Juan Aguero, +Don Manuel Silva, Don Manuel Primo, Don Francisco Kamirez, and several +others, though connected with the Government. Besides which, I gave up +40,000 dollars to the commissary of the army, who claimed it; so that, +having returned all the money for which dockets were produced, there +remained 285,000 dollars, which was subsequently applied to the payment +of one year's arrears to every individual of the squadron; but relying +on the justice of the Chilian Government, I took no part myself, +reserving the small surplus that remained for the more pressing +exigencies and re-equipment of the squadron. + +Accounts of the whole money seized, were forwarded to the Minister of +Marine at Valparaiso, as well as vouchers for its disbursement, and in +due course, I received the approbation of the Chilian Government for +what had been done. + +General San Martin entreated, in the most earnest terms, the restoration +of the treasure, promising the faithful fulfilment of all his former +engagements. Letter after letter was sent, begging me to save the credit +of the Government, and pretending that the money seized was all the +Government possessed for indispensable daily expenses. To this I +replied, that had I been aware that the treasure spared in the +_Sacramento_ was the property of Government, and not that of the +Protector, I would have seized it also, and retained it till the debts +due to the squadron were liquidated. Finding all arguments unavailing, +and that no attention was paid to his threats, the Protector--to save +the credit of his Government--addressed a proclamation to the squadron, +confirming the distribution which was going on by my orders, at the same +time writing to me, that I "might employ the money as I thought proper." + +San Martin afterwards accused me to the Chilian Government of seizing +the whole of the treasure, that in his yacht included, which, at a low +computation, must have been worth several millions of dollars, which +were all left untouched. He also asserted, that I had retained the +whole belonging to private individuals, though each _real_ claimed was +given up, as was well known to every individual concerned, and he also +knew that I did not retain a penny on my own account. Nevertheless, he +added, that I had kept the whole myself,--that, in consequence, the +squadron was in a state of mutiny, and the seamen were abandoning their +ships to offer their services to the Government of Peru! the fact being, +that those who went on shore to spend their pay after the fashion of +sailors, were prevented from returning on board, a lieutenant of my +flag-ship being put in jail for attempting to bring them off again. + +The first intimation of this outrage was conveyed by the officer +himself, in the following letter, from his place of confinement. + + My Lord, + + Whilst obeying your Lordship's orders in bringing off the + men to the _O'Higgins_, Captain Guise sent his Lieutenant to tell me + that I could not ship any more men. My answer was, that, till I + received contrary orders from you I could not think of desisting. + I then went to Captain Guise to tell him your orders, and he told + me, that it was the Governor's order that I should not do it; he + likewise told me, that several officers had spoken against the + Government, instancing Captain Cobbett and others. He then + asked me, whether I thought that your Lordship's _robbery_! of the + money at Ancon was right? and, whether I believed that the + Government meant to keep its promise, and pay us, or not? My + answer was, that I thought your Lordship had acted perfectly right, + and that, in my opinion, the Government never intended to pay us; + upon which, he ordered me to be seized. + + My Lord, I am now a prisoner in the Case-mates, and am told + that the Governor has written to you on the subject. The men, my + Lord, will, I have no doubt, come off, as many have promised me to + do so, to-morrow morning. Hoping that your Lordship will enquire + into the circumstance, I remain, &c. &c, + + J. PAYNTOR. + +On receipt of this, I immediately demanded his release, which was +complied with. + +Before distributing the money to the squadron, I took the precaution to +request that a commissary of the Government might be sent on board to +take part in the payment of the crews. As this was not complied with, I +again urged it, but without effect--the object of not attending to the +request being, as was afterwards learned, the expectation that I should +place the money in his hands ashore, when it doubtless would have been +seized, without payment to officers or men. This was, however, foreseen, +the Government being informed by me that "the money was on board ready +for distribution, whilst the people were on board ready to receive it, +there was, therefore no necessity to take it on shore;" it was then +distributed by my own officers. + +Annoyed beyond measure at my having taken such steps to restore order in +the squadron by doing justice to the officers and men, the Protector, on +the very day, September 26th, on which he told me by letter to "make +what use I pleased of the money," sought to revenge himself by sending +on board the ships of the squadron his two _aides-de-camp_, Colonel +Paroissien and Captain Spry, with papers for distribution, stating that +"the squadron of Chili was under the command of the Protector of Peru, +and not under that of the Admiral, who was an inferior officer in the +service; and that it was consequently the duty of the Captains and +Commanders to obey the orders of the Protector and not mine." One of +these papers was immediately brought to me by that excellent and highly +honourable officer, Captain Simpson, of the _Araucano_ (now an Admiral +in the Chilian service), to whose ship's company it had been delivered. +These emissaries offered, in the name of the Protector, commissions, and +the promise of honours, titles, and estates to all such officers as +might accept service under the Government of Peru. + +From the _Araucano_, the Protector's envoys went to the _Valdivia_, +where similar papers were given to the men, and Captain Cobbett, nephew +of the celebrated William Cobbett, was reminded of the preference which +an officer, for his own interests, ought to give to the service of a +rich state like Peru, in place of adhering to Chili, which must soon +dwindle to comparative insignificance; besides which the authority of +the Protector over the Chilian forces being unquestionable, it was the +duty of the officers to obey the orders of the Protector as +General-in-Chief. Captain Cobbett, who was a faithful and excellent +officer, sarcastically inquired of Spry whether, if his disobedience to +the Admiral brought him to a court-martial, the Protector's authority +would ensure him an acquittal? This closed the argument; for Spry being +at the time under sentence of court-martial, the question was much too +pertinent to be pleasant, especially as he by no means felt confident +that Cobbett might not seize him as a deserter. + +Unfortunately for the emissaries, my flag-captain, Crosbie, was on a +visit to Captain Cobbett, and on learning their errand he pushed off to +the flag-ship with the intelligence. Observing this movement they +immediately followed, judging it more prudent to visit me than to run +the risk of being compelled so to do. At one o'clock in the morning +their boat came alongside, when Paroissien solicited an interview, Spry +remaining in the boat, having his own reasons for not wishing to attract +my attention. Paroissien then addressed me with the most high-flown +promises, assuring me of the Protector's wish, notwithstanding all that +had occurred, to confer upon me the highest honours and rewards, amongst +others the decoration of the newly-created order of "the Sun," and +telling me how much better it would be for me to be First Admiral of a +rich country like Peru, than Vice-Admiral of a poor province like Chili. +He assured me, as one of the Commissioners of confiscated property, that +it was the intention of the Protector to present me with a most valuable +estate, and regretted that the present unlucky difference should form an +obstacle to the Protector's intentions to confer upon me the command of +the Peruvian navy. + +Perceiving that he felt nervously uneasy in his attempt at negotiation, +I reminded him that the Peruvian navy had no existence except in +imagination; that I had no doubt whatever of his desire for my +prosperity, but that it might be more agreeable to him to join me in a +bottle of wine than to reiterate his regrets and lamentations. After +taking a glass he went into his boat, and pulled off, glad no doubt to +escape so easily, not that it occurred to me to resent the treachery of +visiting the ships of the squadron in the dark, to unsettle the minds of +the officers and men. + +This, however, and other efforts proved but too successful, twenty-three +officers abandoning the Chilian service, together with all the foreign +seamen, who went on shore to spend their pay, and who were either +forced, or allured by promises of a year's additional pay to remain, so +that the squadron was half unmanned. + +The fortress, notwithstanding the supplies so successfully introduced by +General Cantarac, having again--by the vigilance of the squadron--been +starved into surrender, I received an order immediately to quit Callao +and proceed to Chili, although the Peruvian Government believed that +from the abandonment of the squadron by the officers and foreign seamen, +it would not be possible to comply with the order. The following is +Monteagudo's letter conveying the commands of the Protector:-- + + Lima, Sept. 26th, 1821. + My Lord, + + Your note of yesterday, in which you explain the motives + which induced you to decline complying with the positive orders of + the Protector, _temporarily_ to restore the money which you forcibly + took at Ancon, has frustrated the hopes which the Government + entertained of a happy termination to this most disagreeable of all + affairs which have occurred during the expedition. + + To answer your Excellency in detail, it will be necessary to enter + into an investigation of acts which cannot be fully understood without + referring to official communications and documents which prove + the interest which has been taken in the necessities of the squadron. + + (Here follows a reiteration of the _promises_ and good intentions of + the Protector, with which the reader is already well acquainted.) + + This has been a mortal blow to the State, and worse could not + have been received from the hand of an enemy, there only remaining + to us a hope in the moderation and patient suffering of the + valiant men who have sacrificed all! + + You will immediately sail from this port to Chili, with the whole + squadron under your command, and there deliver up the money + which you have seized, and which you possess without any pretext + to hold it. In communicating this order to your Excellency, the + Government cannot avoid expressing its regret at being reduced to + this extremity towards a chief with whom it has been connected by + ties of friendship and high consideration since August 20th, 1820. + + I have to complain of the style of your Excellency's Secretary, + who, perhaps from his ignorance of the idiom of the Spanish + language, cannot express himself with decency--his soul not having + been formed to conceive correct ideas. + + MONTEAGUDO. + +The complaining tone of this letter about the "valiant sacrificing all," +is worthy of the writer; when I had left untouched many times the amount +seized, and the army, according to the admission of the Protectoral +Government, had received two-thirds of its pay, whilst the squadron had +even been suffered to starve. On the 28th I replied to the Minister as +follows:-- + + Sir, + + I should have felt uneasy, had the letter you addressed + to me contained the commands of the Protector to quit the ports of + Peru without reason assigned, and I should have been distressed + had his motives been founded in reason, or on facts; but finding + the order based on the groundless imputation that I had declined to + do what I had no power to effect, I console myself that the Protector + will ultimately be satisfied that no blame rests on me. At all + events, I have the gratification of a mind unconscious of wrong, and + gladdened by the cheering conviction that, however facts may be + distorted by sycophancy, men who view things in their proper + colours will do me the justice I deserve. + + You address me as though I required to be convinced of your + good intentions. No, Sir, it is the seamen who want convincing, + for it is they who put no faith in professions so often broken. They + are men of few words and decisive acts, and say that "for their + labour they have a right to pay and food, and will work no longer + than they are paid and fed"--though this may be uncourtly + language, unfit for the ear of high authority. They urge, moreover, + that they have had no pay whatever, whilst their fellow-labourers, + the soldiers, have had two-thirds of their wages; they were starved, + or living on stinking _charqui_, whilst the troops were wholly fed on + beef and mutton; they had no grog, whilst the troops had money + to obtain that favourite beverage, and anything else they desired. + Such, Sir, are the rough grounds on which an English seaman + founds his opinions. He expects an equivalent for the fulfilment + of his contract, which, on his part, is performed with fidelity; but, + if his rights are withheld, he is as boisterous as the element on + which he lives. It is of no use, therefore, to convince me, but + them. + + In what communication, Sir, have I insisted on the payment of + 200,000 dollars. I sent you an account of money due, but told you + in my letter that it was the mutinous seamen who demanded the + disbursements, and that I was doing all in my power, though + without effect, to restrain their violence and allay their fears. You + tell me in your letter that it was impossible to pay the clamorous + crews. How, then, is it _that they are now paid out of the very money + then_ lying at your disposal, I having left untouched ten times as much? + My warning to you, that they were no longer to be trifled with, was + founded on a long acquaintance with their character and disposition; + and facts have proved, and may more fully prove, the truth of what + I told you. + + Why, Sir, is the word "immediate" put into your order to go + forth from this port? Would it not have been more decorous to + have been less peremptory, knowing, as you do, that the delay of + payment had unmanned the ships--that the total disregard of all + my applications had left the squadron destitute--and that the men + were enticed away by persons acting under the Peruvian Government? + This being so, why are matters pushed to this extremity? + + I thank you for the _approval of my services since the 20th of + August_, 1820, and assure you that no abatement of my zeal for the + Protector's interest took place till the 5th of August, when I became + acquainted with his Excellency's installation, and when, in your + presence, he uttered sentiments that struck a thrill through my + frame, which no subsequent act, nor protestation of intentions, has + been able to mitigate. Did he not say--aye, did you not hear him + declare, that he would never pay the debt to Chili, nor that due to + the navy, unless Chili would sell the squadron to Peru? What + would you have thought of me as an officer, sworn to be faithful to + the state of Chili, had I listened to such language in cold, calculating + silence, weighing my decision in the scale of personal interest? + No, Sir, the promise of San Martin, that "my fortune should be + equal to his own," will not warp from the path of honour + + Your obedient, humble Servant, + COCHRANE. + +After a lapse of nearly forty years' anxious consideration, I cannot +reproach myself with having done any wrong in the seizure of the money +of the Protectoral Government. General San Martin and myself had been, +in our respective departments, deputed to liberate Peru from Spain, and +to give to the Peruvians the same free institutions which Chili herself +enjoyed. The first part of our object had been fully effected by the +achievements and vigilance of the squadron; the second part was +frustrated by General San Martin arrogating to himself despotic power, +which set at naught the wishes and voice of the people. As "my fortune +in common with his own" was only to be secured by acquiescence in the +wrong he had done to Chili by casting off his allegiance to her, and by +upholding him in the still greater wrong he was inflicting on Peru, I +did not choose to sacrifice my self-esteem and professional character by +lending myself as an instrument to purposes so unworthy. I did all in my +power to warn General San Martin of the consequences of ambition so +ill-directed, but the warning was neglected, if not despised. Chili +trusted to him to defray the expenses of the squadron when its +objects--as laid down by the Supreme Director--should be accomplished; +but in place of fulfilling the obligation, he permitted the squadron to +starve, its crews to go in rags, and the ships to be in perpetual danger +for want of the proper equipment which Chili could not afford to give +them when they sailed from Valparaiso. The pretence for this neglect was +want of means, though at the same time money to a vast amount was sent +away from the capital to Ancon. Seeing that no intention existed on the +part of the Protector's Government to do justice to the Chilian +squadron, whilst every effort was made to excite discontent among the +officers and men with the purpose of procuring their transfer to Peru, I +seized the public money, satisfied the men, and saved the navy to the +Chilian Republic, which afterwards warmly thanked me for what I had +done. Despite the obloquy cast upon me by the Protector's Government, +there was nothing wrong in the course I pursued, if only for the reason +that if the Chilian squadron was to be preserved, _it was impossible for +me to have done otherwise_. Years of reflection have only produced the +conviction, that, were I again placed in similar circumstances, I should +adopt precisely the same course. + + + + +CHAPTER IX. + +ARRIVAL AT GUAYAQUIL--ADDRESS TO GUAYAQUILENOS--INJURIOUS MONOPOLIES +--MINISTERIAL FOLLY--DEPARTURE FROM GUAYAQUIL--ARRIVAL IN +MEXICO--ANCHOR AT ACAPULCO--MOCK AMBASSADORS--PLOT AGAINST ME--RETURN +TO GUAYAQUIL--VENGANZA TAKEN POSSESSION OF--AGREEMENT WITH +JUNTA--GENERAL LA MAR--ORDERS TO WITHHOLD SUPPLIES--ABOMINABLE +CRUELTY--COURTLY SPLENDOUR--DESTRUCTION OF A DIVISION OF THE +ARMY--DISSATISFACTION OF OFFICERS--RENEWED OVERTURES FROM SAN +MARTIN--THEIR REFUSAL BY ME--WARNING TO THE CHILIAN GOVERNMENT. + + +The orders of the Protector to proceed to Chili were not complied with, +1st, because having thrown off his allegiance to Chili, he had no right +to interfere with the squadron; and, 2ndly, as the Spanish frigates +remained at large, my mission was incomplete till they were taken or +destroyed. + +Before going in quest of them, it was essential to repair, equip, and +provision the ships, none of which purposes could be effected in Peru, +the Protector not only having refused supplies, but having also issued +orders on the coast to withhold necessaries of all kinds even to wood +and water. From want of stores, none of the ships were fit for sea; even +the _Valdivia_, so admirably found when captured, was now in as bad a +condition as the rest, from the necessity which had arisen of +distributing her equipment amongst the other ships; and to complete her +inefficiency, the Protector refused to restore the anchors which had +been cut away from her bows at the time of her capture, thus adding to +our embarrassment. + +Many of the officers had gone over to the service of Peru, and the +foreign seamen had been kept on shore in such numbers, that there were +not sufficient left to perform the duties of reefing and steering. I +therefore resolved on sending part of the squadron to Chili, and with +the remainder to proceed to Guayaquil, in order to repair and refit for +a cruise on the coast of Mexico in search of the Spanish frigates. + +We reached Guayaquil on the 18th of October, and were extremely well +received by the authorities, who saluted the Chilian flag, the like +compliment being paid to their own. The work of repairing and refitting +occupied six weeks, during which period the newly-constituted Government +rendered us all the assistance in its power, entering into the most +friendly intercourse with us. The expenses, which were heavy, were all +defrayed out of the uncondemned prize-money remaining on board, this +rightfully belonging to the officers and seamen, as never having had +their previous claims satisfied by the Government, on which account it +had been retained. To inspire the seamen with the reasonable expectation +that the Chilian Government would reimburse them for their generosity, I +added money of my own, on which they willingly consented to the +appropriation of that due to the squadron. + +Before quitting the anchorage, I was honoured with a public address, and +thinking the opportunity good for striking a blow at those Spanish +prejudices which, in spite of independence, still lingered from force of +habit, the compliment was returned by the following address:-- + + GUAYAQUILENOS, + + The reception which the Chilian squadron has met + with from you not only shews the generosity of your sentiments, but + proves that a people capable of asserting their independence in spite + of arbitrary power must always possess noble and exalted feelings. + Believe me, that the state of Chili will ever be grateful for your + assistance, and more especially the Supreme Director, by whose + exertions the squadron was created, and to whom, in fact, South + America owes whatever benefit she may have derived from its + services. + + May you be as free as you are independent, and as independent + as you deserve to be free! With the liberty of the press, now + protected by your excellent Government, which discriminates + enlightenment from that fount, Guayaquil can never again be + enslaved. + + See what difference a year of independence has produced in public + opinion. In those whom you then looked upon as enemies, you have + discovered your truest friends, whilst those formerly esteemed as + friends have proved enemies. Remember your former ideas on + commerce and manufactures, and compare them with those which + you at present entertain. Accustomed to the blind habits of Spanish + monopoly, you then believed that Guayaquil would be robbed, were + not her commerce limited to her own merchants. All foreigners + were forbidden by restrictive laws from attending even to their own + business and interests: now you appreciate a true policy, and your + enlightened Government is ready to further public opinion in the + promotion of your riches, strength, and happiness, as well as to assist + these, by disseminating through the press the political opinions of + great and wise men--without fear of the Inquisition, the faggot, or + the stake. + + It is very gratifying to me to observe the change which has taken + place in your ideas of political economy, and to see that you can + appreciate and despise the clamour of the few who would still interrupt + the public prosperity; though it is difficult to believe how any + citizen of Guayaquil can be capable of opposing his private interest + to the public good, as though his particular profit were superior to + that of the community, or as if commerce, agriculture, and manufactures + were to be paralysed for his especial behoof. + + Guayaquilenos! Let your public press declare the consequences of + monopoly, and affix your names to the defence of your enlightened + system. Let it shew that, if your province contains 80,000 inhabitants, + and that if 80 of these are privileged merchants according to + the old system, 9,999 persons out of 10,000 must suffer because + their cotton, coffee, tobacco, timber, and other productions must + come into the hands of the monopolist, as the only purchaser of + what they have to sell, and the only seller of what they must + necessarily buy! the effect being that he will buy at the lowest + possible rate, and sell at the dearest, so that not only are the + 9,999 injured, but the lands will remain waste, the manufactories + without workmen, and the people will be lazy and poor for want of + a stimulus, it being a law of nature that no man will labour solely + for the gain of another. + + Tell the monopolist that the true method of acquiring general + riches, political power, and even his own private advantage, is to sell + his country's produce as high, and foreign goods as low as possible--and + that public competition can alone accomplish this. Let foreign + merchants who bring capital, and those who practise any art or + handicraft, be permitted to settle freely; and thus a competition + will be formed, from which all must reap advantage. + + Then will land and fixed property increase in value; the + magazines, instead of being the receptacles of filth and crime, will + be full of the richest foreign and domestic productions, and all will + be energy and activity, because the reward will be in proportion to + the labour. Your river will be filled with ships, and the monopolist + degraded and shamed. You will bless the day in which Omnipotence + permitted the veil of obscurity to be rent asunder, under which the + despotism of Spain, the abominable tyranny of the Inquisition, and + the want of liberty of the press, so long hid the truth from your + sight. + + Let your customs' duties be moderate, in order to promote the + greatest possible consumption of foreign and domestic goods; then + smuggling will cease, and the returns to the treasury increase. Let + every man do as he pleases as regards his own property, views, and + interests; because every individual will watch over his own with + more zeal than senates, ministers, or kings. By your enlarged + views set an example to the New World; and thus, as Guayaquil + is from its situation the _Central Republic_, it will become the centre + of the agriculture, commerce, and riches of the Pacific. + + Guayaquilenos! The liberality of your sentiments, and the justice + of your acts and opinions, are a bulwark to your independence more + secure than that of armies and squadrons. That you may pursue + the path which will render you as free and happy as the territory is + fertile, and may be rendered productive, is the sincere wish of your + obliged friend and servant, + + COCHRANE. + +The English reader may consider a lecture of this nature superfluous to +an emancipated people, but the adherence to injurious monoplies, in +spite of independence, was one of the most marked features of the South +American Republics, and one which I never lost an opportunity of +combating. Even the Chilian Republic, which was amongst the first to +assert its freedom, increased its monopolistic practices, instead of +diminishing them. One or two examples will not be here out of place. + +English malt liquor bore a very high price in Chili, from the heavy +freight and customs' duties. An ingenious Scotchman, named Macfarlane, +set up a brewery at considerable expense, and malt costing in Chili +barely a shilling per _fanega_ (about a bushel), soon produced beer of a +fine quality, at a low price. The Government forthwith imposed a duty on +his beer equal to the whole freight from England, customs' dues, and his +profit, the consequence being, that the brewery was stopped and the +capital employed lost. He had unwittingly interfered with the +established duties on beer! + +Some enterprising Americans formed a whale fishery on the Chilian coast +near Coquimbo, where the sperm whale abounded, and so successful was the +fishery, that the speculation promised a fortune to all concerned. A +large plant had been provided, including abundance of casks to contain +the oil. The Government directed the whole of the casks to be seized for +the purpose of watering the squadron, that being easier than to provide +them themselves, which being done, pursuant to orders, the Americans +formed pits lined with clay, in which the oil was put till fresh casks +could be procured. On this, the Governor of Coquimbo forbade the +practice, as the wind might waft an unpleasant smell to Coquimbo, though +the trade wind never blew in that direction. The Americans were +therefore compelled to abandon the pursuit, and with it several sperm +whales which were lying in the bay ready for boiling. + +An enterprising English engineer, Mr. Miers, brought out complete +machinery for smelting, rolling, and manufacturing copper, purchasing +land whereon to erect his factory. As soon as his purpose became known, +he was involved in a long and expensive law-suit to prevent the use of +the land which he had bought, the result being great pecuniary loss, +complete prevention of his operations, and the final removal of such of +his machinery as was not utterly spoiled, to Brazil. + +It would be easy to multiply similar instances to a great extent, but +these will show that my advice to the Guayaquilenos was not unnecessary; +and to give counsel of this nature, wherever it could be applied, was my +invariable practice, in place of engaging in petty intrigues, or +bargaining for personal power or advantages, which, situated as I was, I +could have commanded to any extent by a sacrifice of my own principles. +Efforts of the above nature to enlighten the people, rendered me +obnoxious to men in power, as interfering with their cherished +monoplies, out of which they contrived to extract individual profit. + +The necessity for a speedy pursuit of the enemy's frigates, precluded +more than a temporary repair of the ships; nothing, indeed, had been +done to remedy the leak in the hull of the flag-ship, as, from the +rotten state of her masts, we durst not venture to heave her down, so +that when we got in a sea-way she made six feet of water a day. + +We quitted the Guayaquil river on the 3rd of December, coasting along +the shore, and examining every bay for the objects of our search. On the +5th we reached Salango, where we again watered the ships, there being +only twenty-three tons of water casks on board the flag-ship. On the +11th we reached Cocos Island, when we found and took possession of an +English pirate, commanded by a man, named Blair. On the following day we +captured a _felucca_, which turned out to be a deserter from Callao. +From the men on board we learned that, after my departure, San Martin +had refused to fulfil the promises by which they had been induced to +remain, though he had thus allured nearly the whole of the foreign +seamen, who comprised the only skilled portion of the Chilian squadron, +into the service of Peru. The _felucca_ thus manned, and sent as a +_guarda costa_ to Chorillas, the men took advantage of the absence of +their captain on shore, and seized the vessel, which they named the +_Retaliation_, having put to sea, no doubt with the intention of turning +pirates. As they had committed no depredations, and I had no wish to be +encumbered with them, they were suffered to escape. + +On the 14th we made the coast of Mexico, the leak of the flag-ship daily +increasing, and on the 19th we anchored in the bay of Fonseca, with five +feet of water in the hold, the chain pumps being so worn as to be +useless, there being no artificers on board to repair them, the ship was +only kept afloat by the greatest possible exertions, in which my +personal skill in smiths' work had to be called into requisition. + +After three days' constant baling at the hatchways, we got two pumps +from the _Valdivia_; but these proving too short, I ordered holes to be +cut through the ships' sides, on a level with the berth deck, and thus +managed to keep her clear till the old pumps could be refitted. Nearly +all our ammunition was spoiled, and, in order to preserve the dry +provisions, we were compelled to stow them in the hammock-nettings. + +Having transferred forty men from the other ships to assist at the +pumps, we quitted Fonseca bay on the 28th, and on the 6th of January, +1822, arrived at Tehuantepec, a volcano lighting us every night. This +was one of the most imposing sights I ever beheld; large streams of +molten lava pouring down the sides of the mountain, whilst at +intervals, huge masses of solid burning matter were hurled into the air, +and rebounding from their fall, ricocheted down the declivity till they +found a resting place at its base. + +On the 29th we anchored at Acapulco, where we met the _Araucano_ and +_Mercedes_, the latter having been sent on to gain intelligence of the +Spanish frigates. We were civilly received by the Governor, though not +without misgivings, on his part, that we might attempt to seize some +Spanish merchantmen at anchor in the harbour; so that we found the fort +manned by a strong garrison, and other preparations made to receive us +in case of hostile demonstration. + +We were not a little surprised at this, as nothing could be more +friendly than our intentions towards the newly emancipated Republic. The +mystery was, however, soon cleared up. When at Guayaquil, we met with +two officers, General Wavell and Colonel O'Reilly, to whom the Chilian +Government had given passports to quit the country, not estimating the +value of their services as tantamount to their pay. As no secret was +made of the object of the Chilian squadron, they had, owing to our delay +on the coast, carried their own version of our mission to Mexico, and +had reported to the Mexican Government, both personally and by letter, +that Lord Cochrane had possessed himself of the Chilian Navy,--plundered +the vessels belonging to Peru,--was now on a piratical cruise,--and was +coming to ravage the coast of Mexico; hence the preparations which had +been made. + +The two worthies whom I have mentioned had represented to the +authorities at Guayaquil that they were ambassadors from Chili to +Mexico, deputed to congratulate the Mexican Government on their +achievement of independence. Knowing this to be false, I requested them +to shew their credentials, which of course they could not do. Their +passports were then demanded, and evinced by their dates that the +pretended ambassadors had quitted Chili prior to the intelligence of the +establishment of independence in Mexico. This disclosure having become +known to the lady of the Captain-General of Guatemala, who happened to +be at Guayaquil, she forwarded the account to her husband, and he +reported it to the Mexican authorities, who were thus informed of the +true character of their visitors; who, in revenge, trumped up the story +of our piratical intentions, to which the Governor of Acapulco attached +sufficient importance to strengthen his forts as narrated. + +The reserve, however, immediately wore off, and the most cordial +relations were entered into; the President of Mexico, Iturbide, writing +me a very polite letter, regretting that he could not visit me +personally, but inviting me to repair to his court, assuring me of the +most honourable reception. This, of course, I could not accept. + +On the 2nd of February, a vessel arrived at Acapulco, and reported the +Spanish frigates to the southward, whither, notwithstanding the +unseaworthy state of the ships, I determined to proceed in search of +them. + +During our stay an officer of marines, named Erescano--who by cruelty to +his prisoners had made himself notorious at Valdivia--endeavoured to +revenge my disapprobation of his conduct by representing to the men, +that, notwithstanding the expenses we had been put to, there was still +money on board the flag-ship, and that it ought to be divided amongst +them. Failing in this, he had laid a plot to get possession of the +chest, even at the cost of my assassination. All this was duly reported +to me by the commander of the _Valdivia_, Captain Cobbett. + +As I did not wish to produce a ferment by punishing this diabolical plot +as it deserved, I contented myself with thwarting its execution, till we +were under weigh, when I ordered Captain Cobbett to send Erescano on +shore with a despatch to the Governor, detailing the whole plot; the +result being, that the traitor was left on shore, the squadron sailing +without him. What afterwards became of him I never heard. + +After despatching the _Independencia_ and _Araucano_ to California for +the purpose of purchasing provisions, with instructions to follow us to +Guayaquil, we stood down the coast, and when off Tehuantepec, +encountered a gale of wind, which, owing to the bad state of the +frigate, threatened her destruction. To add to our distress, a sea +struck the _Valdivia_--to which vessel we contemplated escaping--and +forced in the timbers on her port side, so that she was only saved from +sinking by passing a sail over the leak, till the damage could be +repaired. + +On the 5th of March we made the coast of Esmeraldas, and came to an +anchor in the bay of Tacames, where we learned that the Spanish frigates +had some time before left for Guayaquil. On receipt of this intelligence +we immediately pursued our voyage, and on the 13th anchored off the +forts of Guayaquil, where we found the _Venganza_. + +Our reception was not of the same cordial nature as on the previous +visit--two agents of San Martin having arrived, who by promises had +gained over the Government to the Protector's interests, and had excited +in their minds a jealousy of me which was as unexpected as ill-founded. +Some attempts were even made to annoy me; but as, upon their +manifestation, I laid the flag-ship alongside the _Venganza_, civility +was enforced. + +The _Prueba_ and _Venganza_, being short of provisions, were compelled +by our close pursuit, to put into Guayaquil, daily expecting us to +follow. Previous to our arrival, the Peruvian envoy, Salasar, had so +impressed upon the officers commanding the certainty of their being +captured by the Chilian squadron, that he had induced them to give up +the ships to Peru, on the promise that the Protectoral Government would +pay the whole of the officers and crews all the arrears due to them, and +that those who chose to remain in South America should be naturalized, +with lands and pensions assigned to them; whilst such as were desirous +of returning to Spain should have their passages defrayed by the +Peruvian Government. + +Many of the Spanish officers and most of the crews were adverse to the +surrender of the ships, so that a mutiny was the consequence; when, at +the instance of Salasar, the Government of Guayaquil was induced to +sanction an assertion that the Chilian squadron was at anchor in the bay +of La Manta, and that letters had been received from me announcing my +intention to come to Guayaquil and seize the ships. This mendacity had +the desired effect, and both officers and crews accepted the terms +offered; so that San Martin's agents had thus tricked the Chilian +squadron out of its prizes. + +Under the before-mentioned impression the _Prueba_ was hastily sent to +Callao before our arrival, but the _Venganza_, being in a condition +unfit for sea, remained at Guayaquil. On being positively assured of the +dishonourable transaction which had taken place, on the morning of the +14th of March I sent Captain Crosbie on board the _Venganza_ to take +possession, of her, for Chili and Peru jointly, being unwilling to +embroil Chili in hostilities with Guayaquil by seizing her on our own +account, as we were indisputably entitled to do, having chased her from +port to port, until, destitute of provisions, she was compelled to take +refuge in that port. + +My orders to Captain Crosbie were to hoist at the peak of the +_Venganza_, the flag of Chili conjointly with that of Peru. This act +gave great offence to the Guayaquil Government, which manned its +gun-boats, erected breast-works, and brought guns to the river side with +the apparent intention of firing upon us; the Spanish sailors, who +shortly before had sold their ships from the dread of having to fight, +being extremely active in these hostile demonstrations. + +Upon this, I ordered the _Valdivia_ to drift with the flood tide in the +direction of the gun-boats, now filled with Spanish officers and seamen. +Imagining that the frigate was about to attack them--though there was no +intention of the kind--these heroes ran the boats ashore, and took to +their heels in most admired disorder, not stopping till they had gained +the protection of the city. + +The Junta, finding that we did not consider their warlike demonstration +worthy of notice, remonstrated at my taking possession of the +_Venganza_, but without effect, as I was not going to permit the Chilian +squadron to be thus cheated out of its prize. I therefore proposed such +terms as were best calculated to be accepted and ratified by the Junta +of Government, composed of Olmedo, Kimena, and Roco, as follows:-- + + 1st.--The frigate _Venganza_ shall remain as belonging to the + Government of Guayaquil, and shall hoist her flag, which shall be + duly saluted. + + 2nd.--Guayaquil guarantees to the Chilian squadron, on responsibility + of 40,000 dollars, that the frigate _Venganza_ shall not be + delivered to, nor negotiated for with any Government, till those of + Chili and Peru shall have decided on what they may esteem most + just. Moreover, the Government of Guayaquil is bound to destroy + her rather than consent that the said vessel shall serve any other + state till such decision be made. + + _3rd_.--Any Government which may henceforward be established + in Guayaquil shall be bound to the fulfilment of the articles here + made. + + _4th_.--These articles shall be understood literally, and in good + faith, without mental reservations or restrictions. + + (Signed) &c. &c. + +After the ratification of this agreement, the Government of Guayaquil +addressed to me a letter acknowledging the important services which had +been conferred on the States of South America, and assuring me that +"Guayaquil would always be the first to honour my name, and the last to +forget my unparalleled achievements," &c, &c. Yet no sooner had I sailed +from the port, than the _Venganza_ was given up to the agent of Peru, +but the 40,000 dollars have never been paid. + +At Guayaquil, I met General La Mar, the late governor of the fortress of +Callao; and a report having been circulated by the Peruvian Government +that during the recent blockade I had made an offer to supply the +fortress with provisions, in order to prevent its falling into the hands +of the Protector, I requested the General to favour me with a statement +whether I did or did not promise to succour his garrison, to which +request the General obligingly returned the following answer:-- + + Guayaquil, March 13th, 1823. + Most Excellent Sir, + + In consequence of the official note which I yesterday + received from your Excellency through the hands of the Government, + it is my duty to assert that I have neither said, nor written, + nor ever heard that you proposed to supply with provisions the place + of Callao during the whole of the time that it was under my charge. + God preserve your Excellency many years. + + (Signed) JOSE DE LA MAR. + +On the 27th we left the Guayaquil river, and on the 29th fell in with +Captain Simpson, of the _Araucano_, whose crew had mutinied and carried +off the ship. On the 12th of April we reached Guambucho, whither we had +gone for the purpose of taking in water. To our surprise the Alcalde +shewed a written order from San Martin, telling him that if any vessel +of war belonging to Chili touched there he was to forbid their landing, +and to deny assistance of every kind, not even permitting them to obtain +wood and water. + +To this order no attention was paid by us, and we took on board whatever +was required, remaining further to repair the _Valdivia_. On the 16th we +sailed, and on the 25th anchored at Callao, where we found the _Prueba_ +under Peruvian colours, and commanded by the senior Chilian captain, who +had abandoned the squadron! On our arrival she was immediately hauled in +close under the batteries, with guns housed, and ports closed, whilst +she was so crammed with troops that three died on the following night +from suffocation; these steps being taken to prevent her sharing the +fate of the _Esmeralda_. To calm their fears, I wrote to the Government +that there was no intention of taking her, otherwise I would have done +so, and at midday too in spite of any such precautions. + +Lima was at this time in an extraordinary condition, there being no less +than five different Peruvian flags flying in the bay and on the +batteries. The Protector had passed a decree ordering that all Spaniards +who might quit the place should surrender half their property to the +public treasury, or the whole should be confiscated, and the owners +exiled. Another decree imposed the penalties of exile and confiscation +of property upon all Spaniards who should appear in the streets wearing +a cloak; also against any who should be found in private conversation! +The punishment of death was awarded against all who should be out of +their houses after sunset; and confiscation and death were pronounced on +all who possessed any kind of weapons except table-knives! A wealthy +lady in Lima was so annoyed at the rigour of these decrees, that her +patriotism overcame her prudence, and having called the Protector ill +names, she was compelled to give up her property. She was then habited +in the garb of the Inquisition,--a garment painted with imaginary +devils!--and taken to the great square, where an accusatory libel being +fastened to her breast, a human bone was forced into her mouth--her +tongue being condemned as the offending member--and then secured; in +which state, with a halter round her neck, she was paraded through the +streets by the common hangman, and afterwards exiled to Callao, where +after two days she died from mental anguish arising from the treatment +she had received. Such was the liberty conceded to Peru. + +In the midst of this national degradation, the Protector had assumed the +style of a Sovereign Prince. An order of nobility was established, under +the title of "The Institute of the Sun," the insignia being a golden sun +suspended from a white ribbon, the Chilian officers who had abandoned +the squadron coming in for a full share as the reward of their +subserviency. + +A quasi-royal guard was established, consisting of the leading youth of +the city, who formed the Protector's escort in public; a precaution +which, notwithstanding that the exasperated Limenos were weaponless, was +not altogether unnecessary. The Solar nobility were permitted to place +their armorial bearings in front of their houses, with the sun blazoned +in the centre, which was certainly an addition to, if not an improvement +on all previous orders of nobility. In short, the Limenos had a Republic +swarming with marquises, counts, viscounts, and other titles of +monarchy, to which consummation all expected the Protector to aspire; +the more so, as the only unfettered portion of the press was that which +saluted him under the title of Emperor. (_See Appendix, Ode of "The +Dove," sung in celebration, of our Protector and Emperor of Peru!_) + +The strength of a State so constituted did not keep pace with the +brilliancy of its court. On the 7th of April, General Cantarac had +fallen upon a division of the liberating army, and cut up or made +prisoners of the whole, capturing 5,000 muskets, the military chest, +containing 100,000 dollars, and all their ammunition and baggage. It +would have been thought that so serious a disaster occurring amongst a +justly-exasperated people would have caused some embarrassment to the +Government, but the Gazette of the 13th of April almost turned it into +matter for congratulation. + + LIMENOS, + + The division of the south, _without having been beaten_, has + been surprised and dispersed. In a long campaign all cannot be + prosperity. You know _my_ character, and you know that _I_ have + always spoken the truth! I do not mean to search for consolation + in conflicts, notwithstanding, I dare to assure you, that the iniquitous + and tyrannical empire of the Spaniards in Peru will cease in the + year 1823. I will make an ingenuous confession to you. It was + my intention to go in search of repose after so many years of agitation, + but I believed your independence was not secured. Some + trifling danger now presents itself, and so long as there remains the + least appearance of it, till you are free you shall not be left by your + faithful friend, + + SAN MARTIN. + +His proclamation to the army is still more extraordinary:-- + + Companions of the United Army, + + Your brothers in the division of the south + have not been beaten--but they have been dispersed. To you it + belongs to revenge this insult. You are valiant, and have known + long ago the path to glory. Sharpen well your bayonets and your + swords. The campaign of Peru shall finish in this year. Your old + general assures it. Prepare to conquer! + + SAN MARTIN. + +To the inhabitants of the interior, proclamations of a still more +bombastic nature were despatched, in which they were assured that a +reverse of this kind "weighed nothing in the balance of destiny of Peru. +Providence protects us, and by this action will accelerate the ruin of +the enemies of Peru. Proud of their first victory, _they will spare us +part of our march in search of them_. Fear not! the army that _drove +them from the capital_ is ready to punish them a third time, and to +punish them for ever!" + +The army, however, rightly dreaded another reverse, and what remained of +the Chilian force was discontented, as no promise to them had been +fulfilled. All gold and silver had disappeared, and paper money was +issued by the Government in its stead. Contributions from the already +drained inhabitants were increased, and had to be collected at the point +of the bayonet. In short, on my arrival, Peru presented the +extraordinary spectacle of a court whose minions indulged in every +species of costly luxury, and a people impoverished to the dregs to +administer to their rapacity. + +Those who had condemned my conduct in taking possession of the money at +Ancon, now admitted that I had adopted the only possible step to +preserve the squadron of Chili. The officers of the liberating army sent +me deplorable accounts of the state of affairs; and the regiment of +Numantia, which had deserted from the Spaniards soon after the capture +of the _Esmeralda_, sent an officer, Captain Doronso, with a message, +asking me to receive them on board, and convey them to Colombia, to +which province they belonged. + +My appearance in the port of Callao caused serious, though, as far as I +was concerned, unnecessary alarm to the Government, to which I +transmitted a fresh demand for the sums due to the squadron, further +alluding, in no measured language, to the events which had taken place +at Guayaquil. Without replying to this by letter, Monteagudo came off to +the _O'Higgins_, lamenting that I should have resorted to such +intemperate expressions, as the Protector, before its receipt, had +written me a private letter praying for an interview, but on the receipt +of my note he became so indignant as to place his health in danger. +Monteagudo further assured me that in that letter he had made me the +offer of a large estate, and the decoration of the "Sun" set in +diamonds, if I would consent to command the united navies of Chili and +Peru, in a contemplated expedition to capture the Philippine Islands, by +which I should make an immense fortune. My reply was, "Tell the +Protector from me, Mr. Monteagudo, that if, after the conduct he has +pursued he had sent me a private letter, on any such subject, it would +certainly have been returned unanswered; and you may also tell him, that +it is not my wish to injure him; I neither fear him nor hate him, but I +disapprove of his conduct." + +Monteagudo, in spite of his reception, begged of me to reconsider my +determination, saying that the Marquis of Torre Tagle had got ready his +house for my reception; asking me further to recal the letter I had +written the day before, and accept the offers which had been made. I +again told him that "I would not accept either honours or rewards from a +Government constituted in defiance of solemn pledges; nor would I set +foot in a country governed not only without law, but contrary to law. +Neither would I recal my letter, my habits were frugal, and my means +sufficient without a fortune from the Philippine Islands." Finding he +could make no impression upon me, and not liking the scowl on the +countenances of those on board, though he wore his blazing decoration +of the first order of the "Sun," and was covered with ribbons and +embroideries, the minister retired, accompanied by his military escort. + +Consequent upon my refusal to comply with his wishes the Protector +shortly afterwards, unknown to me, despatched Colonel Paroissien and +Garcia del Rio to Chili with a long series of the most preposterous +accusations, in which I was represented as having committed every +species of crime, from piracy to petty robbery; calling on the Chilian +Government to visit me with the severest punishment. + +On the 8th of May, the schooner _Montezuma_, which had been lent to +General San Martin by the Chilian Government, entered Callao _under +Peruvian colours_. The insolence of thus appropriating a vessel of my +squadron was too great for forbearance, so that I compelled her to come +to an anchor, though not before we were obliged to fire upon her. I then +turned all the officers ashore, and took possession of her; the +Protectoral authorities, by way of reprisal, detaining a boat belonging +to the flag-ship, and imprisoning the men; but, rightly calculating the +consequences of such a step, they were soon set at liberty, and the boat +was, on the same night, permitted to return to the ship. + +On the 10th of May we quitted Callao, and arrived at Valparaiso on the +13th of June, after an absence of a year and nine months, during which +the objects of the expedition had been completely accomplished. + +Having satisfied myself, that, from the oppression practised, the +Protectoral Government could not endure longer than the first favourable +opportunity for a general revolt which might present itself to the +Limenos, and judging that the fall of San Martin might involve serious +consequences to Chili, I had addressed the following letter to the +Supreme Director:-- + + _Private and confidential_. + Callao Roads, May 2, 1822. + Most Excellent Sir, + + You will perceive by my public despatches the points of + most interest as regards the proceedings of the squadron, and the + result of our pursuit of the enemy's frigates, _Prueba_ and _Venganza_, + both of which I have embargoed, the one at Guayaquil and the + other here, until your pleasure shall be known, whatever that may + be, whether to give up the squadron of Chili, or to bring those + vessels to you, shall be alike obeyed. + + San Martin has now laid down the external pomp of Protector, + and, like Cincinnatus, has withdrawn to retirement, but not with the + same view. This modesty is to captivate the crowd, who are to call + on him to convert the ploughshare _into an Imperial sceptre!_ I have + excellent information to this effect, having found means to obtain it + from behind the scenes of this political actor. + + Great hopes are entertained, from the mission to Chili, that + the squadron will at least be withdrawn, and that when the sun of + Peru shall rise on the ocean, the star (the national emblem of Chili) + which has hitherto shone, will be for ever eclipsed! Some spots + have, however, appeared on the sun's surface. Two thousand men + have ceased to see its light at Pasco; and the Numantian regiment, + once dazzled by its splendour, are about to grope their way to their + native land. + + As the attached and sincere friend of your Excellency, I hope you + will take into your serious consideration the propriety of at once + fixing the Chilian Government upon a base not to be shaken by the + fall of the present tyranny in Peru, of which there are not only + indications, but their result is inevitable; unless, indeed, the + mischievous counsels of vain and mercenary men can suffice to prop + up a fabric of the most barbarous political architecture, serving as + a screen from whence to dart their weapons against the heart of + liberty. Thank God, my hands are free from the stain of labouring + in any such work, and, having finished all which you gave me to do, + I may now rest till you shall command my further endeavours for + the honour and security of my adopted land. + + The enemy's forces, since the destruction of the division at Pasco, + under Tristan, are superior to those of San Martin at Lima, and are + said to be advancing on the capital. + + Everything being fully explained in my despatches, I need not + trouble your Excellency with a repetition. Trusting that you will + judge of my conduct and intentions by my acts--not by the vile + scandals of those who have deserted their flag, and set your + proclamations at defiance, + + I have the honor, &c, + COCHRANE. + + + + +CHAPTER X. + +RETURN TO VALPARAISO--THANKS OF THE GOVERNMENT--REASONS FOR +SATISFACTION--ILLEGITIMATE TRADE--TURNED TO GOOD ACCOUNT--DENUNCIATION +OF OFFICERS DESERTED--INVESTIGATION OF ACCOUNTS--SAN MARTIN'S CHARGES +AGAINST ME--MY REFUTATION--GOVERNMENT REFUSES ITS PUBLICATION--CRUELTY +TO SPANISH PRISONERS--RETIREMENT TO QUINTERO--POLITICAL FRUITS OF OUR +SUCCESS--DESTITUTE CONDITION OF SQUADRON--INFAMOUS ATTEMPT TO PROMOTE +DISSATISFACTION THEREIN--OBJECT OF THIS COURSE--STEPS TAKEN TO DEFEAT +IT--DISAVOWED BY THE MINISTER--SYMPATHY OF OFFICERS--ATTEMPT TO GET RID +OF GEN. FREIRE--ITS EVENTUAL RESULT--LETTER OF THE CAPTAINS. + + +On my arrival at Valparaiso, I found that San Martin's agents, +Paroissien and Garcia del Rio, had produced his accusations against me +to the Government at Santiago, though without effect, as I had taken +care to keep it apprised of everything which had transpired, exercising +the most scrupulous care in furnishing accounts of monies and stores +taken from the Spaniards, but especially as regarded the public money of +the Peruvian Government appropriated at Ancon. + +The return of the squadron was announced by me to the Government in the +following letter:-- + + The anxious desires of His Excellency the Supreme Director + are now fulfilled, and the sacrifices of the Chilian people are + rewarded. The naval power of Spain in the Pacific has succumbed + and is extinguished, the following vessels having surrendered to + the unceasing efforts of the squadron of this Free State:-- + + _Prueba_, 50 guns; _Esmeralda_, 44; _Venganza_, 44; _Resolution_, 34; + _Sebastiana_, 34; _Pesuela_, 18; _Potrillo_, 16; _Prosperina_ 14; + _Arausasu_; seventeen gun-boats; the armed ships _Aguila_ and + _Begonia_; the block ships at Callao; and many merchantmen. + + It is highly gratifying to me, after labouring under such difficulties + as were never before witnessed on board ships of war, to announce + the arrival of the Chilian squadron in Valparaiso--its cradle; where, + owing to its unceasing services in the cause of liberty and independence + of Chili, Peru, Colombia, and Mexico, it forms an object + of admiration and gratitude to the inhabitants of the New World. + + (Signed) COCHRANE. + +By the inhabitants of Valparaiso our return was hailed with every +manifestation of delight, almost every house in the place being +decorated with the patriot flag, whilst other demonstrations of national +joy showed the importance which the Chilian people attached to our +services, in spite of the obstacles which they well knew had been +opposed to them. + +On the 4th of June, the following letters of thanks were forwarded to +me:-- + + Ministry of Marine, + Santiago de Chili, June 4th, 1822. + Most Excellent Sir, + + The arrival of your Excellency at Valparaiso with the + squadron under your command, has given the greatest pleasure to + his Excellency the Supreme Director. In those feelings of gratitude + which the glory acquired by your Excellency during the late + campaign has excited, you will find the proof of that high + consideration which your heroic services so justly deserve. + + Among those who have a distinguished claim are the chiefs and + officers, who, faithful to their duty, have remained on board the + vessels of war of this State, a list of whom your Excellency has + honoured me by enclosing. These gentlemen will most assuredly + receive the recompense so justly due to their praiseworthy constancy. + + Be pleased to accept the assurance of my highest esteem. + + JOAQUIM DE ECHEVERRIA. + + His Excellency the Vice-Admiral and + Commander-in-Chief of the Squadron, + the Right Honourable Lord Cochrane. + +From the preceding letter it will be observed that my old opponent, +Zenteno, was no longer at the head of the Department of Marine, but was +appointed Governor of Valparaiso, where he exercised the office of +Port-Admiral, a position in which, with all his former enmity, he +contrived, notwithstanding the complete satisfaction of the Government +with my services, to give me great annoyance. + +In addition to the above acknowledgment of our services, a decree was +issued commanding a medal to be struck in commemoration thereof. + + Ministry of Marine, + Santiago de Chili, 19th June, 1822. + Most Excellent Sir, + + His Excellency the Supreme Director being desirous + of making a public demonstration of the high services that the + squadron has rendered to the nation, has resolved that a medal be + struck for the officers and crews of the squadron, with an inscription + expressive of the national gratitude towards the worthy supporters + of its maritime power. + + I have the honour to communicate this to your Excellency by + supreme command, and to offer you my highest respects. + + JOAQUIM DE ECHEVERRIA. + + His Excellency the Rt. Hon. Lord Cochrane, + Vice-Admiral and Commander-in-Chief, &c. &c. + +It is here observable, that whereas San Martin, on the occupation of +Lima, had caused a medal to be struck, arrogating the success of the +expedition entirely to the army, which had done little or nothing +towards it--leaving out all mention of the services of the squadron; the +Chilian Government gave the credit, as was deserved, to the +squadron--omitting all mention of the army, which remained under the +standard of the Protector. Nothing can be more conclusive as to the +opinions of the Chilian Government on the subject. + +Chili had indeed reason to be grateful, no less for the management than +the achievements of the squadron. I had now been in command something +more than two years and a half, during which we either took, destroyed, +or forced to surrender, every Spanish ship of war in the Pacific; the +whole of the west coast was cleared of pirates, which before abounded; +we had reduced unaided the most important fortresses of the enemy, +either by storm or blockade; the commerce both of Chili and neutral +powers had been protected; and the cause of independence placed on a +basis so firm, that nothing but folly or corruption could shake it. + +For these most important results, Chili had been at no cost whatever +beyond the original ineffective equipment of the ships. With the +exception of three or four cargoes of provisions sent to Callao, I had, +by my own exertions, for the whole period, provided for the maintenance +and subsistence of the squadron, its repairs, equipment, stores, +provisions, and pay, as far as the men had been paid; not a dollar +having been expended for these purposes by the Chilian Government, which +trusted--but in vain--to Peru. To have been ungrateful--as far as the +public expression of gratitude went, for other reward there was +none--would have been a national crime. + +As one of my modes of providing for the necessities of the squadron has +not been mentioned, it must be here given. + +Under the Spanish regime, no foreign vessel could trade at their ports +in the Pacific. But, for the sake of revenue as well as to obtain +supplies, it had become the practice of the Viceroy to sell licences, +enabling British merchants to employ British vessels in the Spanish +Colonial trade. These had to load in some port in Spain, and were there +furnished with legalized Spanish papers. + +Under the altered state of things in Chili, in order to secure such +vessels from capture by the Chilian ships of war, as having Spanish +property on board, the device of simulated papers was resorted to, +representing the cargoes as British property, coming from the port of +Gibraltar; one set of papers being used ashore, and the other afloat, or +as occasion required. Several British vessels had been detained by the +Chilian squadron, whereof the Spanish papers were found in the Peruvian +custom-houses when taken possession of; they were accordingly liable to +be libelled as Spanish property. + +In order, however, to land their cargoes in safety, the commanders and +supercargoes of such British vessels voluntarily offered terms which +should confer upon their trade a legitimate character, viz. to pay a +certain impost as an equivalent for customs' duties. I accepted these +terms as furnishing me with means to supply the necessities and defray +the expenses of the squadron, the wants of which were with great +difficulty supplied, as the Protectoral Government refused to aid in +any way, notwithstanding that it owed its very existence to our efforts. + +The duties thus collected,--for the most part in contraband of +war,--were duly accounted for by me to the Government of Chili, whilst +such compromise was received as a boon by the British merchants, and +highly approved of by the British naval authorities, Sir Thomas Hardy +especially. + +Yet General San Martin, and others interested in a line of policy which +in its prosecution was inimical to the true interests of Chili, +afterwards charged these proceedings upon me as "acts of piracy." + +That the Chilian Government was, however, well satisfied with all the +steps taken for provisioning and maintaining the squadron, as well as +with the seizure and disposal of the public money at Ancon, is evident +from the following acknowledgment:-- + + Most Excellent Sir, + + I have informed the Supreme Director of the note + which you addressed to me on the 7th of October, accompanying the + accounts of the monies supplied to the payment of the officers and + seamen of the squadron, and to the other objects of the naval + service; as well as the accounts of money and bars of silver returned + at Ancon to their respective owners. + + His Excellency approves of all that you have done in these matters + and orders me in reply to convey his approbation, which I have the + honour now to do. + + Accept the assurance of my high consideration, + + (Signed) JOAQUIM DE ECHEVERRIA, + Ministry of Marine, Santiago de Chili. + + To LORD COCHRANE, + Vice-Adm. & Comm.-in-Chief. Nov. 13, 1821. + +On the same date, the following was received relative to the officers +who had deserted from the squadron, for the purpose of entering the +service of the Protector:-- + + Santiago de Chili, Nov. 13, 1821. + Most Excellent Sir, + + His Excellency the Supreme Director has received + with the greatest dissatisfaction a list of the naval officers who have + deserted from the squadron. These will not fail to be noted in + order to be tried by a court-martial, in case they should again tread + the soil of Chili. It is fortunate that your Excellency has altered + the private signals, lest Capt. Esmonde should divulge those which + were in use. + + (Signed) JOAQUIM DE ECHEVERRIA. + Vice-Adm. Lord Cochrane. + +Immediately after my arrival, an intimation was forwarded to me by the +Supreme Director of his wish to confer with me privately on the subject +of my letter of May 2nd, in which had been pointed out the danger +arising in Peru, from the tyranny exercised by the Protectoral +Government. + + Santiago, June 4th, 1822. + My Distinguished Friend Lord Cochrane, + + I do not wish to delay a moment in expressing + my satisfaction at your arrival, of which you have informed me in + your letter of the 2nd inst. As in that letter you acquaint me + that you will speedily be in this Capital, with a view to communicate + matters which would be better conveyed in a verbal conference, + shall anxiously await the day to express to you all the consideration + with which I am + + Your sincere friend, + + BERNARDO O'HIGGINS. + +Having as yet received no official acknowledgment of the accounts of the +squadron, beyond the previously mentioned general expression of entire +satisfaction on the part of the Government, I applied to the Minister of +Marine for a more minute investigation into their contents, as from the +charges made against me by San Martin, I was desirous that the most +rigid inquiry should be instituted forthwith, and indeed expressed my +surprise--from the time which had elapsed since they were +forwarded--that this had not been done. On the 14th of June, the +Minister replied as follows:-- + + MOST EXCELLENT SIR, + + The accounts of monies applied by your Excellency + in the necessary requirements of the vessels of war under your + command, which you conveyed to me in your two notes of the 25th + of May last, have been passed to the office of the Accountant-General, + for the purpose indicated by your Excellency. + + JOAQUIM DE ECHEVERRIA. + +Knowing the dilatory habits of the departments of State, I did not deem +this satisfactory, and being engaged in preparing a refutation of San +Martin's charges, I again urged on the Minister to investigate the +accounts without further delay, when, on the 19th of June, he +acknowledged--in a letter too long for insertion--the specific items; at +the same time declaring his "high consideration for the manner in which +I had made the flag of Chili respected in the Pacific." + +This was satisfactory, but it is perhaps necessary to assign a reason +why so much importance is attached to a mere matter of routine, +especially after the Government had declared its satisfaction with all +my proceedings. The reason is this--that for all the services so warmly +acknowledged, the Government of Chili restrained from conferring either +upon myself or the squadron the slightest pecuniary recompense, even the +prize-money due to the officers and seamen, part of which the ministry +had appropriated. On pressing these claims year after year subsequent to +my departure from Chili, I was informed _sixteen years afterwards!_ that +my accounts required explanation! the reason for this unworthy +proceeding being, that, as the claim could not be disputed, it might +thus be evaded. + +My refutation of San Martin's accusations was drawn up in the most +minute manner, replying to every charge _seriatim_, and bringing to +light a multitude of nefarious practices on the part of his Government, +which had been previously kept back. Lest I might appear in the +invidious light of an accuser, I was strongly dissuaded from its +publication, as being unnecessary, the Chilian Government paying no +attention whatever to his charges, but being afraid of embroiling +themselves with Peru, the weakness of which they failed rightly to +estimate. + +Having, however, my own character to defend, I did not think proper to +comply, and therefore forwarded my refutation to the Government, the +Minister of Marine acknowledging its receipt, with an intimation that it +had been deposited in the archives of the Republic. + +As, from the Minister of Marine's reply, the document was evidently +intended to remain there without further notice, I addressed the +following letter to the Supreme Director:-- + + MOST EXCELLENT SIR, + + As the game attempted to be played by the Government + of Peru for the annihilation of the marine of Chili is now being + put in practice in another form, conjointly with further attacks on + my character, I have to request permission from the supreme + authority to publish my correspondence with San Martin and his + agents on these subjects; together with a copy of his accusation + against me, with my reply thereto, in order that the public may no + longer be deceived, and falsehood pass for truth. + + I have the honour, &c. + + COCHRANE. + +To this the following reply was returned:-- + + Santiago, Oct. 1, 1822. + + MOST EXCELLENT SIR, + + Your Excellency is too well acquainted with political + affairs not to understand the reasons which oppose the publication + of the disagreeable occurrences which have taken place with the + Protector at the termination of the Peruvian campaign. Were they + made public, it would be opening a vast field of censure to the + enemies of our cause, and also weakening the credit of the independent + Governments, by shewing dissensions amongst themselves. + + Already have we felt the inconveniences of the injurious impressions + _made on the British Cabinet_ by the dissensions between your + Excellency and Gen. San Martin; for they had no sooner been + informed thereof, than the diplomatic negociations which had been + established with our Envoy at that Court were paralysed; and had + he not laboured to counteract the rumours, which had been exaggerated + by distance, there is no doubt but that his influence in + advocating the cause of South America would have most prejudicially + failed. + + His Excellency the Supreme Director feels confident that these + reflections will have in your mind all the weight they merit; but + if you still insist on the publication of your reply to Gen. San + Martin, you may nevertheless avail yourself of the liberty of the + press which prevails in Chili. + + (Signed) JOAQUIM DE ECHEVERRIA. + +It was "_the injurious impressions made on the British Cabinet,_" which +made me chiefly desirous of replying to the Protector's charges; but +being thus adjured not to sacrifice the interests of South America, and +being, moreover, strenuously requested to let the matter drop, as being +of no consequence to me in Chili, I reluctantly yielded, contenting +myself with sending a copy of my reply to the Peruvian Government. +Further to assure me of the disbelief of the Chilian Government in the +charges made, an additional vote of thanks was given me by the Senate, +and inserted in the Gazette. + +On my return to Valparaiso, I found a lamentable instance of the cruelty +practised by the military tyrants of Peru, It has been mentioned that +the old Spaniards were ostensibly permitted to quit Lima on surrender of +half their property--a regulation of which many availed themselves +rather than submit to the caprices of the Protectoral Government. In +place of the security which they thus purchased for the remainder of +their property, they were seized and stripped on their way to Callao of +the whole that remained, thrust on board the prison ship, and finally +sent, in a state of complete destitution of the necessaries of life, to +be added to the Spanish prisoners in Chili. The _Milagro_ had arrived +in Valparaiso full of these miserable people, many of whom were shortly +before amongst the most respectable inhabitants of Lima; and, to add to +the bitterness of their treatment, they were accompanied to Chili by the +agents of the Protector, Paroissien and Garcia del Rio, with his charges +against me, no doubt for the further purpose of again tampering with the +officers of the squadron. I did all in my power to interfere on the part +of the unhappy prisoners, but in vain; they were at length transferred +to the hospital of San Juan de Dios, where they were confined with the +common felons, and would have been starved but for the English +inhabitants of Valparaiso, who raised a subscription on their behalf, +and appointed one of their body to see their daily food distributed. +They were afterwards transferred to Santiago. The cruelty practised +towards these prisoners in Peru, is of itself a reason why their tyrants +did not venture to encounter the Spanish General Cantarac. Cruel people +are invariably cowards. + +On my arrival at Santiago, I found the Supreme Director on the point of +resigning his high office from the opposition he had to encounter by +adhering to a ministry which in one way or other was constantly bringing +his Government into discredit, and from being supposed to favour the +designs of General San Martin, though to this I attached no credit, +believing that his high sense of principle led him to take upon himself +the obnoxious acts of his Ministers, who were partisans of the +Protector. The dissatisfaction increasing, the Supreme Director at +length tendered his resignation to the Convention, who, being unprepared +for this step, insisted on reinstating him in the supreme executive +authority. + +Being indisposed to mingle in the conflicting state of parties which +distracted Chili after my return, and being in need of relaxation after +the two years and a-half of harassing anxiety which I had encountered, I +requested permission of the Government to retire to my estate at +Quintero, intending also to visit the estate which had been conferred +upon me at Rio Clara as an acknowledgment of services rendered at +Valdivia; my object being to bring it into a state of cultivation, which +might give an impetus to the low condition of agriculture in Chili. + +At this juncture, the _Rising Star_, the steamer which was spoken of as +having been left behind in England, arrived in Valparaiso, too late, +however, to take any part in the operations which were now brought to a +close by the surrender of the Spanish navy. This delay had been caused +by want of funds to complete her equipment, which could not even now +have been accomplished, had not large means been furnished to the +Chilian agent in London, by my brother, the Hon. Major Cochrane, who, to +this day, has not been reimbursed a shilling of the outlay advanced on +the faith of the accredited Chilian Envoy! Though the _Rising Star_ was +now of little use as regarded naval operations, she was the first +steamer which had entered the Pacific, and might, had she not been +repudiated by the Government, have formed the nucleus of a force which +would have prevented an infinity of disasters which shortly after my +departure from Chili befel the cause of independence, as will presently +be seen. + +The political fruits of our successes in Chili and Peru now began to +manifest themselves in the recognition of the South American Republics +by the United States, so that Chili had assumed the rank of a recognised +member of the family of nations. + +I took with me as a guest to Quintero, my former prisoner, Colonel +Fausto del Hoyo, the Commandant at Valdivia on our reduction of that +fortress. Previous to my departure for Peru, I had obtained from the +Government a promise for his generous treatment, but no sooner had the +squadron sailed, than he was thrust into prison, without fire, light, or +books, and in this miserable condition he had remained till our return. +As he received the promise of generous treatment from me, I insisted on +and obtained his liberation, and he was now on parole. By paying him +every attention, I hoped to inculcate that national greatness does not +include cruelty to prisoners of war. + +No sooner had I arrived at Quintero, than I zealously entered on my +improvements, having now received from England a variety of agricultural +implements, such as ploughs, harrows, spades, &c, all of which were new +to Chili; also European agricultural seeds, such as carrots, turnips, +&c, which, previous to their introduction by me were unknown in the +country. + +But I was not long permitted to enjoy the "_otium_" marked out for +myself. Letter after letter came from the squadron, complaining that, +like the Spanish prisoners, they too were in a state of destitution, +without pay, clothes, or provisions. Starting again for Valparaiso, I +found their complaints to be more than realized, upon which I addressed +to the Minister of Marine the following letter:-- + + MOST EXCELLENT SIR, + + Three months having passed since the squadron + anchored in this port, and the same period since my representations + on its condition were made to the Supreme Government, relative to + the nakedness and destitute condition of the crews; who still + continue in the same state as that in which they passed the + winter, without beds or clothes, the sentinel at my cabin door + being in rags, no portion of which formed his original uniform. As + it is impossible that such a state of things can continue, without + exciting dangerous discontent and mutiny, I beg that you will order + such clothing as may be found in Valparaiso to be supplied through + the Commissary of the squadron, in order that it may immediately + be distributed to the naked crews. + + (Signed) COCHRANE. + +The determination with which I had entered upon the relief of the +seamen, was so offensive to those who, in popular estimation, were +deserving of blame, that a report was circulated of my having +surreptitiously shipped on board the English frigate _Doris_, then lying +in the harbour of Valparaiso, 9000 ounces of coined gold, and also a +quantity of gold and silver bars to the like amount! the object no doubt +being to induce a belief in the popular mind, that money had been +applicable for the use of the squadron, but that it had been dishonestly +appropriated by myself. + +As I had returned to Quintero, this rumour did not reach me till it had +become widely disseminated amongst the Chilian people. The first +intimation I had of it, was contained in the following letter from +Captain Cobbett, of the _Valdivia_:-- + + MY DEAR LORD, + + When I informed you, on my arrival at Quintero, + that something unpleasant would take place, I was not altogether + ignorant of a report which has now become prevalent. It was said + on the day of your departure, that your Lordship had placed a large + sum of money on board one of the British men of war in the + harbour, 9,000 ounces in gold in a package directed to Lady + Cochrane, and an equal amount in gold and silver bars to wait + further orders from your Lordship. Every exertion was made by + one interested in injuring your Lordship, to convince me of the fact, + my reply being, that I had too long been accustomed to rely in + your Lordship's integrity to believe any such report without proof. + + Yesterday the same person came again to my house to inform me + that the matter was cleared beyond doubt, for that the master of the + _Doris_ frigate had told him that the two boxes of gold and silver + were on board, directed as above-mentioned. This report has created + great sensation here, and the greatest pains are being taken to + spread it far and wide. On making inquiry on board the _Doris_, + Captain Wilkinson and myself found that no packages of the kind + were on board, and on telling the parties engaged in spreading the + report the result of our inquiry, they seemed much chopfallen, but + would not retract their charge, which I am certain they intend + to carry to the Supreme Director, the consequence of which would + be, that were the report true or false, the Government would blame + your Lordship, and accuse us of being your abettors; whilst, as the + want of pay and prize-money renders the officers irritable, they are + ready for anything and everything which might promise to relieve + their necessities. + + I have told your Lordship all I know, and have conceived the + rumour to be of so much importance, as to send one of my own + horses with the little doctor to inform you immediately of what is + going on, as such reports ought not to be treated lightly. I beg to + subscribe myself, with the greatest respect, + + Your Lordship's grateful Servant, + + HENRY COBBETT. + +Another letter, from Captain Wilkinson, was to the same effect:-- + + MY DEAR LORD, + + A report is in circulation that your Lordship has put + on board the British frigate _Doris_ nine thousand ounces in gold. I + feel it my duty to acquaint you of this, as no person can have your + Lordship's reputation more at heart than myself. I have been told + this by two or three persons after your Lordship left for Quintero, + and in the evening by Moyell, who must have known it to be + false, and I declared it so to him. I trust your Lordship will + be able to trace the shameless offender. + + I am, my Lord, &c. &c. + + W. WILKINSON. + +As soon as these letters were received, I lost no time in repairing to +Valparaiso, not doubting that Zenteno and the Peruvian agents were again +at work to disorganize the squadron, and in case of the overthrow of the +Supreme Director, which was still impending, to place it in the hands of +San Martin. The object of the party was to cause dissension amongst the +seamen, by making them believe that, amidst their poverty and +sufferings, I had been taking care of myself, and hence they hoped to +destroy that confidence in me which officers and men had all along +exhibited, notwithstanding their privations. As they had never before +been so wretchedly destitute, this circumstance was considered +favourable to the impression, that having secured all I could for +myself, I was about to abandon them. + +Though there was not a word of truth in the report which had been thus +sedulously disseminated, it was too serious to be trifled with; +accordingly, on the receipt of Captain Cobbett's letter, I hastened to +Valparaiso, and to the chagrin of Zenteno, again hoisted my flag on +board the _O'Higgins_. + +My first step was to demand from the Government the appointment of a +commission to go on board the _Doris_, and there ascertain whether I had +placed any packages on board that frigate for transmission to England or +elsewhere. The reply was, that no such commission was requisite, as no +one gave credit to the assertion that I had done so, or suppose me +capable of acting in the way which had been falsely reported! + +The re-hoisting my flag was a step which had not been anticipated, and +as it was unbidden, a remonstrance was addressed to me upon having taken +such a step unauthorised by the Government. My reply was, that I had +taken the step upon my own responsibility, and that as such an infamous +accusation had been promulgated against me, for the purpose of promoting +mutiny amongst the men, I intended to keep my flag flying till they were +paid. At the same time I addressed the following letter to the Minister +of Marine:-- + + MOST EXCELLENT SIR, + + Aroused from the tranquillity in which I had + vainly hoped to spend at least the short period of my leave of + absence by imputations against my character, propagated with a + view to excite dissatisfaction and mutiny in the squadron, by taking + advantage of the irritation occasioned by the necessities of the + officers, and the destitute and naked condition of the men, which I + have so often implored you to remedy; I have reluctantly proceeded + to this port to refute the calumny and prevent the evil anticipated, + for which purpose I have re-hoisted my flag, to haul it down when + the discontent shall cease, by the people being clothed and paid, or + when I shall be ordered to haul it down for ever. + + I enclose a copy of a letter which I have sent to the Governor + of Valparaiso. + + (Signed) COCHRANE. + +It is unnecessary to give the letter to Zenteno, as being to the same +effect with the preceding, with some additional guesses at the infamous +author of the report, these proving sufficient for his discreet silence +on the subject. The following reply from the Minister of Marine was +immediately forwarded to me:-- + + Santiago, Oct. 1, 1822. + + MOST EXCELLENT SIR, + + His Excellency the Supreme Director is impressed + with deep disgust at the calumny to which you allude in your note, + a copy of which I have forwarded to the Governor of Valparaiso. + Your Excellency may rest satisfied that the authors thereof will not + remain unpunished if discovered. + + Accept the assurance of my high consideration. + + The Minister of Marine, + + JOAQUIM DE ECHEVERRIA. + + To the Vice-Admiral Com.-in-Chief of the Squadron. + +As a matter of course the libeller was neither discovered nor punished, +otherwise the Governor of Valparaiso, and the agents of San Martin would +have been placed in an unpleasant position. But they had nothing to +fear, as, from the daily increasing perplexities of the Chilian +Government, it was in no condition to defend itself, much less to assert +the majesty of the law. + +From the promptitude displayed in meeting a charge as utterly groundless +as it was infamous, and from the conviction of the squadron that I was +incapable of acting in the manner imputed to me, the calumny produced +the opposite effect to that which was intended, viz. by inspiring in the +minds of the officers and men the most intense disgust towards its +originators. On my re-hoisting my flag, I was received with every +demonstration of enthusiasm and affection, the officers unanimously +uniting in the following address;-- + + May it please Youe Excellency, + + We, the undersigned officers of the Chilian squadron, + have heard with surprise and indignation the vile and scandalous + reports tending to bring your Excellency's high character in + question, and to destroy that confidence and admiration with which + it has always inspired us. + + We have seen with pleasure the measures your Excellency has + adopted to suppress so malicious and absurd a conspiracy, and trust + that no means will be spared to bring its authors to public shame. + + At a time like the present, when the best interests of the squadron + and our dearest rights as individuals are at stake, we feel especially + indignant at an attempt to destroy that union and confidence which + at present exists, and which we are assured ever will exist, while we + have the honour to serve under your Excellency's command. + With these sentiments we subscribe ourselves, + + Your Excellency's most obedient humble Servant, + (Signed) J.P. GRENFELL, Lieut.-Com. _Mercedes_, + And all the Officers of the Squadron. + +The excellent officer whose name is prominently attached to this +address, is now Admiral Grenfell, Consul-General in England of the +Brazilian Empire. He was my flag-lieutenant at the capture of the +_Esmeralda_, under the batteries of Callao, and it is no more than +justice to mention, that his distinguished gallantry in that affair in +an eminent degree contributed to the success of the enterprise. + +But I was not the only person of whom the envoys of San Martin and their +creatures in the Chilian Government desired to get rid. General Santa +Cruz was openly appointed to supersede General Freire as Governor of +Conception and Chief of the Army of the South; the keen discrimination +of Freire having estimated San Martin and his proceedings in Peru as +they deserved, and hence he had become obnoxious to those whose design +it was to lay Chili at the feet of the Protector. On Santa Cruz +proceeding to Conception to take up the command, the troops unanimously +refused to obey his authority, or to permit General Freire to leave +them. The people of Conception, who had suffered more from their +patriotism than any other in Chili, were equally resolute, not only from +attachment to Freire, but because they knew that if the ministry gained +their ends, Conception would be destroyed as a port; it being their +object to shut up every port but Valparaiso, in order that by the +corrupt practices prevalent there, they might monopolize the whole +advantage to be personally gained from the commerce of the country. + +The Supreme Director was, as usual, made the scapegoat for the +unsuccessful attempt of his ministers to depose General Freire, and the +consequence was that in three months after the attempt was made, General +O'Higgins was deposed from his authority, and General Freire elevated to +the Supreme Directorate! + +As I had been falsely accused of stealing money which ought to have been +divided amongst the seamen, I was determined that no ground for future +accusation of the kind should arise in consequence of their not being +paid; and with this view, pertinaciously insisted on the payment of the +arrears due to the squadron. These efforts were seconded by the +commanding officers of ships, who, in a temperate address to the +Government, set forth the nature of their claims. From this address, the +following extracts are given, as forming an excellent epitome of the +whole events of the war:-- + + "Ever since the capture of the _Isabel_, the dominion of the + Pacific has been maintained by the Chilian navy, and such have + been the exertions of our Commander and ourselves that with + Chileno crews unaccustomed to navigation, and a few foreign seamen + whom we alone could control, not only have the shores of this + State been effectually protected from injury and insult, but the + maritime forces of the enemy have been closely blockaded in the + face of a superior force. By means of the navy the important + province, fortifications, and port of Valdivia have been added to the + Republic. By the same means the Spanish power in Peru was + brought into contempt, and the way opened for the invasion of that + country. The enemy's ships of war have all fallen into our hands + or by our means have been compelled to surrender. Their merchant + vessels have been seized under their very batteries, whilst the + Chilian transports and trading vessels have been in such perfect + security that not even the smallest has been compelled to haul down + its flag. Amongst these achievements, the capture of the _Esmeralda_ + has reflected lustre on the Chilian marine equal to anything recorded + in the chronicles of ancient States, greatly adding to Chilian + importance in the eyes of Europe; whilst, from the vigilance of the + naval blockade, the fortifications of Callao were finally compelled + to surrender." + + "This happy event, so long hoped for, was by all considered to + complete our labours in Peru, and to entitle us if not to a remuneration + from that State, _as in the case of those officers who abandoned + the Chilian service_! yet, at least, to a share of the valuable property + taken by our means, as awarded under similar circumstances by + other States, which, by experience, are aware of the benefit of + stimulating individuals by such rewards for great enterprises undertaken + for the public good. But, alas! so far from either of these + modes of remuneration being adopted, _even the pay so often promised + was withheld, and food itself was denied, so that we were reduced to a + state of the greatest privation and suffering; so great, indeed, that + the crew of the Lautaro abandoned their ship for want of food, and + the seamen of the squadron, natives as well as foreigners, were in a + state of open mutiny, threatening the safety of all the vessels of the + State_." + + "We do not claim merit for not relieving ourselves from this + painful situation by an act of a doubtful nature, viz. by an + acquiescence in the intentions of the General Commanding-in-Chief + the expeditionary forces; _who, having declared us officers of Peru,_ + offered, through his _aides-de camps_, Colonel Paroissien and Captain + Spry, honours and estates to those who would further his views. + _Nor do we envy those who received those estates and honours_; but + having rejected these inducements to swerve from our allegiance, + we may fairly claim the approbation of Government for providing + the squadron of Chili with provisions and stores at Callao, _out of + monies in our hands justly due for the capture of the Esmeralda, + when such supplies had been refused by General San Martin_. We + may also claim similar approbation for having repaired the squadron + at Guayaquil, and for equipping and provisioning it for the pursuit + of the enemy's frigates, _Prueba_ and _Venganza_, which we drove from + the shores of Mexico in a state of destitution to the shores of Peru; + and if they were not actually brought to Chili, it was because they + were seized by our late General and Commander-in-Chief, and + appropriated in the same manner as he had previously intended with + respect to the Chilian squadron itself. We may add, that every + endeavour short of actual hostilities with the said General, was + made on our part to obtain the restitution of those valuable frigates + to the Government of Chili. In no other instance through the + whole course of our proceedings, has any dispute arisen but what + has terminated favourably to the interests of Chili, and the honour + of her flag. Private friendships have been preserved with the naval + officers of foreign powers; no point has been conceded that could + be maintained consistently with the maritime laws of civilized + nations, by which our conduct has been scrupulously guided; and + such has been the caution observed, that no act of violence contrary + to the laws of nations, nor any improper exercise of power, + can be laid to our charge. The Chilian flag has waved in triumph, + and with universal respect, from the southern extremity of the + Republic to the shores of California; population and the value of + property have by our exertions increased threefold; whilst commerce + and its consequent revenue have been augmented in a far greater + proportion; which commerce, so productive to the State, might, + without the protecting aid of its navy, be annihilated by a few of + those miserable privateers which the terror of its name alone deters + from approaching." + + "The period has now arrived at which it is essential for the well-being + of the service in general, and especially for our private affairs, + that our arrears, so long due, should be liquidated; and far as it is + from our desire to press our claims on the Government, yet we + cannot abstain from so doing, in justice to the State, as well as to + ourselves; because want of regularity in the internal affairs of a + naval service is productive of relaxation of discipline, as just + complaints cannot be redressed, nor complainants chastised--discontent + spreading like a contagious disease, and paralysing the system." + + "Permit us, therefore, to call to the notice of the Government + that since our return to Valparaiso _with our naked crews, even clothes + have been withheld for four months_, during which no payment has + been made, the destitute seamen being _without blankets, ponchos, or + any covering to protect them from the cold of winter_, the more severely + felt from the hot climates in which they have for nearly three years + been employed." + + "The two months' pay offered the other day could not now effect + its purpose, as the whole--and more is due to the Pulperia keepers, + to whose benefit, and not that of the seamen, it must have immediately + accrued. Judge, then, of the irritation produced by such + privations, and the impossibility of relieving them by such inadequate + payment; also whether it is possible to maintain order and + discipline amongst men worse circumstanced than the convicts of + Algiers! Under such circumstances, it is no exaggeration to affirm + that confidence will be for ever gone, and the squadron entirely + ruined, if measures of preservation are not immediately resorted to." + + "With respect to the offer of _one month's pay to ourselves!_ after + our faithful and persevering services, undergoing privations such as + were never endured in the navy of any other State, we are afraid to + trust ourselves to make any observations; but it is quite impossible + that it could have been accepted under any circumstances, as it + would have placed us in no better situation than if, on our arrival + here four months ago, we had actually paid the Government three + months' salary for the satisfaction of having served it, during a + period of two years, with unremitting exertions and fidelity." + + "In conclusion, we respectfully hope, that the Supreme Government + will be pleased to take what we have stated into its serious + consideration, and more especially that it will be pleased to comply + with its existing engagements to us, with the same alacrity and + fidelity with which we have acted towards the Government; the + duties of each being reciprocal, and equally binding on both parties." + + Signed by all the Captains. + + The preceding statement of the captains is a faithful + statement of the case as regarded the injustice done to + the squadron, which had throughout supported itself, + even to the repairs and equipment of the ships. As + to the ruin which the captains predict, it was no + doubt intended by the envoys of San Martin and + their creatures in the Chilian Ministry, as the effect + would have been to have driven the men to desertion, + when the ships would have been turned over to Peru, + and manned with fresh crews. Fortunately for Chili, + this consummation was prevented by an occurrence + as strange as unexpected by her short-sighted rulers, + though long before predicted by myself. + + + + + CHAPTER XI. + + NEGOCIATIONS WITH BOLIVAR--EXILE OF MONTEAGUDO--COMPLAINTS OF THE + LIMENOS--EXTRAVAGANCE OF THE GOVERNMENT--EXCULPATION OF SAN + MARTIN--EFFECTS OF POPULAR DISSENSION--DISAGREEMENT OF BOLIVAR + AND SAN MARTIN--VOTE OF PERUVIAN CONGRESS--EXTRAORDINARY NEGLECT + OF THE CHILIAN SQUADRON--SAN MARTIN'S ARRIVAL AT VALPARAISO-- + I DEMAND HIS TRIAL--COUNTENANCE OF THE SUPREME DIRECTOR-- + SQUADRON AT LENGTH PAID WAGES--REVOLT OF CONCEPTION--GENERAL + FREIRE APPRISES ME OF IT--FREIRE ASKS FOR MY SUPPORT--HIS + LETTER NOT REPLIED TO--SAN MARTIN'S INFLUENCE. + + + Mention has been made in a previous chapter + of the all but total destruction of a division of the + liberating army by General Canterac, and of the + bombastic proclamations issued on that occasion by + San Martin, to the effect that they were "only + dispersed, not beaten," &c. The Protector was + however ill at ease, and entered into a correspondence + with Bolivar, with a view to procure the assistance + of Columbian troops against the Spaniards, who, + following up their success, were making demonstrations + of attacking the patriot forces in Lima. To + this request was added another soliciting an interview + with Bolivar at Guayaquil. A similar despatch was + sent to Santiago, asking, in the most urgent terms, + for aid from the Chilian Government. + + The whole affair--as narrated at the time, for + personally I had nothing to do with it--was somewhat + curious. San Martin's designs on Guayaquil + having got wind, Bolivar marched the Columbian + troops across the Cordillera, successfully invaded + Quito, and was hastening towards Guayaquil, with a + view of being beforehand with San Martin, of whose + intentions upon that province he was aware. After + the above-mentioned defeat of the Peruvian army by + Canterac, San Martin had been compelled to withdraw + his forces from Truxillo, on which Sucre, the + next in command to Bolivar, advanced to Guayaquil + and took possession of it. At this time, as was afterwards + well known, the Limenos were privately + soliciting Bolivar to give them his assistance in + liberating Peru, _both from the Protector_ and the + Spaniards! + + Ignorant of this, the Protector, having delegated + the supreme authority to the Marquis of Torre Tagle, + and appointed General Alvarado Commander-in-Chief + in his absence, departed for Guayaquil, for the + purpose of the proposed interview. + + No sooner had San Martin turned his back, than a + public meeting of the Limenos took place in the + Plaza, and insisted on the reconstitution of the _Cabildo_, + which assembly had been put down by the Protector + immediately after the declaration of independence. + The members having complied, it was decided that + "the Minister Monteagudo should be deposed, tried, + and subjected to the severity of the law," a note + being despatched to this effect to the Supreme + Delegate, Torre Tagle. The Council of State met, + and informed Monteagudo of what had taken place, + when he was induced to resign; the Supreme + Delegate politely informing the _Cabildo_ that the + ex-Minister should be made to answer to the Council + of State for the acts of his administration. + + This note not satisfying the municipality, the + _Cabildo_ requested that Monteagudo should at once + be placed in arrest till called upon for his defence, + which was immediately complied with; but the step + was disapproved by the Limenos, who feared that + some crafty subterfuge might again place him in + authority. The _Cabildo_, therefore, in order to satisfy + the people and get rid of the ex-Minister, + requested of the Government that he might be put + on board ship, and exiled for ever from Peru. This + was also acceded to; and, on the anniversary of his + arrival in Lima, Monteagudo was sent under escort + to Callao, and forthwith taken to sea. + + Torre Tagle was unable to cope with the returning + spirit of the Limenos, nor did he attempt it, as the + army was as much disgusted as were the inhabitants, + and would not have raised a hand against them. The + liberty of the press returned, and the first use of it + was the following picture of the exiled Minister, taken + from the Lima newspapers; this would not have been + inserted here, except to shew the class of men with + whom I had so long to contend. + + "Every honourable citizen found in Don Bernardo Monteagudo, + (this is the name of the man of whom we speak,) an enemy who + at any price would have sacrificed him. How many victims has he + not immolated in his one year's ministry! More than eight hundred + honourable families have been reduced by him to extreme indigence, + and the whole city to misery! Amongst the patriots of Lima, + nothing was thought of but where they might find an asylum in a + foreign land. Without agriculture, commerce, industry, personal + security, property, and laws, what is society here but a scene of the + most afflicting torments?" + + "The religion of our forefathers suffered an equal persecution in + its ministers and its temples; these were deprived of their riches, + not for the service of our country, but for the reward of _espionage_, + and to deceive us with useless trickeries. The satellites of this + bandit were equally despotic with himself, and committed under his + protection the most horrid crimes. This is not a proper place in + which to insert the baseness with which he abused the delicacy and + weakness of females. Fathers of families * * * *. Every + man was intimidated. Every feeling man wept, because all were + the victims of the caprice of this insolent upstart, who made an + ostentation of atheism and ferocity." + + "It is impossible to recapitulate his actions. Volumes would be + necessary to shew the world the arbitrary crimes of this atrocious + individual. It would appear that for the commission of so many + offences he must have had some cause that impelled him, for they + could not possibly be the effect of ignorance. It was impossible to + believe that by insulting and ruining every one, plundering our + property, despising the ingenuity and talents of the Peruvians, and + endeavouring to introduce anarchy, he could be longer tolerated in + this capital. Was the reduction of Peru to the most degrading + slavery, the means to make us or even himself happy?" &c. &c. &c + +The reader can--from what has been narrated in these pages,--form pretty +correct opinions upon the majority of the enormities which drove +Monteagudo into exile. Of his private character I have always foreborn +to speak, as considering it a thing apart from official acts--but as the +Limenos themselves have forcibly alluded to it, I can say that in no +respect can their allegations be called in question. + +The opinion of the roused Limenos, that for Monteagudo's plunders, +insults, and cruelties, there "must have been an impelling cause," is +correct, though it is rather surprising that they should not have more +justly estimated that cause. The vast amount of silver and gold which I +spared in the _Sacramento_ at Ancon, as being the property of the +Protector, shews the gulf which swallowed up his plunder of the +inhabitants. The costly extravagance of the Government--amidst which the +degraded Minister's ostentation was even more conspicuous than that of +the Protector himself--could have had no other source but plunder, for +of legitimate revenue there was scarcely enough to carry on the expenses +of the Government--certainly none for luxurious ostentation; which, +nevertheless, emulated that of the Roman Empire in its worst period--but +without the "_panem et circenses_." + +The "impelling cause" was the Protector himself. Ambitious beyond all +bounds, but with a capacity singularly incommensurate with his ambition, +he believed that money could accomplish everything. Monteagudo supplied +this literally by plunder and cruelty, whilst San Martin recklessly +flung it away in ostentation and bribes. In return for the means of +prodigality, the Minister was permitted to carry on the Government just +as he chose, the Protector meanwhile indulging in the "_otium cum +dignitate_" at his country palace near La Legua--his physical powers +prostrated by opium and brandy, to which he was a slave, whilst his +mental faculties day by day became more torpid from the same +debilitating influence. This was well known to me, and alluded to in my +letter to him of August 7th, 1821, in which I adjured him to banish his +advisers and act as became his position. I now mention these things, not +to cast a slur on San Martin, but for the opposite purpose of averting +undue reproach, though my bitter enemy. The enormities committed in his +name were for the most part not his, but Monteagudo's; for, to +paraphrase the saying of a French wit, "San Martin reigned, but his +Minister governed." Duplicity and cunning were San Martin's great +instruments when he was not too indolent to wield them; and while he was +wrapped in ease, his Minister superadded to these qualities all the +cruelty and ferocity which sometimes converts a ruler into a monster, as +the Limenos very appropriately designate him. San Martin was not +innately cruel, though, as in the execution of the Carreras, he did not +hesitate to sacrifice men of far greater patriotism and ability than +himself, regarding them as rivals; but he would not, as Monteagudo did, +have endeavoured to tempt me ashore to the house of Torre Tagle, for the +purpose of assassinating me; nor, failing in this, would he as +Monteagudo also did, have liberated a convict for the express purpose of +murdering me on board my own ship. At this distance of time these things +may be mentioned, as there can be no delicacy in thus alluding to +Monteagudo, who, having lived the life of a tyrant, died the death of a +dog; for having sometime afterwards imprudently returned to the Peruvian +capital, he was set upon and killed in the streets by the enraged +Limenos. + +This bad commencement of the Peruvian Government subsequently entailed +on the country years of misery and civil war, from intestine feuds and +party strife--the natural results of the early abuse which unhappily +inaugurated its liberation. No such features have been exhibited in +Chili, where the maritime force under my command at once and for ever +annihilated the power of Spain, leaving to the mother country neither +adherents nor defenders, so that all men agreed to consolidate the +liberty which had been achieved. The same good results followed my +expulsion of the Portuguese fleets and army from Brazil, where, whatever +may have been the contentions of the parties into which the country was +divided, the empire has ever since been preserved from those revolutions +which invariably characterise states based at the outset upon virulent +contentions. In Peru, the liberty which had been promised was trodden +under foot by the myrmidons of San Martin, so that a portion of the +people, and that the most influential, would gladly have exchanged the +degradation of their country for a return to Spanish rule, and this was +afterwards very nearly achieved. Another portion, dreading the +Spaniards, invited Bolivar to free them from the despotism to which, in +the name of liberty, they had been subjected. A third party sighed for +independence, as they originally hoped it would have been established. +The community became thus divided in object, and, as a consequence, in +strength; being in constant danger of the oppressor, and in even more +danger from its own intestine dissensions; which have continued to this +day, not in Peru only, but in the majority of the South American States, +which, having commenced their career in the midst of private feud and +public dissension, have never been able to shake off either the one or +the other monuments of their own incipient weakness. + +The intelligence of Monteagudo's forced exile was received at Valparaiso +on the 21st of September; and if this excited the surprise of the +Chilians, still greater must have been their astonishment when, on the +12th of October, General San Martin himself arrived at Valparaiso, a +fugitive from his short-lived splendour, amidst the desolation of +despotism. + +The story of this event is brief, but instructive. Having met Bolivar, +as previously agreed upon, the Liberator, in place of entering upon any +mutual arrangement, bitterly taunted San Martin with the folly and +cruelty of his conduct towards the Limenos; to such an extent, indeed, +that the latter, fearing designs upon his person, precipitately left +Guayaquil, and returned to Callao shortly after the expulsion of +Monteagudo. Finding what had taken place, he remained on board his +vessel, issuing vain threats against all who had been concerned in +exiling his minister, and insisting on his immediate recal and +reinstatement. A congress had however, by this time been appointed, with +Xavier de Luna Pizarro as its head, so the remonstrances of the +Protector were unheeded. After some time spent in useless recrimination, +he made a virtue of necessity, and sent in his abdication of the +Protectorate, returning, as has been said, to Chili. + +One of the first acts of the Peruvian Congress, after his abdication, +was to address to me the following vote of thanks, not only marking my +services in the liberation of their country, but denouncing San Martin +as a military despot:-- + + _Resolution of thanks to Lord Cochrane by the Sovereign Congress + of Peru._ + + The Sovereign Constituent Congress of Peru, in consideration + of the services rendered to Peruvian liberty by Lord Cochrane, by + whose talent, worth, and bravery, the Pacific Ocean has been + liberated from the insults of enemies, and the standard of liberty + has been planted on the shores of the South, + + Has Resolved,-- + + That the Supreme Junta, on behalf of the Nation, shall offer to + Lord Cochrane, Admiral of the Chilian squadron, its most expressive + sentiments of gratitude for his hazardous exploits on behalf of + Peru, hitherto under the tyranny of military despotism, but now the + arbiter of its own fate. + + This resolution being communicated to the Supreme Junta, they + will do that which is necessary for its fulfilment, by ordering it to + be printed, published, and circulated. + + Given in the Hall of Congress, at Lima, September 27th, 1822. + + Xavier de Luna Pizarro, President. + + Jose Sanchez Carrion, Deputy and Secretary. + + Francisco Xavier Mariatique, Deputy and Secretary. + + In fulfilment of the preceding Resolution, we direct the same to + be executed. + + Jose de la Mar, + + Felipe Anto. Alvarado, + + El Conde de Vista Florida. + + By order of His Excellency, + Francisco Valdivieso. + +San Martin had, however, played his cards so cunningly, that, in order +to be well rid of him, the Peruvian congress had been induced to give +him a pension of 20,000 dollars per annum, whilst nothing but thanks +were awarded to me, both for liberating their country and for freeing +them from military despotism! notwithstanding that the new Peruvian +Government was in possession of our prizes, the _Prueba_ and _Venganza_, +the latter only to be given up by paying 40,000 dollars to the Chilian +squadron, which at its own cost had run it down in Guayaquil--these +sums, no less than the value of the other frigate, being, in common +honesty, due from Peru to the Chilian squadron to this day. To have +thanked me so warmly as the exclusive instrument of their independence +and deliverance from military tyranny--yet to have rewarded the tyrant +and not myself in any form beyond the acknowledgment of my services, is +a circumstance to which the Peruvian Government of the present day +cannot look back with satisfaction; the less so as Chili has, after the +lapse of thirty years, partially atoned for the ingratitude of a former +Government in availing itself of my aid, without a shilling in the way +of recompense, though I had supported its squadron by my own exertions, +with comparatively no expense to the Government, during the whole period +that I held the command. + +To add to this palpable injustice, the Peruvian Congress distributed +500,000 dollars amongst twenty general and field officers of the army; +but the officers of the squadron, whose prowess had freed the Pacific of +the enemy, and by the admission of the Congress itself Peru also--were +not only excluded from the Peruvian bounty, but were denied the +prize-money which they had won and generously given up to the temporary +exigencies of Chili. Such a monstrous perversion of justice and even +common honesty, never before reflected discredit on a state. But more +of this hereafter. + +It having been circulated in Lima that San Martin had secreted a +quantity of gold in the _Puyrredon_, steps were taken to verify the +rumour, on which, at midnight on the 20th of September, he ordered the +Captain to get under weigh, though the vessel was not half manned, and +had scarcely any water on board. He then went to Ancon, and despatched a +messenger to Lima, on whose return, he ordered the Captain instantly to +weigh anchor and proceed to Valparaiso, where on his arrival, it was +given out that an attack of rheumatism compelled him to have resource to +the baths of Cauquenes. + +On the arrival of the Ex-protector, two _aides-de-camp_ were sent by +Zenteno to compliment him, and his flag was regularly saluted, the +Governor of Valparaiso's carriage being sent to convey him to the +Government house. Yet shortly before, this very Governor of Valparaiso +had rightly branded those who abandoned the Chilian flag for that of +Peru, as "deserters;" but now he received the man who had not only first +set the example, but had also induced others to desert--with the honours +of a Sovereign Prince! The patriots were eager that I should arrest +General San Martin, and there were those in power who would not have +complained had I done so, but I preferred to leave the Government to its +own course. + +On the following day, General San Martin was forwarded in one of the +Director's carriages to Santiago with an escort, the pretence for this +mark of honour being fears for his personal safety, in which, there +might be something of truth, for the Chilian people rightly estimated +his past conduct. Without troubling myself about such matters, I +immediately forwarded to the Supreme Director the annexed demand, that +he should be tried for his desertion and subsequent conduct:-- + + MOST EXCELLENT SIR, + + Don Jose de San Martin, late Commander-in-Chief + of the Expeditionary forces from Chili for the liberation of Peru, + having this day arrived at Valparaiso, and being now within the + jurisdiction of the laws of Chili, I lose no time in acquainting you + that, if it be the pleasure of Government to institute an inquiry into + the conduct of the said Don Jose de San Martin, I am ready to + prove his forcible usurpation of the Supreme Authority of Peru, in + violation of the solemn pledge given by his Excellency the Supreme + Director of Chili; his attempts to seduce the navy of Chili; his + receiving and rewarding deserters from the Chilian service; his + unjustifiably placing the frigates, _Prueba_ and _Venqanza_, under the + flag of Peru; with other demonstrations and acts of hostility towards + the Republic of Chili. + + Given under my hand this 12th day of October, 1822, on board + the Chilian ship _O'Higgins_, in the harbour of Valparaiso. + + (Signed) COCHRANE. + +In place of my demand being complied with, San Martin was honoured by +having the palace appointed as his residence, whilst every mark of +public attention was paid him by the Ministry, the object being no other +than to insult me, both as regarded the countenance given to him in the +face of my demand for his trial, and the infamous accusations which he +had made against me, but which he did not dare to sustain. + +The passive acquiescence of the Supreme Director in the treachery of his +advisers caused an amount of popular discontent which ended in his exile +also; both Chilenos and Spaniards revolting at the idea of San Martin +being thus publicly honoured. To see the Supreme Director parade himself +as the friend and ally of such a man, was more than the patriot spirit +could bear, and the voice of dissatisfaction was loud in every +direction. By the partisans of San Martin this was attributed to the +squadron; and at his instigation, as was generally believed, troops were +sent to Valparaiso for the purpose of overawing it. I was cautioned to +be on my guard against personal seizure or assault, as had been +attempted in Peru, but did not place sufficient reliance on the courage +of my opponents to adopt any steps evincing doubt of the Chilian people, +who were well disposed to me. + +On the 21st of November there occurred an earthquake, which completely +destroyed the town of Valparaiso, so that scarcely a house remained +habitable; the people rushing to the hills or to the ships in the +harbour. On the first shocks, knowing that terrible disasters would +ensue, I went on shore to restore what order could be maintained amongst +the terrified people, and met with the Supreme Director, who had +narrowly escaped with his life when hurrying out of his house. It being +impossible to render the unhappy townspeople any service, I paid His +Excellency every possible attention, even though I had reason to +believe that his visit was unfriendly to me, he being falsely persuaded +that my incessant demands for the payment of the squadron was an act of +hostility to himself, instead of a measure of justice to the officers +and men. + +Finding me determined, after what had occurred, to procure the payment +of the squadron, the now tottering Government gave in, and thus far +decided on doing justice; but even in this--as I had reason to +believe--the counsels of San Martin induced them to adopt a plan of +making the payments ashore, and paying the men and petty officers +first--after which, they were to be allowed a furlough of four months. +As this plan was palpably meant to unman the squadron, and thus place +the officers and myself at the mercy of the intriguers, I would not +suffer it to be carried into effect, the men were therefore paid on +board their respective ships. + +A new system of annoyance was hereupon practised towards me by Zenteno, +who had again assumed the office of Minister of Marine. From the neglect +to repair the ships--which were left in the same wretched condition as +when they returned from Peru and Mexico--the _Independencia_ was alone +seaworthy; and was sent to sea by Zenteno without even the formality of +transmitting the requisite orders through me. + +But a crisis was now at hand. The insult offered to General Freire, by +sending Santa Cruz to supersede him, will be fresh in the reader's +recollection. Soon after this the Provincial Convention of Conception +met, and passed a vote of censure upon the Council of Government at +Santiago, for re-electing General O'Higgins as Supreme Director after +his resignation--an act which it considered illegal, as no such power +was vested in the Ministry--and it became known that General Freire was +about to march with the troops under his command to enforce these views. +On the 17th, General Freire had advanced his troops as far as Talca, and +a division of the army at Santiago was ordered to be in readiness to +meet him. The marines belonging to the squadron, under the command of +Major Hind, were also ordered to reinforce the Director's troops. + +I was at this time at my country residence at Quintero, but learning +what was going on, I immediately went to Valparaiso and resumed the +command of the squadron, to which I found that orders had been issued at +variance with the arrangements which had been entered into in regard to +the prize-money due to the officers and men--the _Galvarino_, which was +pledged to be sold for that purpose, being under orders for sea, to +convey San Martin to some place of safety, for, not anticipating the +disorganisation which he found in Chili, he was afraid of falling into +the hands of General Freire, from whom he would doubtless have +experienced the full amount of justice which his conduct deserved. The +squadron in my absence had, however, taken the matter into its own +hands, by placing the _Lautaro_, with her guns loaded, in a position to +sink the _Galvarino_ if she attempted to move. The forts on shore had +also loaded their guns for retaliation, though of these the squadron +would have made short work. + +No sooner had I restored order, by resuming the command, than I received +from General Freire the subjoined letter, which no longer left me in +doubt of his intentions:-- + + Conception, Dec. 18th, 1822. + + MY LORD, + + The province under my command being tired of + suffering the effects of a corrupted administration, which has reduced + the Republic to a state of greater degradation than that under + which it was labouring when it made the first struggle to obtain its + liberty; and when, by means of an illegitimately-created convention, + without the will of the people, they have traced the plans of + enslaving them, by constituting them as the patrimony of an + ambitious despot, whilst, in order to ensure him the command, they + have trodden under foot the imprescriptible right of the citizens, + exiling them in the most arbitrary manner from their native + country. + + Nothing now remains for us but heroically to resolve that we will + place the fruit of eleven years of painful sacrifices in the way of + saving it; to which effect I have deposited in the hands of its legal + representatives who are united in this city the authority that I + have hitherto exercised; but notwithstanding my want of merit, and + sincere renouncement, the constituent power has deigned to place + upon my weak shoulders this enormous weight, by again depositing + the civil and military command in my person, which the adjoining + resolution I have the honour of remitting will explain to your + Lordship. + + God preserve your Lordship many years. + + (Signed) RAMON FREIRE. + +In short, a revolution to depose the Supreme Director had commenced, and +General Freire, supported by the inhabitants of Conception and Coquimbo, +was in arms to effect it. With this revolution I was determined to have +nothing to do, because, as a foreigner, it was not desirable for me to +become a party to any faction, though it was evident that the authority +of General O'Higgins would shortly be at an end. + +Regarding General Freire's letter as an indirect request to me to aid +him in deposing General O'Higgins, I did not even reply to it. On the +20th of September he made the following direct overture to me to join in +the revolution:-- + + Conception, Nov. 20th, 1853. + My Best and Most Distinguished Friend, + + The time has arrived when circumstances and + the country require the protection of those who generously and + judiciously know how to maintain its sacred rights. Let us withdraw + the curtain from the scene which trifles with the interests of the + Republic, leading it to inevitable ruin. Its deplorable state is + public and notorious. There is not a man who is unacquainted + with it, and who does not bewail the prospective loss of its + independence, + with a thraldom also in view more grievous than the + Spanish yoke. + + The self-assumed powers of the Government, the restrictions on + commerce, and, above all, the constitution recently promulgated, + place the ambitious views of the Chief Magistrate and the corruption + of his Ministers in a clear light. Every act proves that the + intentions of the Supreme Director have undergone a change. + Fortune, which has hitherto favoured him, has given a new turn to + his ambition, as if the proposal of a crown could no longer be + resisted--all the measures pursued throughout the state leading to + that end. It is grievous to see laurels thus stained in the grasp of + one who so gloriously obtained them. It is, however, needless to + trespass on you with further reflections on these occurrences, as + your judgment cannot fail to be formed both on the facts and their + consequences. Let us therefore touch on other subjects. + + Permit me, without offence to your delicacy, to make some + reflections on subjects equally public and notorious. + + You enjoyed honours, rank, and fortune, amidst a people the most + distinguished in Europe. You generously abandoned ease and + comfort in order to aid in the attainment of our liberty, and you + have been the chief instrument which has enabled us to achieve it. + The whole world is acquainted with your gallant efforts to abolish + tyranny and give liberty to South America. The people of this + Republic are full of the most lively gratitude, and are grieved that + it is not in their power to give you an effectual proof of their deep + attachment. This Province, holding valour and merit in estimation, + idolizes you, whilst it holds in abhorrence and detestation the tyrant + "Liberator of Peru!" who has stained our soil with tears of blood + shed for his pretended services. Chacabuco would have terminated + the war throughout the Republic, had it not been deemed necessary + to foster its continuance for the interests of this individual. + + This Province (Conception) having been completely sacrificed, + has arrived at the point of exasperation. Its inhabitants are + unanimously determined on a change and a reform of Government, + and declare that in Arauco they will breathe the air of liberty, and + that they will perish in the field of battle to obtain it. This is the + decision universally adopted without exception. This is the + determination of the gallant troops which I have the honour to command, + and of their valiant officers, and is moreover sanctioned by the holy + orders of the clergy. + + Compromised by these declarations, what am I to reply to them? + Must I profess my sympathy and accordance of opinion with them, + and admit to you, that, though yesterday a private citizen, with a + heart burning to be freed from fetters, _I must to-day gird on the + sword_. May Heaven favour my lot in the absence of personal + merit! To my country I owe my life and the position I hold--from + having contributed to its welfare--can I then neglect the duty + that I owe to it? No, my dear friend, far be that course from me. + Freire has sworn to live or perish for the liberty of his native + country, and he now repeats that solemn oath, grieved at the cause + which compels him to renew it, but trusting in the hope that God + will avert the effusion of blood in the accomplishment of the object. + + I know that you are deeply interested in securing the liberty of + Chili, for which you have so gloriously contended. I know you will + deeply feel the privation of hope--for neither in your generous + heart, nor in mine, can such events be received with indifference. Let + us then pursue a course in uniformity with the glory of Chili, and + the opinion of the world. Let us listen to the voice of the country, + which calls us to avert evils when repose might have been anticipated. + I count, together with the whole Province, on your + co-operation to avert mischief and advance the good of the country. + + Act as you judge best, but for the promotion of that object, the + moment has arrived for action. Answer me with promptitude and + frankness. Let us have the satisfaction of applying effective + remedies to the evils which afflict the country, zealously and + disinterestedly for the good of the Republic, and without personal + views. + + _I hold the residence of San Martin in any part of Chili as suspicious + and dangerous. Let him be off to make some other quarter happy, + where he can sell his protection to the ill-fated inhabitants._ + + I hope my intentions meet your approbation, and will be seconded + by the officers of the squadron. + + I trust you will receive this as the sincerest proof that I can give + of the high consideration with-which I am + + Your most faithful and unchangeable Friend, + RAMON FREIRE. + + To Vice-Adm. Lord Cochrane, + Commanding the squadron of Chili. + +I did not reply with promptitude, for I felt that it was no part of my +mission to mingle in civil warfare. This letter, however, corroborated +my opinion as to the fact of San Martin's influence over the Supreme +Director, and the recent coolness in his conduct towards me. If General +Freire's information was correct, there was evidently a desire to +restore San Martin to the Empire of Peru! when possession could be got +of the squadron, and he in return had deluded General O'Higgins into +the plot by promise of support. Whether this was so in reality is +problematical, but there is General Freire's letter, for the first time +published, and the Chilian people can thence draw their own conclusions. + +Fortunately an occurrence took place, which relieved me from the dilemma +in which I was placed, as will be narrated in the succeeding chapter. + + + + +CHAPTER XII. + +THE SQUADRON TAKEN FROM ME--I ACCEPT INVITATION FROM BRAZIL--LETTER TO +THE SUPREME DIRECTO--- SAN MARTIN QUITS CHILI--HIS PRUDENCE--OPINION OF +HIS AIDE-DE-CAMP--MINISTERIAL NEGLECT--PERMISSION TO QUIT CHILI--LETTER +TO GENERAL FREIRE--FOR THE FIRST TIME MADE PUBLIC--LETTER TO THE +CAPTAINS AND OFFICERS--TO THE CHILIAN PEOPLE--TO THE FOREIGN +MERCHANTS--TO THE PRESIDENT OF PERU--SAN MARTIN ACTUATED BY +REVENGE--THIS SHEWN FROM HIS LETTERS. + + +The event alluded to in the last chapter was the arrival of an express +from the Brazilian _Charge d'Affaires_ at Buenos Ayres, with a request +from the Imperial Court at Rio de Janeiro, to the effect that, as by my +exertions the Spaniards had now been driven from the Pacific, I would +accept the command of the Brazilian navy, for the purpose of expelling +the Portuguese, who still maintained their hold upon the greater portion +of that side of the South American Continent. As acquiescence in this +offer would relieve me from the embarrassing situation in which I was +placed in Chili, I began seriously to consider the expediency of +accepting it. + +At this juncture Freire commenced his march towards the capital, at the +same time sending Captain Casey to Valparaiso with an armed merchantman, +to ascertain the effect of his last letter to me. Without coming to an +anchor, Captain Casey sent a boat on board the _O'Higgins_ to ascertain +my sentiments, but meeting with a refusal to acquiesce in the +revolution, he again sailed. The ministers, however, judging me by +themselves, and suspecting that I was about to become a party to +General Freire's designs, began to withdraw the ships from my command, +on the pretence of repairs or converting them into store-ships, several +being thus taken from the squadron. I was also ordered to place the +_O'Higgins_ and _Valdivia_ under the charge of the Commandant of Marine, +to be repaired, and to make a store-ship of the _Lautaro_, and being +thus deprived of the slightest authority over them, I was now considered +as a sort of state prisoner; but in pursuing this course, the little +schooner _Montezuma_, which I had rescued from Peru, had been +overlooked, and on board of her I hoisted my flag. + +The _Galvarino_ was now sent to sea without my permission, and without +an Englishman in her. The _Lautaro_, the pretended store-ship, was also +being got ready for sea, when I addressed the following note to Captain +Worcester, who commanded her:-- + + Memo, + + Having received directions from the Supreme Government + to cause the _Lautaro_ to be placed as a store-ship, under the command + of the Governor, and observing that the said order is in + process of violation by the preparations making for sea; you are + hereby required and directed to hoist my flag, and obey all such + orders as you shall receive from me on the service of the State. + + Given under my hand this 8th day of January, 1823, on board + the _Montezuma_. + + COCHRANE. + +Tired of this heartless ingratitude, and disgusted with the suspicion +that I was about to join General Freire with the squadron--an idea which +could only have arisen from the expectation that I should thus resent +the injuries inflicted on me--I resolved to accept the invitation from +His Majesty the Emperor of Brazil, leaving all which the Chilian +Government owed me to the honour of a juster and more enlightened +administration. Accordingly I addressed to the Supreme Director the +following letter:-- + + Valparaiso, Jan. 8, 1822. + Most Excellent Sir, + + The difficulties which I have experienced in accomplishing + the naval enterprizes successfully achieved during the + period of my command as Admiral of Chili, have not been effected + without responsibility such as I would scarcely again undertake, not + because I would hesitate to make any personal sacrifice in a cause + of so much interest, but because even these favourable results have + led to the total alienation of the sympathies of meritorious officers, + --whose co-operation was indispensable,--in consequence of the + conduct of the Government. + + That which has made most impression on their minds has been, + not the privations they have suffered, nor the withholding of their + pay and other dues, but the absence of any public acknowledgment + by the Government of the honours and distinctions promised for + their fidelity and constancy to Chili; especially at a time when no + temptation was withheld that could induce them to abandon the + cause of Chili for the service of the Protector of Peru; even since + that time, though there was no want of means or knowledge of + facts on the part of the Chilian Government, it has submitted itself + to the influence of the agents of an individual whose power having + ceased in Peru, has been again resumed in Chili. + + The effect of this on me is so keenly sensible that I cannot trust + myself in words to express my personal feelings. Desiring, as I + do, to extenuate rather than accuse, nothing shall enter into a + narrative of these circumstances which is not capable of undeniable + proof. + + Whatever I have recommended or asked for the good of the + naval service has been scouted or denied, though acquiescence + would have placed Chili in the first rank of maritime States in this + quarter of the globe. My requisitions and suggestions were founded + on the practice of the first naval service in the world--that of + England; they have, however, met with no consideration, as + though their object had been directed to my own personal benefit. + + Until now I have never eaten the bread of idleness. I cannot + reconcile to my mind a state of inactivity which might even now + impose upon the Chilian Republic an annual pension for past + services; especially as an Admiral of Peru is actually in command + of a portion of the Chilian squadron, whilst other vessels are sent to + sea without the orders under which they act being communicated + to me, and are despatched by the Supreme Government through + the instrumentality of the Governor of Valparaiso (Zenteno.) I + mention these circumstances incidentally as having confirmed me + in the resolution to withdraw myself from Chili for a time; asking + nothing for myself during my absence; whilst as regards the sums + owing to me, I forbear to press for their payment till the Government + shall be more freed from its difficulties. I have complied + with all that my public duty demanded, and if I have not been able + to accomplish more, the deficiency has arisen from circumstances + beyond my control--at any rate, having the world still before me, + I hope to prove that it is not owing to me. + + I have received proposals from Mexico, from Brazil, and from an + European state, but have not as yet accepted any of these offers. + Nevertheless, the active habits of my life do not permit me to refuse + my services to those labouring under oppression, as Chili was before + the annihilation of the Spanish naval force in the Pacific. In this + I am prepared to justify whatever course I may pursue. In thus + taking leave of Chili, I do so with sentiments of deep regret that I + have not been suffered to be more useful to the cause of liberty, + and that I am compelled to separate myself from individuals with + whom I hoped to have lived for a long period, "without violating + such sentiments of honour as, were they broken, would render me + odious to myself and despicable in their eyes." + + Until this day I have abstained from pressing upon your Excellency's + attention my reply to the infamous accusations presented + against me by the agents of San Martin--knowing that your + Excellency had more urgent objects to attend to. Nevertheless, I + now beg your Excellency's consideration of this matter, in order + that--as has been the case in Peru--these falsehoods may be + rendered manifest--as well as the despicable character of that man + who falsely arrogated to himself the attributes of a General and a + Legislator, though destitute of courage or legislative knowledge--the + substitution for which was duplicity and cunning. + + (Signed) COCHRANE. + +Foiled in getting one of the ships of the squadron, wherein to escape +from the impending storm, San Martin remained in Santiago till the +beginning of January, 1823, when finding matters in Chili becoming +dangerous to his safety, he crossed the Cordillera to Mendoza, and from +thence went to Europe to avoid reprobation in retirement. + +Throughout this narrative I have been careful that San Martin's +proceedings should be shown from his own acts and letters, there not +being in this volume one which has not been published in the gazettes of +Chili and Peru, or of which the originals are not now in my possession. +Of the latter, I could communicate San Martin's letters to me by dozens, +and had I so far trespassed on the patience of the reader, his acts +would have appeared in a yet more invidious light. What have been given +are strictly relative to public transactions, and belong to the people +of Chili as part of their national history, which, rather than any +defence of my own conduct--which was never brought in question by the +Chilian Government--is my chief reason for now making them public. + +There may be, however, some who think that I have mistaken General San +Martin's _prudence_ in not approaching Lima when every advantage was +before him--for a worse quality, which until my letter to the Supreme +Director O'Higgins, just quoted, I had never publicly attributed to him, +though, in the estimation of every officer of the army and squadron, +richly deserving it. It will be in the recollection of the reader, that +instead of marching on Lima, he wasted nearly two months at Haura, and +that from the pestilential character of the climate, a fearful amount of +sickness amongst the troops was the consequence. I will here give a +letter to me from his _Aide-de-camp_ Paroissien, who was subsequently +employed by San Martin to promulgate his infamous accusations against +me, when he had no longer any hope of securing my co-operation; +premising that in my ardour to get the army at once to Lima, and +unsuspicious at that time of San Martin's secret designs, I had laid +Paroissien a wager that by a given day we should be in the Peruvian +capital; the _Aide-de-camp_ being a better judge of his chief than I +was, accepted the wager, and as a matter of course, won it. + + Haura, 10 April, 1821 + My dear Lord, + + With what pleasure would I lose twenty bets like that + which I have unfortunately won of you, if you could but tell me + that I should be _the loser_. Nay more, I will lay you the same + wager now, that in another three weeks we shall not get to the + little room over the great entrance of the Palaccio. I have received + this afternoon a fine fat turtle; and egad, if I thought I _should + lose_, I would fatten him up all the more--but, alas! I fear we shall + have to calipee and calipash it in Haura; however, the bustle that has + lately prevailed seems to indicate some movement; and those of us + who are well, are ready to march at an hour's notice--but of course + you are infinitely better acquainted with these things than I am. + Still, I think that _were we more active and enterprising, a great deal + might he done, particularly with our cavalry--whose swords for want + of use are getting rusty. If we do not make a push now, God knows + when we shall do so._ + + * * * * * + + The General appears desirous of striking a blow against Baldez. + It may be right---and I dare say it is; _but I should rather we had a + touch against the Capital_. Thank God we are about to do something. + Yours very truly, + PAROISSIEN. + +The reader will have gathered from the narrative, that San Martin struck +no blow anywhere, even hesitating to enter Lima when no blow was +required to be struck. His _Aide-de-camp's_ view of the matter can +hardly be mistaken. + +It is not a little remarkable, that in a letter addressed to the Supreme +Director, before sailing on the liberating expedition to Peru, I should +have, from the first, correctly estimated San Martin's character in +persisting not to make any military movement without an unnecessary +force to ensure his personal safety, though our recent victory at +Valdivia with a force of 350 men only, could not have given him any very +great idea of the difficulties to be encountered. As this letter was +omitted in its place, I will here transcribe it. + + May 4, 1820. + Most excellent Sir, + + Finding that all the measures proposed in the + expedition to Peru are made public--that all that is decided on + to-day is contradicted to-morrow--that no system is followed, either + in regard to naval or state matters, which can promote your + interest--that mischievous delays of all kinds are opposed to the + success of an enterprise, which your Excellency is desirous of promoting + --that the expedition of 2,000 men (abundantly sufficient), + was not to be delayed on any pretence, but that it has been delayed + in order to increase it to 4,000--and that even now it is kept back, + in order to ascertain the position and force of the enemy at Callao, + of which we know just as much now as we should when the + _Montezuma_ may return, some forty days hence, after an investigation + to no purpose--in short, finding that everything stipulated and + agreed upon has been deviated from. I am desirous to give up the + command of the squadron to whoever may enjoy the confidence of + your Excellency; which act will, I hope, add to your tranquillity, + by relieving you from my opinions in regard to what ought to be + done, but has not been done--and to that which could be effected, + but has not even been attempted. + + I have abstained from sending the _Montezuma_ on a meaningless + voyage of forty days to Callao, till I receive your Excellency's + definitive commands--considering that the despatch of that vessel + is not only useless, but a pretext for delay, and is calculated to + frustrate all that your Excellency has in contemplation. Would that + you could yourself note the palpable treachery which prevents anything + of importance being collected for the expedition--I say palpable + treason--as not a single article necessary has yet been procured. + + Can your Excellency believe, that only one vessel is in the hands + of the contractor; and even she is not prepared for sea? Will you + believe that the only provisions that the contractor's agent has in + hand is twenty-one days' rations of bread, and six days' of salt meat, + whilst to my query whether he had any _charqui_ ready, his reply + was, "There is plenty in the country." Will your Excellence + believe that there are only 120 water casks ready for 4,000 troops + and the crews of the squadron? + + Your Excellency may be assured that only your interest and that + of the State could induce me to utter these opinions; but, in order + to convince you that I have no wish to abandon the service, if my + continuance in it can be of any use--my only wish being to avoid + becoming the butt of disasters after their occurrence--I now offer + to give up the command of the squadron, and to accept in lieu + thereof, the command of the four armed prizes taken by the + _O'Higgins_ in the last cruise, and with 1,000 troops selected by + myself, to accomplish all that is expected from the 4,000 troops + and the squadron; the former being a manageable force, capable of + defeating all the defensive measures of the enemy--whilst the latter, + solely under military command, will not only be unmanageable for + desultory operations, but, from its unhandiness, will paralyse naval + movements. + + Lastly, I must repeat to your Excellency that the inviolable + secresy of determinations and the rapidity of operations under + present circumstances, are the only security for the prosperity of + the Chilian Government and the hoped-for liberty of Peru. If + those are to be set at nought, I hereby again place at your Excellency's + disposal the commission with which I have been honoured, + in order that you may be convinced of my having no other object + than to serve your Excellency in every way compatible with honour. + + + I have the honour, &c. + COCHRANE. + + To his Excellency the Supreme Director, + &c. &c. + +To return to my, now in reality, approaching departure from Chili. The +request to be permitted to retire for a time from the service, was +promptly complied with, and no doubt gladly so, from the belief of the +Government that I might otherwise ally myself with General Freire, +though, that I had no such intention, the annexed reply to his +communications--made shortly after I had left Chili, and when he had +succeeded in overthrowing the Government of General O'Higgins--will +shew. + + Bahia, June 21, 1823. + My respected Friend, + + + It would give me great pleasure to learn that the + change which has been effected in the Government of Chili proves + alike conducive to your happiness and to the interests of the State. + For my own part--like yourself--I suffered so long and so much, + that I could not bear the neglect and double dealing of those in + power any longer, but adopted other means of freeing myself from an + unpleasant situation. + + Not being under those imperious obligations which, as a native + Chileno, rendered it incumbent on you to rescue your country from + the mischiefs with which it was assailed by the scandalous measures + of some of those who were unhappily in the confidence of the late + Supreme Director, I could not accept your offers. My heart was + with you in the measures you adopted for their removal; and my + hand was only restrained by a conviction that my interference, as a + foreigner, in the internal affairs of the State, would not only have + been improper in itself, but would have tended to shake that confidence + in my undeviating rectitude which it was my ambition that + the people of Chili should ever justly entertain. Indeed, before I + was favoured with your communications, I had resolved to leave the + country, at least for a time, and return to England, but accident so + ordered it that at the very moment I was preparing to execute this + intention, I received an offer from the Emperor of Brazil to + command his navy, and conditionally accepted it. + + Brazil has one great advantage over other South American States, + it is free from all question as to the authority of its Chief, who has + nothing to fear from the rivalry to which those elevated to power + are so frequently subject. I pray God that this may not be your + case. The command of the army will enable you to accomplish + great things without jealousy, but the possession of the Supreme + power of the State will hardly fail to excite the envy of the selfish + and ambitious to a degree that may operate to the destruction of + your expectations of doing good, and to the injury of the cause in + which you have embarked. + + Permit me to add my opinion, that whoever may possess the + Supreme authority in Chili--_until after the present generation, + educated as it has been under the Spanish colonial yoke, shall have + passed away_, will have to contend with so much error, and so many + prejudices, as to be disappointed in his utmost endeavours to pursue + steadily the course best calculated to promote the freedom and + happiness of the people. I admire the middle and lower classes of + Chili, but I have ever found the Senate, the Ministers, and the + Convention, actuated by the narrowest policy, which led them to + adopt the worst measures. It is my earnest wish that you may + find better men to co-operate with you; if so, you may be fortunate, + and may succeed in what you have most at heart--the promotion of + your country's good. + + Believe me that I am--with gratitude for the disinterested and + generous manner in which you have always acted towards me-- + your unshaken and faithful friend, + + COCHRANE. + + To His Excellency Don Ramon Freire, + Supreme Director of Chili, &c. + +This letter has never before seen the light, and I here make it public, +in order to show that the Government of General O'Higgins had nothing to +fear, even from its ingratitude to me; my only desire being to escape +from it, even at the cost of leaving behind the whole amount due to my +services, none of which was conceded. + +Previous to my departure, I addressed the following letter to the +squadron:-- + + To the Captains and Officers generally of the Chilian Navy, + + Gentlemen, + + As I am now about to take my leave of you, at least + for a time, I cannot refrain from expressing my satisfaction at the + cheerful manner in which the service has been carried on, the + unanimity which has prevailed, and the zeal which, on all trying + occasions, you have shown. These have compensated me for the + difficulties with which I have had to contend, and which I am + confident have been such as never before presented themselves in + any service. Your patience and perseverance under privations of + all kinds were such as Chili had no right to expect, and such as no + other country would have demanded, even from its own native + subjects. In all maritime states the strictest attention is paid to + the necessities of officers and men--regularity of pay and adequate + reward for services are deemed necessary as excitements to perseverance, + and the achievement of effective and heroic exploits--but + your exertions and achievements have been made independently of + any such inducements. + + Gentlemen, by our united exertions, the naval power of the + enemy of these seas, though superior to our own, has been annihilated, + and the commerce of the Pacific is everywhere carried on in security + under the protection of the independent flag of Chili. To me it is + highly gratifying to reflect, that these services have not been sullied + by any act of illegality or impropriety on your part; and that, while + you have asserted the rights of Chili, and maintained and confirmed + her independence, you have so conducted yourselves, as uniformly + to preserve the strictest harmony and good fellowship with the + officers of the ships of war of all neutral states. The services you + have rendered to Chili will, however, be better appreciated at a + future period, when the passions which now actuate individuals + shall have ceased to influence those in power, and when your + honourable motives shall no longer be felt as a reproach by those + whose selfishness has withheld the reward of your fidelity, and + whose jealousy has denied you even the official expression of public + approbation. + + Gentlemen, the best approbation is that of your own hearts--of + that, none can deprive you. However, if it be any satisfaction to + you to receive my assurance that your conduct has, on all occasions, + merited my warmest applause, I can say with perfect truth that I + have great pleasure in rendering you that assurance, and in conveying + to you my heartfelt thanks for your uniform cordial and + efficient co-operation in the cause in which we have been engaged. + + Towards the brave seamen under my command I entertain similar + sentiments, which you will oblige me by communicating to them in + terms most gratifying to their feelings. + + In taking my leave of you and them, I have only to add, that if I + have not been able to evince my gratitude so fully as I ought, it has + not been owing to any deficiency of zeal, but to circumstances over + which I had no control. + + + I remain, Gentlemen, + Your grateful and faithful friend and servant, + COCHRANE. + Jan. 18th, 1823. + +On my acceptance of the Brazilian command becoming known, several highly +meritorious officers begged to accompany me--giving up, like myself, all +present hope of adequate payment for their services. Knowing that in +Brazil--as had been the case in Chili--it would be necessary to organize +a navy, I gladly complied with the requisition; so that neither then, +nor afterwards, did they receive from Chili any recompense for their +unparalleled bravery and perseverance in the cause of independence. + +To the people of Chili--amongst whom, disgusted with the treatment I had +received at home, I had once hoped to spend the remainder of my days in +the bosom of my family--I issued the following address:-- + + Chilenos--My fellow Countrymen! + + The common enemy of America has fallen in Chili. + Your tricoloured flag waves on the Pacific, secured by your sacrifices. + Some internal commotions agitate Chili. It is not my + business to investigate their causes, to accelerate or retard their + effects; I can only wish that the result may be favourable to the + national interest. + + Chilenos. You have expelled from your country the enemies of + your independence, do not sully the glorious act by encouraging + discord and promoting anarchy--that greatest of all evils. Consult + the dignity to which your heroism has raised you, and if you must + take any step to secure your national liberty--judge for yourselves--act + with prudence--and be guided by reason and justice. + + It is now four years since the sacred cause of your independence + called me to Chili. I assisted you to gain it. I have seen it + accomplished. It only remains to preserve it. I leave you for a + time, in order not to involve myself in matters foreign to my duties, + and for other reasons, concerning which I now remain silent, that I + may not encourage party spirit. + + Chilenos. You know that independence is purchased at the + point of the bayonet. Know also, that liberty is founded on good + faith, and on the laws of honour, and that those who infringe upon + these, are your only enemies, amongst whom you will never find + + + COCHRANE. + Quintero, Jan. 4th, 1823. + +On the same day I issued another address to the English and other +merchants at Valparaiso who at the outset had given me every confidence +and assistance, but--notwithstanding the protection imparted by the +squadron to their legitimate commerce, the minds of some had become +alienated because I would not permit illegitimate trading at which the +corrupt ministers not only connived, but for their own individual +profit, encouraged,--by granting licences to supply the enemy, even to +contraband of war. In the subjoined, allusion is made to this matter-- + + To the Merchants of Valparaiso. + + Gentlemen, + + + I cannot quit this country without expressing to + you the heartfelt satisfaction which I experience on account of the + extension which has been given to your commerce, by laying open + to all the trade of these vast provinces, to which Spain formerly + asserted an exclusive right. The squadron which maintained the + monopoly has disappeared from the face of the ocean, and the flag + of Independent South America waves everywhere triumphant, protecting + that intercourse between nations which is the source of + riches, power, and happiness. + + If, for the furtherance of this great object, some restraints were + imposed, they were no other than those sanctioned by the practice + of all civilized states: and though they may have affected the + immediate interests of a few who were desirous to avail themselves of + accidental circumstances presented during the contest, it is a + gratification to know that such interests were only postponed for the + general good. Should there, however, be any who conceive themselves + aggrieved by my conduct. I have to request them to make known + their complaints, in order that I may have an opportunity of particular + reply. + + I trust that you will do me the justice to believe that I have not + determined to withdraw myself from these seas, whilst anything + remained within my means to accomplish for your benefit and + security. + + + I have the honour to be, gentlemen, + Your faithful humble servant, + COCHRANE. + Quintero, Chili, Jan. 4, 1823. + +Though I remained in Chili a fortnight after the date of this letter, +not a complaint of any kind was forwarded from the merchants; indeed, +considering the protection which the squadron had afforded to their +existing commerce, and the facilities which it had given for extending +it, I had no reason to suppose that any complaint would be made. + +The above addresses were printed by a lithographic press in my house at +Quintero, this being the first introduced into the Pacific States. I had +sent for this press from England, together with other social +improvements, and a number of agricultural implements, hoping thereby, +though at my own expense, to give an impetus to industry in Chili. All +this was, however, frustrated, and the mortification was not a little +enhanced by the circumstance that, whilst turning printer for the nonce, +there lay opposite my house at Quintero one of our best prizes, the +_Aguila_, a wreck, tenanted only by shell-fish--she having gone ashore +whilst waiting the decision of the Chilian Government, previous to being +sold for the benefit of her captors! + +As the Chilian Government refused to permit my refutation of San +Martin's charges against me in a way as public as they had been +promulgated, I addressed the following note to the Peruvian congress, +together with a copy of the refutation:-- + + To His Excellency the President of the Congress of Peru. + Sir, + + + I have the honour to transmit through you to the Sovereign + Congress a copy of a letter addressed by me to Don Jose de San + Martin, translations of which I have forwarded to Europe and to + North America, to be issued to the world through the press. + Mankind will then cease to accuse the Peruvians of ingratitude, + and will do longer wonder that an Imperial Crown was withheld + from the Protector as the reward of labours in the cause of liberty, + but will applaud your resolution to select from amongst yourselves + the most enlightened of your citizens--men capable of securing the + independence and promoting the prosperity of the State on principles + of national freedom under the rule of law. + + Be pleased to solicit in my name that the Sovereign Congress + may deign to deposit in their archives that letter and the charges + against me thereto annexed, which were preferred by Don Jose de + San Martin to the Chilian Government relative to my conduct in + Peru, in order that a record may remain whereby to judge of facts + when the actors shall have passed from this scene. Then the even + hand of time shall poise the scale of justice, apportioning to all the + due measure of approbation or reproach. + + That the acts of the Sovereign Congress and of the Executive + Government of Peru may be such as shall call forth the admiration + and secure the affections of its people, is the prayer of + + + Your Excellency's obedient humble Servant, + COCHRANE. + Valparaiso, Dec. 12, 1822. + +One word more with regard to these accusations of San Martin. It was not +till all his offers to me to abandon my allegiance to Chili, and to join +him in his defection had proved unavailing, that he sought to revenge +himself by such charges, well knowing that Zenteno and his party in the +Chilian ministry would second any chance of injuring me in public +estimation from their unabating personal enmity to me, arising from my +constant opposition to their selfish measures for private advantage. +Into these matters I have no inclination to enter, though possessing +abundant materials for disclosing a career of state dishonesty without +parallel in the history of Governments. + +Up to the time of my last refusal of San Martin's offers, made through +Monteagudo, everything was "couleur de rose"--with all kinds of +declarations that "my lot should be equal to his own"--though, thank +God, my lot has been of a far different nature. It was within a week of +my last refusal that his charges against me were trumped up. I will +select one more from his numerous letters now in my possession, to show +that nothing but revenge at being disappointed in my co-operation to +ensure his personal aggrandisement, could have influenced him to +perpetrate such an act of meanness. + + Lima, 20 Aug., 1821. + + My esteemed friend, + + Your appreciated letter, received yesterday, has convinced + me that the frankness of your sentiments is only equalled by + the regard you entertain for the public cause--especially as to + matters under my charge. I cannot view the counsel and opinions + you offer, otherwise than as proof of the zeal you entertain for my + interests. Aware of the estimation in which you hold glorious + acts, I cannot do otherwise than sympathize with you, as you desire + that I shall augment those I have acquired. Without entertaining + a doubt that I shall contribute effectually in the field still open to + us--_more particularly to you_, I wish that the enterprises in which + you evince so much zeal, _did not require so great temerity to carry + them out, and such enthusiasm to bring them to a successful result._ + Believe me, my Lord, that nothing will make me swerve from the + determination that the _lot of Lord Cochrane shall be that of Gen. + San Martin._ + + I hope that in your correspondence with Sir Thos. Hardy, all + difficulties will be smoothed in a manner satisfactory to both. I + understand that he is desirous to accord to _our_ flag all that justice + demands and the policy of England will permit. On these points I + confide in your prudence. + + Never doubt, my Lord, of the sincere friendship with which I am + your affectionate + + JOSE DE SAN MARTIN. + +It is so utterly incredible that a man entertaining such opinions of me +should believe in the charges he afterwards made against me, _with +regard to acts occurring long previous to this period_, even to accusing +me of "endangering the safety of the squadron from the first moment of +our quitting Valparaiso," that I will not weary the reader's patience in +commenting further upon them. + + + + +CHAPTER XIII. + +FREIRE MARCHES ON VALPARAISO--ELECTED SUPREME DIRECTOR--HE BEGS OF ME TO +RETURN--MY REPLY--SUBSEQUENT LETTER TO GENERAL FREIRE. + + +On the 18th of January, 1823, I hauled down my flag, hoisted in the +_Montezuma_ schooner--the only vessel which the suspicious jealousy of +the Chilian ministers had left me--and sailed for Rio de Janiero in the +chartered brig, Colonel Allen, though my brother's steamer, the _Rising +Star_--or rather the Chilian Government's steamer, upon which he had a +lien for money advanced for its completion and equipment--was lying idle +at Valparaiso. Could I have taken this vessel with me to Brazil, on the +refusal of Chili to repay the sums which my brother had advanced on the +guarantee of its London envoy Alvarez--the Brazilian Government would +have eagerly availed itself of an advantage to which the Chilian +ministry was insensible: though recently by the exertions of Admiral +Simpson, and the more enlightened views of the present Government, Chili +is now beginning to appreciate the advantage of a steam marine, which, +at the period of her liberation, she so perversely rejected by refusing +to honour the comparatively trifling pecuniary engagements of her +minister in London. The probable reason why the Chilian Government +refused to acknowledge these obligations was--that the war being now +ended by the annihilation of the Spanish naval power in the Pacific +through the instrumentality of sailing ships alone, there was no +necessity for a steam ship of war--the narrow-minded policy of the +ministers who have figured in these pages never conceiving that to +maintain maritime preponderance is scarcely less difficult than to +achieve it. Hence, to get rid of the paltry sum of L13,000 due--and +still due--to my brother for his advances on the ship, she was rejected; +the consequence was, that after my departure, the independence of Chili +was again placed in jeopardy, whilst Peru was only saved from a Spanish +reconquest by the intervention of the Colombian liberator, Bolivar. + +Shortly after my departure, the partisans of General Freire, and the +enemies of General O'Higgins, having entered into a combination--the +former marched on Valparaiso, where the people ardently espoused his +cause; so that abandoned by his evil genius, San Martin, and equally so +by others who had caused his downfall, the Supreme Director found +himself a prisoner in the hands of the very man who had most conduced to +his overthrow, viz., Zenteno, in whose charge he was placed on pretence +of being made accountable for the expenditure of those who now held him +in durance! + +The end of this was, a five months' examination of O'Higgins, which +resulted in his being permitted to leave the country; General Freire +having, meanwhile, been elected to the Supreme Directorate, in the midst +of internal dissensions in Chili, and disasters in Peru, where the +Spaniards, under Cantarac--emboldened by the pusillanimity of the +Protector in permitting them to relieve Callao unmolested, and elated +with their decisive victory over a division of his army, as narrated in +a previous chapter--had availed themselves of the treasure carried away +from Callao in reorganising their forces, which now threatened Lima, and +would no doubt have recovered Peru, had not Bolivar, foreseeing the +result, sent a division of his army, under General Sucre, to the +assistance of the beleaguered city. + +In the midst of these embarrassments, the New Government of Chili +despatched the following letter to Rio de Janeiro, for the purpose of +inducing me to return, and reorganise the navy, the officers and men of +which had, as I learned, shortly subsequent to my departure been turned +adrift, without any reward whatever for their extraordinary privations +and exertions in the cause of independence. + + Ministry of Foreign Affairs. + Santiago de Chili, April 11, 1823. + Most Excellent Sir, + + + The Representatives of the people of Chili, legally + assembled, having elected Don Ramon Freire as Supreme Director + of the State, this event has happily terminated the internal movements + which agitated the country. The new Government, on + entering on its delicate functions, has been impressed with the want + of your Excellency to give preponderance to this maritime state, by + the imposing aptitude of your Excellency's measures and extraordinary + renown, so highly prized by the Chilenos, and dreaded by + their enemies. + + The loss of the Allied army in Moquegua, where it has been + beaten by General Cantarac, has occasioned such an effect on the + result of the war, that possibly the capital of Peru may fall into the + hands of the enemy in consequence of the ascendancy thus acquired. + + In consequence of this event, Chili must give a new impulse to + her maritime affairs, especially as an expedition is about to sail from + Cadiz, composed of two ships of the line, to restore the Spanish + authority in Peru. + + Your Excellency, on leaving Chili, promised not to abandon the + cause of independence; and Chili--which has ever admired in your + Excellency one of its most illustrious protectors--must not therefore + be deprived of your services in a time of danger, and your great + work thus be left incomplete. These considerations his Excellency + desires me to lay before you in the name of the nation, and in his + own name, to request that you will return to this State, at least + during the period of danger. His Excellency trusts in your + generosity and zeal for the cause of humanity, that you will return + as speedily as circumstances require, without taking into account + fatigue or sacrifices in supporting the cause which you have + advocated since its commencement. + + Be pleased to accept the expression of my high consideration. + + + (Signed) MARIANO DE EGANA. + +It is almost unnecessary to state that my engagements with Brazil, and +the fact that when the invitation to resume the command of the Chilian +navy was received, I was blockading the Portuguese fleet in +Bahia--rendered it impossible to comply with the request. That a state +whose ministers had, by the greatest injustice, compelled me to quit +it--should, in so short a period, have thus earnestly entreated me to +return and free it from impending disaster, is not more a proof of the +peril in which the Government was placed, than of its thorough +satisfaction with my conduct as its admiral, and of its anxiety for my +renewed assistance. + +In reply to the request, I addressed the following letter to the +minister:-- + + Most Excellent Sir, + + I have just been honoured with your letter of + April 11th, announcing the elevation of Mareschal Don Ramon + Freire to the high dignity of Director of the State of Chili, by + acclamation of the people--a choice at which I cordially rejoice, + as it has placed in power a patriot and a friend. My sentiments + with respect to His Excellency have long been well known to the + late Supreme Director, as well as to his Ministers, and I would + to God that they had availed themselves of Gen. Freire's able and + disinterested services in the expedition to Peru--in which case the + affairs of South America would have now worn a different aspect; + but the Buenos Ayrean faction, being actuated by ambitious motives + and more sordid views, interfered, and rendered abortive those plans + which, under Gen. Freire's management, would have brought the + war to a speedy and successful termination. + + On my quitting Chili, there was no looking to the past without + regret, nor to the future without despair, for I had learned by + experience what were the views and motives which guided the + councils of the State. Believe me, that nothing but a thorough + conviction that it was impracticable to render the good people + of Chili any further service under existing circumstances, or to + live in tranquillity under such a system, could have induced + me to remove myself from a country which I had vainly hoped + would have afforded me that tranquil asylum which, after the + anxieties I had suffered, I felt needful to my repose. My inclinations, + too, were decidedly in favor of a residence in Chili, from + a feeling of the congeniality which subsisted between my own + habits and the manners and customs of the people, those few only + excepted who were corrupted by contiguity with the Court, or + debased in their minds and practices by that species of Spanish + Colonial education which inculcates duplicity as the chief qualification + of statesmen in all their dealings, both with individuals + and the public. + + I now speak more particularly of the persons late in power-- + excepting, however, the late Supreme Director--who I believe + to have been the dupe of their deceit; and I do assure you + that nothing would afford me greater pleasure, for the sake of + the ingenuous Chilian people, than to find that with a change + of Ministers, a change of measures has also taken place, and that + the errors of your predecessors, and their consequent fate, shall + operate as an effectual caution against a course so destructive. + + Point out to me one engagement that has been honourably + fulfilled--one military enterprise of which the professed object + has not been perverted--or one solemn pledge that has not been + forfeited; but my opinions on this want of faith, at various periods + of the contest, when everything was fresh in my recollection, + are recorded in my correspondence with the Minister of Marine, + and more particularly in my private letters to His Excellency, the + late Supreme Director, whom I unavailingly warned of all that + has happened. My letter also to San Martin, in answer to his + accusations--a copy of which was officially transmitted to your + predecessor in office--contains a brief abstract of the errors and + follies committed in Peru; as my public letters and those documents + are, of course, in your possession, I shall abstain from trespassing + on your attention with a repetition of facts with which you are + acquainted. + + Look to my representations on the necessities of the navy, + and see how they were relieved! Look to my memorial, proposing + to establish a nursery for seamen by encouraging the coasting + trade, and compare its principles with the code of Rodriguez, which + annihilated both. You will see in this, as in all other cases, that + whatever I recommended in regard to the promotion of the good + of the marine, was set at naught, or opposed by measures directly + the reverse. Look to the orders which I received, and see whether I + had more liberty of action than a schoolboy in the execution of his + task. Look back into the records of the Minister of Marine's + office, and you will find that, while the squadron was nearly reduced + to a state of starvation, provisions were actually shipped at + Valparaiso, _apparently for the navy, but were consigned to Don Luiz + de Cruz, and disposed of in such a way as to reflect eternal reproach + and disgrace_. You may probably find also, the copy of an order, + the original of which is in my possession, (not rubricated by the + Supreme Director) _to permit a vessel laden with corn to enter the + blockaded port of Callao at the period of its greatest distress_, + and which did enter in my absence, and was sold for an enormous amount; + whilst funds could not be found to send even 500 troops on an eight + days' voyage from Chili to secure Upper Peru, when the greater part of + the country was actually in our possession, and when the minds of + the people, afterwards alienated by the base conduct of San Martin, + were universally in our favour. + + Sir, that which I suffered from anxiety of mind whilst in the + Chilian service, I will never again endure for any consideration. + To organise new crews--to navigate ships destitute of sails, cordage, + provisions, and stores--to secure them in port without anchors and + cables, except so far as I could supply these essentials by accidental + means, were difficulties sufficiently harassing; but to live amongst + officers and men--discontented and mutinous on account of arrears + of pay and other numerous privations--to be compelled to incur the + responsibility of seizing by force from Peru, funds for their payment, + in order to prevent worse consequences to Chili--and then to be + exposed to the reproach of one party for such seizure, and the + suspicions of another that the sums were not duly applied, though the + pay-books and vouchers for every material item were delivered to the + Accountant-General--are all circumstances so disagreeable and so + disgusting that until I have certain proof that the present Ministers + are disposed to act in another manner, I cannot possibly consent to + renew my services, where, under such circumstances, they would be + wholly unavailing to the true interests of the people. Intrigue and + faction might again place me in the predicament in which I found + myself previous to my departure from Valparaiso, viz., a cypher and + a public burthen; for the ships of war might again be placed in the + hands of a Governor Zenteno, for the purpose of exposing me to + popular odium, as a person receiving a large salary from the state, + for which--without a vessel under my command--no adequate + services could be rendered. That this was the intention of the + late ministers in withdrawing the ships from my command, on the + false pretence of repairing them, there can be no doubt; for whilst + every honorary reward was withheld from me, they refused to accept + the remission which I offered of 4,000 dollars from my annual pay-- + treating me at the same time with every neglect and indignity. + + Such proceedings, I am aware, are far distant from the contemplation + of the excellent person who now presides over the affairs of Chili, + as in my conscience I believe that they were no less distant from + the mind and heart of the late Supreme Director, who, being placed + in that elevated situation, was unfortunately exposed to the errors + that arise from listening to the reports of interested individuals who + ever surround the powerful, making a gain by concealing the truth + and propagating falsehood. + + It is a fact--as is well known to all my friends--that I had determined + to quit Chili, previous to my receiving any proposition from + the Government of Brazil. By that Government I have been + hitherto treated with the utmost confidence and candour, and the + orders they have given me are in everything the reverse of those + narrow and restricted instructions with which I was hampered by + the Senate, the Ministers of Chili, and San Martin, under whose + orders they had placed me. The Government of Brazil, having in + view the termination of the war, gave orders to that effect, without + any of those miserable restrictions which are calculated to retard, if + not finally to defeat, their object. The consequence is, that the war + in Brazil is already successfully terminated--though we have had to + contend with a much superior force--by the evacuation of Bahia-- + the flight of the Portuguese fleet--the capture of great part of their + transports and troops--and the surrender of Maranham--all in + fewer months than the Chilian Government have employed years + without having even yet accomplished their object, nay, with no + other result than that of removing the independence of Peru, and + their own peace and security to a greater distance. + + I must now call your attention, although I have already addressed + a letter on the subject to the Minister of Finance, to a breach of + faith on the part of the late Government of Chili in respect to the + contract between Senor Alvarez, their Envoy in England, and my + brother, the Honourable William Erskine Cochrane, for the completion, + outfit, and navigation to Chili of the steamer _Rising Star_, + by which my brother has been involved in expenses to a very great + amount. Whether the inconvenience he is sustaining from the + perfidy of the late Ministers is in the course of removal by the good + faith of their successors I have yet to learn, but if not, I must + respectfully state to you on behalf of my brother that I demand + payment of the amount due to him under the contract above-mentioned. + + I also respectfully suggest, that it is your duty to examine the + accounts of Mr. Price, and cause him to pay over the bonus of + 40,000 dollars which was granted by the Government on account of + the _Rising Star_, which bonus Mr. Price prematurely obtained in + advance nearly three years ago, although it did not become due till + the arrival of the ship. This sum, which is part of the remuneration + due to my brother on account of the said ship, Mr. Price, or the + house of which he is a member, refuses to deliver up, under the + pretence that its detention is necessary to their own security, in the + event of the Chilian Government requiring it to be restored. This + is a most extraordinary way of justifying the detention of another's + property, and I trust, Sir, that you will immediately take the + necessary steps to cause both that sum, and all other sums due to + my brother for the _Rising Star_--the particulars of which you may + receive from Mr. Barnard--to be paid without further delay. To + that end, and in order to prevent the risk and serious expense + attending the remittance of money to so great a distance, I beg to + suggest that the best mode of payment will be by an order on your + agents in London. + + I am much less solicitous on the subject of the debt due to + myself, but after repeatedly requesting the Accountant-General, + Correa de Saa, during the last six months of my residence in Chili, + to investigate and determine on my accounts, without his proceeding + therein in any effectual way, I was astonished to receive from him + a communication calling upon me to appoint an agent to explain + certain particulars, which I had considered as explicitly set forth in + the documents delivered. This delay and these obstacles, I cannot + consider in any other light than _as mere pretexts to avoid the + payment of the balance due to me for my services_, and for the + expenditure of monies that were my own, inasmuch as I might, + with perfect justice--instead of employing them for the maintenance + of the Chilian navy--have applied them to the liquidation of the + debt due to myself, and have left the service, as the Government + did, to shift for itself. Besides, Sir, let me call to your recollection + that not a _real_ of these monies came out of the pocket of any + Chileno, but that the whole were captured or collected by me from + sources never before rendered available to supply the necessities of + a destitute squadron. + + I call upon you, Sir, as the Minister of Marine, to see justice + done on the above subjects, and if in my accounts or demands you + find anything false or fraudulent, let it be printed in the _Gazette_, + and give me the privilege of reply. + + I trust you will excuse my entering into the present detail, and + do me the justice to feel that no part of it is irrelevant to the + subject of your letter. Indeed, if I were not desirous of troubling + you as briefly as possible, I could assign numerous other reasons for + desiring to have demonstration of a change of ministerial conduct in + the management of affairs in Chili, before again exposing myself to + difficulties of so painful a nature, and re-occupying a situation + which I have found to be harassing, thankless, and unprofitable. + + When the _puertos non habilitados_ (unlicensed ports) shall be + thrown open to the national commerce--when those obstacles shall + be removed which now render the transport by sea more expensive + than carriage by land--when the coasting trade, that nursery for + native seamen, shall be encouraged instead of prohibited, it will be + time enough to think of re-establishing the marine, for, with regard + to foreign seamen, such is the disgust they entertain for a service + in which they have been so neglected and deceived, that I am confident + that the ships of Chili will never again be effectively supplied + with men of that description. Indeed, there was not an individual + amongst the foreign seamen under my command during the latter + period of my services in Chili whose fidelity was not shaken to such + a degree as to be undeserving of confidence on any occasion of + danger or emergency. Could the late Ministers even expect the + natives to serve them faithfully without pay and without food?-- + but His Excellency the present Director can solve this question in + a similar case with regard to the army. + + It will be well if the foreign seamen have sufficient forbearance + to refrain from revenging--by acts of hostility to the state--the + deception and breach of promise which they experienced from San + Martin, and that destitute condition to which they were reduced, + especially during the last six months of my stay at Valparaiso, + by similar frauds on the part of Rodriguez, who, I believe, as + Minister of Finance, has been actuated by the hope of compelling + the men to abandon their country without remuneration for their + services, when they appeared to him and to other short-sighted + individuals to be no longer useful. + + The Chilian expedition to the Intermedios, and the mean methods + by which it was proposed to obtain Chiloe without my intervention, + excited in my mind at the time no other feeling than pity and + contempt, mixed with regret that the sacrifices of so good a people + should be rendered unavailing by the imbecility of their rulers. + The failure of both these wretched attempts I predicted. From the + men now in power I hope better things, and it will gratify me + extremely to observe that you succeed in establishing just laws--a + free constitution--and a representative body to direct civil affairs. + In fine, that you succeed in all you undertake for the public good; + and when I see you entered on the right path, my most zealous + cooperation--if required--shall not be withheld. + + I cannot conclude without expressing my high sense of the honour + which His Excellency the present Director conferred upon me, by + desiring my continuance in the command of the navy. To him I + return my heartfelt thanks, and to you also for the polite manner + in which you communicated his obliging wishes. + + + (Signed) COCHRANE. + + To His Excellency Don Mariano Egana, + Minister of Foreign Affairs, &c. + +I will quote one more letter, subsequently addressed by me to the +Supreme Director, General Freire, in whose administration I felt a +sincere interest, knowing him to be a truly honest man, having only at +heart the good of his country; but from his rough training in the camp, +without the administrative ability to contend with the intrigues by +which he was surrounded. + + Rio de Janeiro, Dec. 14, 1823. + + My respected and esteemed friend, + + It would afford me great satisfaction to learn that + everything you contemplated for the advancement and happiness of + your country, has succeeded to the extent of your wishes and + endeavours, but here we live at so great a distance, and the + communication by letter is so scanty, that we have no certain + knowledge with respect to your proceedings. I dare not venture to + offer you my congratulations, being well aware that the re-union of + the Congress would present difficulties which might possibly be + insuperable, fearing also that you may have been subjected to much + uneasiness by the diversity of views entertained by the members, + and their deficiency in those habits, and that general information + in affairs of Government, so necessary in the deliberations of a + Legislative Assembly. + + Here we have had our Cortes, but their meeting has produced + nothing beneficial to the State. There existed indeed amongst + them so great a discordance of opinion, and the temper of those + who found their crude notions opposed was so violent, that the + Emperor--finding it impracticable to act with them--determined + to dissolve them, which he did on the 12th of last month, and + issued his commands for the meeting of a new Cortes, but I much + doubt whether the people in the various provinces can find others + competent to the task. Everything here is quiet, and I have no + doubt will remain so in the neighbourhood of the capital, but I + have some fear as to the disposition of the northern provinces. I + shall regret much should anything occur which will disturb the + public tranquillity, now that all the provinces are entirely free and + independent of European authority. + + With regard to myself, the friendship you have always expressed + and entertained towards me, justifies my belief that you will be + gratified to learn that everything has succeeded here to the full + extent of my expectations, the foreign war being entirely brought to + a close within the short space of six months; during which period + about seventy vessels have fallen into our hands, including several + ships of war, amongst which is a beautiful new frigate of the largest + dimensions. + + We have gone on here in the happy manner that I fondly + anticipated we should have done in Peru, and which would have + been the case if the expedition which was intended to be sent to the + Puertos Intermedios three years ago under your command, had not + been prevented by the intrigues of San Martin, who was jealous of + anything being done in which he was not personally engaged, + though he had neither the courage nor talent to avail himself of + circumstances when appointed to the command of the Peruvian + expedition. + + I have heard that my reply to San Martin's accusations has been + published in Peru, but as it is chiefly a personal defence, it cannot + be very interesting to the public, to whom I feel a great inclination + to address a letter on the causes of the miscarriage of their _military + enterprises_, and the origin and progress of those intrigues which led + to the mismanagement of public affairs, and disappointed the hopes + and expectations of the worthy people of Chili, who conducted + themselves so long with patient submission to rulers who governed + without law, and often without justice. + + In my letter to you of the 21st of June last, I mentioned at some + length my reasons for leaving Chili, but as that letter may possibly + have miscarried, I think it well to repeat here--which I do with + great truth--that it would have given me great pleasure to have + been at liberty to co-operate with you; but having, long previous to + your communications, determined from the ill-treatment I received + to quit the country, I considered that it was better in every point + of view to conform to that resolution, without mixing myself in its + internal affairs, it being my province, as a foreigner, to leave all + parties uncontrolled, and in the free exercise of their civil rights. + In adhering to this resolution, I sacrificed both my inclination to + have acted with you in overthrowing the ministers, and my own + personal interests--abandoning nearly all that I had individually + hoped to attain; but I had predetermined to do this, rather than + endure any longer the base intrigues of those men, and their packed + Convention; whose injustice became the more conspicuous after + their receiving the stars and distinctions bestowed by San Martin, + with the promise of estates and further bounties. Indeed, the + reception which even the late Supreme Director influenced by these + persons gave to San Martin after his apostacy to Chili, his cowardice, + ambition, and tyranny in Peru, formed a sufficient contrast with + the conduct pursued towards me, to convince me that my presence + in Chili was no longer desired by the Government, and could not, + under existing circumstances, be useful to the people. + + I hear that O'Higgins has proceeded to Peru. Personally I wish + him well, and hope that the lesson he has received will enlighten + him, and enable him in future to distinguish between sincere + friends and insidious enemies. I fear, however, that his asylum in + Peru will not meet his expectations, because his passive acquiescence + in the barbarities inflicted by San Martin on the Spaniards + to whom he had tendered protection cannot be forgotten; and the + Peruvian people are not ignorant that the miseries which they + have suffered might have been averted by a little firmness on the + part of O'Higgins. + + I have no reason to believe that the old intrigue on the part of + Puyrredon and San Martin, is again revived by the latter, and that + a French frigate which lately sailed hence for Buenos Ayres, has a + commission on that subject. Whether these intrigues extend from + Mendoza over the Cordilleras, or not, I have no means to ascertain, + but I know that the French _Charge d'Affaires_ here has been + endeavouring underhand to induce this Government to give up the + fortifications of Monte Video to the State of Buenos Ayres, which + can only be with the view of extending the influence of France in + that quarter. + + I fear that I have already trespassed too long on the time of + your Excellency, otherwise I might take the liberty to throw out + some suggestions which it appears to me ought to be useful, though + you may probably have anticipated them. The principal one is the + benefit which might be derived from having some accredited agent + here; and from the reciprocal and formal acknowledgment of the + independence of the respective States. Treatises of commerce and, + if possible, alliance and mutual protection against any hostile + attempts on the independence of South America should be entered + into. This country possesses a squadron of considerable force, in + addition to which six new frigates and eight large steam gallies + have been ordered to be built in North America, England, and the + northern ports of the Empire. + + I shall be gratified if you will do me the favour to honour me + with the continuance of your friendly correspondence, and believe + me to be, + + + Your respectful and attached friend, + + (Signed) COCHRANE and Marenhao. + + His Excellency Don Ramon Freire, + + Supreme Director of Chili. + + + P.S. I did not intend to have trespassed on you with anything of + a private nature, having written at length to the Accountant-General + on the subject of my brother's claim for the steamer + "_Rising Star_," and my own claims for monies disbursed _for the + maintenance of the Chilian squadron, whilst in pursuit of the Prueba + and Venganza_; but, on consideration, I think it well to request + you to do me the favour to cause justice to be done. + + + + +CHAPTER XIV. + +INJUSTICE TO THE SQUADRON--INCONSISTENCY OF THIS--ESTATE TAKEN FROM +ME--MY LOSSES BY LITIGATION--ENDEAVOURS TO ENFORCE MY CLAIMS--PETTY +EXCUSES FOR EVADING THEM--I AM CHARGED WITH EXPENSES OF THE ARMY--AND +WITH COSTS FOR MAKING LEGAL CAPTURES--MY CONDUCT APPROVED AT THE +TIME--MINISTERIAL APPROBATION--PALTRY COMPENSATION AT LENGTH +GIVEN--MINISTERIAL CORRUPTION--PROVED BY SAN MARTIN--CAUSE OF OFFICIAL +ANIMOSITY TO ME----CONCLUSION. + + +My services to Chili and Peru have been so fully narrated in these +pages, that recapitulation is unnecessary. I will, therefore, briefly +notice their reward. + +I was compelled to quit Chili by the political dissensions previously +related--without any of the emoluments due to my position as +Commander-in-Chief of the Navy, or any share of the sums belonging to +myself, officers, and seamen; which sums, on the faith of repayment had, +at my solicitation, been appropriated to the repairs and maintenance of +the squadron generally, but more especially at Guayaquil and Acapulco, +when in pursuit of the _Prueba_ and _Venganza_. Neither was any +compensation made for the value of stores captured and collected by the +squadron, whereby its efficiency was chiefly maintained during the whole +period of the Peruvian blockade. + +The revolutionary movements already detailed, also compelled me to quit +the Pacific without any compensation from Peru, either to myself or the +officers who remained faithful to Chili--though my absence ought not to +have operated as a bar to such compensation as the Sovereign Congress +awarded to the generals and field officers of the army, who, though +restrained by General San Martin from effecting anything of importance +towards the liberation of the country, nevertheless received 500,000 +dollars as a reward, whilst nothing was bestowed on myself or the +squadron, except thanks for "hazardous exploits on behalf of Peru, +hitherto," as the Congress expressed it, "under the _tyranny of military +despotism_, but now the arbiter of its own fate." To the "military +despot" himself, a pension of 20,000 dollars was granted, no doubt, as +has been said, in order to be rid of him; but it was I who gave the +death-blow to his usurped power, by seizing the treasure at Ancon to pay +the squadron, and by my constant refusal of his insidious overtures to +aid him in further treading under foot the liberties of Peru. It is +scarcely possible that the Government of Peru, even at this day, can +contrast with any degree of satisfaction, the empty thanks which were +alone given to one--to use the words of the Sovereign Congress in its +laudatory vote to myself--"by whose talent, worth, and bravery, the +Pacific Ocean has been liberated from the insults of enemies, and the +standard of liberty has been planted on the shores of the South"--and +its lavish reward to the enemy of that liberty, and even to those +officers who deserted from Chili to aid the specious views of the +Protector, of which rewards all who remained faithful to their duty were +wholly deprived. + +Still more inconsistent has been the neglect of succeeding Peruvian +Governments in not fulfilling existing obligations. The Supreme Director +of Chili, recognising--as must also the Peruvians--the justice of their +paying, at least, the value of the _Esmeralda_, the capture of which +inflicted the death-blow on Spanish power, sent me a bill on the +Peruvian Government for 120,000 dollars, which was dishonoured, and +never since paid by any succeeding Government. Even the 40,000 dollars +stipulated by the authorities at Guayaquil as the penalty of giving up +the _Venganza_ was never liquidated, though the frigate was delivered to +Peru contrary to written stipulations previously adduced--and was thus +added to the Peruvian navy without cost to the State, but in reality at +the expense of the Chilian squadron, which ran it down into Guayaquil. +How the successive Governments of Peru can have reconciled this +appropriation to the injury of one whom their first independent +Government so warmly eulogised, it is difficult to conceive. + +To return, however, to my relations with Chili. Shortly after my +departure for Brazil, the Government forcibly and indefensibly resumed +the estate at Rio Clara, which had been awarded to me and my family in +perpetuity, as a remuneration for the capture of Valdivia, and my +bailiff, Mr. Edwards, who had been left upon it for its management and +direction, was summarily ejected. Situated as this estate was, upon the +borders of the Indian frontier, it was, indeed, a trifling remuneration +for overthrowing the last remnant of Spanish power in the continental +territory of Chili. To have resumed it then, without pretext of any +kind, was an act reflecting infinite discredit upon those who +perpetrated that act, whether from revengeful feelings or baser motives. + +The sum of 67,000 dollars, the speedy payment of which was promised to +me by the Supreme Director after our return from Valdivia, was never +paid, though the conquest of that fortress proved the immediate cause of +success in negociating a loan in England, which, before that event, had +been found impracticable. By a remarkable coincidence, the first +instalment of the loan arrived at Valparaiso at the period of my +departure; but the English merchants to whose care it was consigned, +refused to permit the money to be landed, in consequence of the +disorganization in which the corrupt conduct of the ministry had +involved the State. + +No compensation for the severe wounds received during the capture of the +_Esmeralda_ was either offered or received--though for these all States +make separate provision. Even the Grand Cross of the Legion of Merit, +conferred for the capture of the _Esmeralda_, was suspended; whilst, in +its place, I was exposed to the greatest imaginable insults, even to the +withdrawal of every ship of war from under my command. + +Unhappily, this ingratitude for services rendered was the least +misfortune which my devotedness to Chili brought upon me. On my return +to England, in 1825, after the termination of my services in Brazil, I +found myself involved in litigation on account of the seizure of +neutral vessels by authority of the then unacknowledged Government of +Chili. These litigations cost me, directly, upwards of L.14,000, and +indirectly, more than double that amount; for, in order to meet the +expenses, I was compelled to dispose of property at a great sacrifice, +amongst which the loss arising from the sale of my residence and grounds +in the Regent's Park alone was upwards of L.6,000--whilst that on other +property also sacrificed was as much more; thus, in place of receiving +anything for my efforts in the cause of Chilian and Peruvian +independence, I was a loser of upwards of L.25,000, this being more than +double the whole amount I had received as pay whilst in command of the +Chilian squadron: in other words, not only did I obtain no compensation +for my services in Chili--but was, in addition, compelled to sacrifice +all I afterwards earned in Brazil to satisfy claims arising from +seizures made under the authority of the Chilian Government! No +consideration whatever for these losses has been shewn by those whom I +so zealously and faithfully served in their hour of need; not even by +Peru, in behalf of which country nearly all these litigations arose, +though the services of the squadron cost nothing to that country or +Chili, beyond the expense to the latter of its original ineffective +equipment, the provisioning and maintenance of the ships having been +provided for at the cost of the enemy, even to the payment of the crews +with their own prize-money, none of which was ever refunded! + +For sixteen years I made unceasing efforts to induce the succeeding +Governments of Chili to liquidate my claims, but without effect. At the +expiration of that period, I was no less surprised than annoyed by +receiving from the Accountant-General a demand for explanation of my +accounts, though, whilst I remained in Chili, I had urged incessantly +their official investigation, for, notwithstanding that the Government +had pronounced its approbation upon all I had done, I foresaw that +quibbles might arise as the pretext for continued injustice. + +That the accounts were not adjusted previous to my departure from Chili, +was no fault of mine, as I was, in self-defence, compelled to quit the +country, unless I chose to take part with the late Supreme Director, in +supporting a ministry which, unknown to him, were guilty of the most +avaricious and injurious acts--or aid Gen. Freire in overthrowing one to +whom I was attached, as having always believed him to be a sincere and +honourable man. + +To call upon me, therefore, in the year 1838, for an explanation of +complicated accounts delivered to the Chilian Government and +unquestioned in 1821-2, was an unworthy course, the more so as most of +the explanations required were of a paltry description, even to the +expenditure of a single dollar in the purser's accounts--as though +amidst operations of such magnitude as had successfully resulted in the +accomplishment of every object proposed, my time could be occupied in +minor details, yet even to these I was compelled to attend, the +Government not furnishing me with a competent person to register the +expenditure of the squadron. + +The explanations thus demanded, after a lapse of nearly twenty years, +were one hundred in number--no great amount in a series of accounts +extending over more than three years' prosecution of an arduous service, +during which I had to find the means of supporting the squadron, the +expenditure of which was now, for the first time, called into question. +The paltry character of many of the matters in dispute will be best +judged of from the following items:-- + + No. 4. Vouchers demanded for ten dollars' worth of mutton. + 23 to 32. Certificates for cases of gin lost in the San Martin. + 40. Deficiency of nine dollars in the pay-books of the Lautaro. + 42. Do. of three dollars in the pay-books of the Independencia. + 69. Error of three dollars in the valuation of goods captured at + Arica. + 73. Forty dollars for repairing pumps at a time when the ships + could hardly be kept afloat. + 75. Imputed error of _one dollar!_ in the purchase of 756 gals. + of gin, &c. &c. + +In addition to many such petty items, I was accused of giving bounty to +seamen unauthorised--though the seamen had captured the very monies with +which they were rewarded--and was expected to refund some which had been +stolen. My having supplied rudders and rigging to the vessels cut out +from before the batteries at Callao, was called into question, though +the ships could not be sent from the port without re-equipment, the +Spaniards having dismantled them before their capture. I was expected, +after the lapse of sixteen years, to produce the pursers' books of the +division of stores captured, the books having been sent in due course to +the Minister of Marine's office; yet the Government had not furnished +the squadron with the necessary articles for the safety of the ships, +whether under sail or at anchor, whilst the stores which were taken from +the enemy and applied to the use of the expedition, were so much clear +gain to the State. + +A still more unjust act of the Chilian Government was that of calling +upon me for vouchers for the expenditure of 50,000 dollars, captured by +Col. Miller, in Upper Peru, and expended by him in paying and +provisioning his troops, of which transactions I was not at all +cognizant: the sums, however, were no doubt faithfully applied by Col. +Miller to the exigencies of the service in which he was engaged; he +merely apprising me that he had captured or otherwise collected 32,000 +dollars, with which he had given his men two months' pay, and an +additional month's gratuity for their gallantry, a transaction no less +essential than honourable, but one which the narrow views of the +ministry failed to appreciate. No vouchers were, however, remitted to me +whilst I remained on the coast, as the following letter from Col. Miller +will shew:-- + + Ica, Aug. 27, 1821. + My Lord, + + + Inclosed is a memorandum of money received and + disbursed to the division under my command. So soon as time will + permit, another more detailed and circumstantial account shall be + forwarded for your Lordship's approval. + + I have written to Major Soler, who is in Lima, to furnish your + Lordship with the necessary particulars relative to the capture of + the cash. + + + I have the honour, &c. + + Wm. MILLER, + Col. Comm. Southern Division. + +I never afterwards saw Col. Miller nor his division in Peru; but the +whole that was expended by him in emancipating the country, was charged +to me, and thus I was made responsible for the price of his victories, +though they did not cost either Government a dollar. + +But the most flagrant act of injustice was the deduction from my claims +of costs and damages for the detention of neutral vessels seized under +the orders of blockade issued by the Chilian Government. The +circumstances were as follows:-- + +The Spanish Government had chartered the _Edward Ellice_ and other ships +to transport troops from Spain to Peru, but internal divisions in the +parent state prevented their despatch. The masters of these vessels +thereupon claimed demurrage, which it was not convenient for the Spanish +Government to pay--but in lieu thereof licences were granted to carry +Spanish goods to Peru. These ships, being thus loaded, proceeded to +Gibraltar, where the house of Gibbs & Co. provided them with British +papers, in addition to the Spanish manifests supplied at Cadiz--this +fact alone shewing that they considered the speculation illegitimate. + +Furnished with these double sets of papers, they came to Peru for the +purpose of trading; but as I had advice of this proceeding--and +afterwards found the Spanish duplicates in the Peruvian Custom Houses--I +seized the vessels on account of the fraudulent papers, they having also +on board contraband of war, and was about to send them to Valparaiso for +adjudication, when their commanders offered to surrender to me all the +anchors, cables, and other illegal cargo, if I would forego this +determination, which I did, and applied these articles to the use of the +Chilian squadron, which at that time had not a trustworthy anchor in any +of the ships. + +The course pursued was satisfactory to the masters and supercargoes, and +subsequently, on explanation, to Sir Thomas Hardy, whilst it was highly +approved by the Chilian Government. After my return to England, actions +were brought against me for even the contraband which had been +voluntarily surrendered by the masters; but as I was fortunately enabled +to produce the Spanish duplicates, they were abandoned, otherwise I +should have been involved in utter ruin, for releasing British vessels +subject to condemnation, and at the same time _gratuitously providing_ +for the Chilian ships of war, the essential articles of which they were +entirely destitute. + +In order to conciliate the English merchants at Valparaiso, the +Admiralty Court acquitted various vessels seized under the orders of the +Government, charging the costs and damages to my account! and that in +the face of its own right to blockade and seizure as expressed to the +British Commodore, Sir Thomas Hardy, who, though he insisted on the +protection of British ships, disavowed their taking advantage of his +protection to supply the enemy with contraband of war, as had been done. + +Sir Thomas Hardy's view was this, that if the blockading power was not +in a position to render the blockade efficient over the whole coast, it +was not recognisable anywhere by the law of nations; but, whilst +expressing this erroneous view of blockade, he added, "nor can I resist +the right which the Government of Chili has to establish and maintain +blockade on the same footing as other belligerents." + +But even in the extreme views of Sir Thomas Hardy, we were competent to +establish and maintain a blockade in its widest extent, and the best +proof of the fact is, that the blockade was established. Even Zenteno, +the Minister of Marine, pointed out to Sir Thomas Hardy, the ability of +the squadron to maintain the blockade which he recognised. + + "Our naval forces, perhaps diminished in apparent magnitude by + distance, was not believed sufficient to maintain the blockade in all + its extent, yet it has had the glory of setting at liberty, and of + placing in the hands of the American Independents, all the ports and + coasts of Peru, excepting only the port of Callao. Moreover, from the + very centre even of that port, and from under the fire of the + batteries, the Spanish ship of war, _Esmeralda_, has been cut out by + our naval forces, and our strength thereby augmented, whilst that + of the enemy is reduced to nothing." + + (Signed) "JOSE IGNACIO ZENTENO." + +So that, in face of this declaration by the Chilian Minister himself, as +to the naval supremacy of the squadron on the coast of Peru, and its +consequent right of seizure, the Admiralty Court, for its own sinister +purposes, chose to decide that I was liable for seizures of neutral +vessels made by my captains, without my knowledge--condemning me in +costs and damages for their acts; the result being that I was mulcted in +this, and every other charge it saw fit to make in my absence. The +injustice of this was the more striking, as San Martin was appointed +Commander-in-Chief of the squadron as well as the army, so that, even +supposing the decisions of the Admiralty Court to be right, the onus lay +upon him, not me. Yet he was rewarded, and I was compelled to pay for +acts executed under his authority. + +In the year 1845, _twenty-three years after_ the liberation of Peru, and +the annihilation of the Spanish power in the Pacific, the Chilian +Government deducted all charges thus unjustly placed to my account, and +awarded me the balance of 30,000 dollars (L.6000) for all the services +rendered to the country. I have before mentioned that, from the +consequence of litigation proceeding from obedience to the orders of the +Chilian Government, I was subjected to a loss in England of nearly +L.25,000; so that in place of my reaping any reward whatever for my +services to Chili and Peru, the liberation of the latter and the +completion of independence of the former cost me L.19,000 out of my own +pocket! + +I would ask the Chilian people and Government whether they do not now +see the injurious treatment pursued towards me--arising from the base +impositions then practised upon them, though these have been partly +compensated by the present enlightened Government, which, as its recent +decision has shewn, is composed of men of a far higher stamp than those +with whom I was placed in contact, and, as I have every reason to +believe, would redeem the stigma left on the national character by their +corrupt predecessors of 1820-23, on fully comprehending the treatment to +which I was subjected. That explanation is here truthfully laid before +them, enabling them to judge for themselves. I will only add that not a +single statement has been made in this narrative which is not based on +original documents, the more important of which have been incorporated, +the whole being about to be photographed and sent out to Chili, so that, +comparing them with their official originals, their authenticity shall +be beyond question. + +I have said that the ministry which paralysed my operations, and by +their ill-disguised mercenary practices overthrew the Supreme Director, +O'Higgins, was corrupt, though I have thought it beneath the dignity of +historical narrative, more particularly to expose their dishonest +practices, of which I was well apprised. I feel, however, that in making +such a charge, some proof thereof is incumbent on me, I will therefore +in conclusion simply adduce a solitary instance of those practices, so +damning, that, unless supported by irrefutable testimony, I might well +be deemed a malicious libeller for making accusations otherwise utterly +incredible. + +It has been proved by the narrative--as indeed it has never been +disputed--that the vigilance of the blockade before Callao starved the +Spanish garrison out of Lima, and ultimately out of the fortress of +Callao, this being the main object of the blockade. Whilst I was thus, +as the only means within my power, endeavouring to starve out the +Spaniards, _the Chilian Ministers were sending corn to be sold, at a +thousand per cent, profit, to the blockaded garrison!_ + +To such an extent was this carried, that even Gen. San Martin, aware of +the villainy of his pretended supporters in the Chilian ministry, and +dreading the result, put me on my guard by writing to me the following +letter:-- + + Haura, Feb. 21, 1821. + My esteemed Friend, + + + I am expecting information from you with great + anxiety, and sincerely hope that it may be as favourable as that + which I received in Ancon when I was in similar uncertainty. + + The _Miantinomo_ is on her way from Valparaiso, _by permission of + the Government, to introduce a cargo of corn into Callao! It is most + essential at all risks to avert this mischief, for it would be perfect + ruin to admit such a cargo under existing circumstances!_ I have + officially given you information on this subject. + + The day before yesterday the _Andromache_ arrived at Huacho; + Capt. Sherriff tells me that in a few days he shall return to Callao. + + Lady Cochrane is at Huaita, making shift in the best way she + can. God give you happiness, my friend. Always count on the + sincere esteem of your affectionate + + JOSE DE SAN MARTIN. + +This testimony from one whose creatures the more influential of the +Chilian ministers were, is indisputable, but in the present case their +rapacity alarmed even their patron. San Martin is however wrong in +attributing the traitorous attempt to the Government collectively--the +Supreme Director, O'Higgins, not being capable of such practices as were +carried on under his authority--of which this is only one solitary +instance. The real perpetrators of these enormities are fresh in the +recollection of many Chilenos still living. Yet these were the men who, +under the mask of patriotism, originated the most unworthy charges +against me, without giving me the slightest credit for having carried on +the naval war without national assistance either in money or stores. The +present generation of Chilenos are proud of their country, and--as their +present excellent President, when awarding me an admiral's pay for the +remainder of my life has stated--desire to reward those illustrious +foreigners who assisted them in their struggles for independence--but +they have great reason to regret the conduct of those ministers who +imperilled that independence, and jeopardised the liberties of Chili for +private gain. + +It is scarcely necessary to add that not a grain of corn in the +_Miantinomo_, or other vessels similarly despatched, with the exception +of one which arrived during my absence, found its way to the starving +garrison of Callao. Yet on their arrival I was implored to permit its +landing, and on replying that no such treachery to the people of Chili +should be carried on before my face, I was coolly asked to stand off +during the night from the blockade, _that I might not see what was going +on!_ Such was ministerial honesty in the first days of Chilian +independence. + +The cause of official animosity to me is now apparent. Had I +participated in these nefarious practices, or had I accepted the rank, +decorations, and estates offered to me by San Martin as the price of my +defection from Chili, I should now be rich, however despicable to +myself--in place of having long and severely suffered in consequence of +my rigorous adherence to the national interests--with the proud +consciousness of never having done an act which I desire to conceal. + + + + +APPENDIX. + + +_Recent Address of the President of Chili to the Senate and Chamber of +Deputies, recognising Lord Dundonald's services, and according to him +full pay as Admiral for the remainder of his life._ + +_Fellow Citizens of the Senate and Chamber of Deputies,_ + +Towards the end of 1818, when Chili celebrated the first maritime +triumph obtained by our squadron in Talcahuano, the gallant seaman +Thomas Lord Cochrane, now Earl of Dundonald, and an admiral in the +British service, appeared upon our seas, decided to assist the noble +cause of our independence. + +The important services of this chief in the British Navy are well known +during the European war which ended in 1815. + +He was a post captain, not in active service, when the squadron of his +country was reduced to the peace establishment, and he accepted the +invitation which was made to him in London by the Chilian agent, to +enter the service of this country, and came to take the command of our +naval forces, bringing in the prestige of his name, his great skill and +intelligence, his active and daring spirit,--a powerful contingent to +that struggle of such vital importance for our independence, the +dominion of the Pacific. + +In how far the well-founded hopes in the cooperation of Lord Cochrane +were realised by the able direction which he knew how to give to our +maritime forces, are facts which have been judged by the world at large +and history. Still alive in our memory is the taking of Valdivia, the +feats at Callao, the bloody and splendid triumph of the _Esmeralda_, the +taking of the Spanish frigates _Prueba_ and _Venganza_ on the coast of +the Ecuador, and the complete annihilation of the power of Spain in +these seas executed by our squadron under the command of Lord Cochrane; +and this Chief upon leaving the service of Chili in January 1823, and +when he delivered over to Government, when there were no longer any +enemies to contend with, the triumphant insignia of his rank, he might +with justice and truth have said, "I return this into your hands when +Chili has ensured the dominion of the Pacific." + +Chili at the same time that she resists unjust and exaggerated +pretensions, has always been proud of her desire to reward, in a +dignified and honourable manner, the services of illustrious foreigners +who have assisted us in the glorious struggle for our independence. This +noble and spontaneous sentiment of national gratitude was what dictated +the law of 6th October, 1842, incorporating, during his life with the +full pay of his rank, General D. Jose San Martin, even when he might +reside in foreign parts; and it is the same sentiment which induces me +to propose to you at present, and with consent of the Council of State, +the following project of law:-- + + Sole Article.--Vice-Admiral Thomas Lord Cochrane, + now Earl of Dundonald, is to be considered during the term + of his life as in active service of the squadron of the Republic, + with the full pay of his rank, even although he may reside + without the territory of Chili. + + Santiago, July 28, 1857. + Manuel Montt. + Jose Francisco Gana. + + * * * * * + + _Lord Dundonald's reply to the preceding._ + + _To His Excellency the President in Council and Congress of Chili._ + + Your Excellency magnanimously presented to Congress + a brief but lucid enumeration of my services to the State, which + being taken into consideration by the enlightened representatives of + a judicious and gallant people, "full pay during my life," and an + honorary medal, were voted to me, accompanied by the truly + gratifying announcement that such estimable gifts were "en + testimonio de gratitud nacional por grandes servicios que presto a + la Republica durante la guerra de Independencia." + + These honours I most thankfully accept, as highly gratifying + proofs that, after the lapse of more than thirty years, my zealous, + official, extra-official, and successful exertions, to ensure to Chili + complete independence, internal peace, and the dominion of the + Pacific, are held in grateful remembrance by the Government and + People of that highly respected nation. Nevertheless I must be + permitted to observe that the grant of full pay, only prospectively, + to one who is upwards of eighty years of age, is little more than + nominal, as my life, in all human probability, is approaching its + close. I had hoped that, as vast benefits have uninterruptedly + accrued to the State, ever since the completion of the services so + honourably recognised, the grant would have dated from that period, + in the same manner that has recently been accorded to me by the + Government of Brazil, which has decreed the restitution of arrears + of pay from the period that my actual command ceased, and also its + continuance during my life. + + If my services to Chili be acknowledged to have been great, might + I not expect an equal boon from a country which owes the blessings + of peace and subsequent tranquillity, and consequent prosperity, to + the speedy termination of war? I plead not for myself, most + Excellent Sir, for at my advanced age, I have few wants, but for the + sake of my children and for the honour of my family. I need only + point to the additional examples of Spain and Portugal, where all + general officers and admirals of first rank, employed in the struggle + for the emancipation and independence of those countries, were + rewarded by the subsequent continuance of their pay during their + lives; an engagement ever punctually discharged. + + I have no doubt that had the recollection of my advanced age been + present to the mind of your Excellency when you proposed the project + of law in my behalf, and had you remembered that a merely + prospective grant would be of little personal benefit to me or to my + numerous family, your Excellency would have been happy to have + recommended, and the Congress to have conceded, that it should + likewise be retrospective, especially as Chili had not (as is the case + in my native country) to rear and maintain numerous officers for + one found suited to command. + + In order to convince your Excellency that I do not desire _full_ pay + to be granted to me during the long period elapsed since my services + were rendered (though from the privations I have suffered and the + losses I have sustained, such delay in truth might be deemed an + additional title), I therefore beg most respectfully to suggest to the + consideration of your Excellency, to that of the Council and National + Congress, as well as to the just feeling of the honourable people of + Chili, that _one half_ of the pay which I received in actual service, be + accorded to me retrospectively, in the same manner that a similar + boon was granted by the Brazilian nation. This I should accept + with deep gratitude, in compensation for the wounds I received this + day thirty-six years, in the capture of the _Esmeralda_, for other + perilous extra-official services rendered, and the heavy + responsibilities incurred, all of which terminated in results most + important to the national cause. + + Be assured, most Excellent Sir, that it is only my advanced age + that prevents me from attempting to re-visit your now peaceful and + prosperous country, personally to acknowledge your Excellency's + courtesy, and the kind feeling evinced towards me by the Council of + State, by the representatives, and people of Chili. It would be with + delight that I should see steam vessels now introduced into the + national marine, the great railroad from Valparaiso to Quillotta and + Santiago, now in progress, and witness the various important + improvements accomplished, and advancement in national prosperity + effected in the course of the last third of a century. Such happy + results testify highly to the merits of the Government and to the + character of the Chilian people. + + COCHRANE--DUNDONALD. + London, Nov. 5, 1857. + +_Letter from the Supreme Director of Chili, approving all I had done in +Peru. This letter was written in English, in which tongue His Excellency +was by no means unversed, having, in early life, had the advantage of a +few years spent at Richmond; a circumstance which, in after years, gave +to his mind an English tone, elevating him far above the then +narrow-minded men by whom, unfortunately for Chili, he was surrounded +and thwarted._ + + Most secret and confidential. + Santiago, Nov. 12, 1821. + My Dear Friend Lord Cochrane, + + + Capt. Morgell, the bearer of this, has delivered to + me the despatches sent by you in the _Ceransasee_, together with your + interesting notes, Nos. 1 to 9, dated 10th to 30th of September + last; as also the documents to which they are referred. I have read + them, with great attention, but have always felt just indignation + against the ungrateful course pursued towards Chili, which can only + be tempered by the pleasure which I feel in reading the dignity, + good judgment, and knowledge with which you knew how to sustain + your rights, and those of this Republic. + + It was my wish that this reply should not be in writing, but + personally, and with embraces of approbation for all that you have + said and practised under the difficult circumstances detailed in your + private and official letters; but as the great distance in which you + are from this deprives me of this pleasure, and as you expect to add + new glories to Chili in the seizure of the _Prueba_ and _Venganza_, and + to bring them to port Bernardo under your orders, I will hastily + answer the principal points of your communications. + + The party and the words you mention, do not leave any doubt of + the small hopes which Chili is to have for its sacrifices; yet there + is nothing to fear from such intentions when discovered. Whilst + the squadron under your orders commands the Pacific, this Republic + is very well covered, and it is in our hands to be the masters of the + moral, political, commercial, and even of the physical force of this + part of America. + + * * * * * + + Although the battery placed at Ancon _after_ the enemy went away + in tranquillity, and the threat (_from San Martin_,) about not paying + one _real_, unless Chili should sell the squadron to Peru, made it + excusable not to send any mission there; yet I have named my + Minister of Finance, in whom I have the greatest confidence, + to go to Lima to fix the basis of relations, and to ask compensation + for the active debt of Chili against Peru. My Minister has orders + to return as soon as possible, let the end of his mission be what it + will, and by that time you may have returned to Chili, and then + we will accord the ulterior. + + It is very painful that the garrison of Callao would not capitulate + under your flag! Then you and Chili would have been implored + for grants,--then all should have been paid without excuse,--and + then you would not have found yourself under the necessity + of taking the property retained, to pay and save the squadron. I + _would have done the same if I had been there, therefore I say again + all has my approbation_, and I give to you, as to the meritorious + officers under your orders, my cordial thanks for their fidelity and + heroism, in favour of Chili, where, in a more glorious and decorous + way, the fortune of all will be made in the course of progress which + events are preparing for this happy country; whilst it is not known + what is to be had in Peru, because, as you observe, the war is only + beginning, which will be followed by poverty, discontent, and above + all, anarchy. They will soon feel the want of you and of the + squadron, and those ungrateful officers who separated themselves + from you to enter the Peruvian navy will also feel their deceit and + punishment. They have been scratched out of the list of the + Chilian navy, and I only wait your arrival or an official detail + relating to the expedition, to assign lands and premiums to those + who have not abandoned you, and in particular to the honourable + Captains Crosbie, Wilkinson, Delano, Cobbet, and Simpson, whom you + recommend. + + Although we live in poverty, and the Exchequer continues in + affliction, yet we have sufficient resignation and courage to make + convenient sacrifices. All my efforts shall be employed in making + the _Rising Star_ one of the vessels of our squadron, and then we + shall be invincible, and by keeping good relations with Sir Thomas + Hardy, and by his means with England, we shall establish fundamental + principles to our glories. I am satisfied of the conferences + and deliberations you had with this gentleman, and I approve the + whole, although the Valparaiso merchants might scream. + + I like the precautions you have taken in sending correspondence + directly to me, and not to the ministry. But you must + understand that even before I had read your private and official + letters, much of their contents was known to the public, no doubt + by the private communications of some officers, or by what was + verbally communicated in Valparaiso by the officers of the _Aransasu_. + On my part, I also recommend you all necessary secrecy on the + contents of this letter, so that our reserve may not be frustrated, + and our best measures disappointed. + + I shall claim from the Lima Government satisfaction for putting + in prison the First Lieutenant of the _O'Higgins_, and also for + imprisoning him of the same class belonging to the _Valdivia_, as + also for the threat of the Ungrateful Guida, as narrated in your + favour of the 29th of September last. I assure you that I will + never permit the least insult against the flag of this Republic. I + felt the greatest pleasure in the answer you gave to Monteagudo + and Guida in your note of the 28th and 29th. + + As you have left Callao there is nothing officially to communicate + upon your conduct there. You have not submitted to Lima neither + directly nor indirectly, and from the moment the independence of + that country was declared under the protectoral Government of San + Martin ceased the provisional control that he had upon the + squadron. + + The province of Conception is almost free of enemies, and I hope + Chiloe will be so very soon, to accomplish our greatness. There is + a nursery for a good navy, and when you can visit that archipelago + you will discover advantages and richness, relieved from the care of + indolent and despotic Spain. + + Believe me, my dear Lord, + Your eternal friend, + O'HIGGINS. + + + +***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK NARRATIVE OF SERVICES IN THE +LIBERATION OF CHILI, PERU AND BRAZIL, FROM SPANISH AND PORTUGUESE +DOMINATION, VOLUME 1*** + + +******* This file should be named 14914.txt or 14914.zip ******* + + +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: +https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/1/4/9/1/14914 + + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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